Album Review – Lorna Shore / I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me (2025)

Call them heroes or hell-bringers, the torchbearers of modern-day Deathcore are inviting us all to be part of their own movie to the sound of their the declarative and breathtaking fifth album.

Call them heroes or hell-bringers, it doesn’t matter to the  men of New Jersey, United States-based Symphonic Deathcore beast Lorna Shore. Produced and engineered by Josh Schroeder, and displaying a sinister artwork by Zac Shiffer, I Feel The Everblack Festering Within Me, the declarative fifth album in their career, and the follow-up to their 2022 masterpiece Pain Remains, sees the band currently formed of Will Ramos on vocals, Adam De Micco and Andrew O’Connor on the guitars, Michael Yager on bass, and Austin Archey on drums putting all of metal’s subgenres on notice. Because after one listen, you’ll wonder what motivates them and what took metal so long to evolve. You also might wonder whose truck may have hit you while you were listening to the album.

Like the soundtrack to a horror movie, the opening track Prison of Flesh grows in intensity until all hell breaks loose to the visceral beats and fills by Austin in a demented display of brutal and vile Deathcore, while Oblivion follows a similar pattern, with Will’s deep, inhumane growls and screeches sounding like a creature form the abyss, being therefore perfect for some insane action inside the circle pit to the wicked riffs by Adam and Andrew. In the infuriated In Darkness, the background orchestrations and choir elevate the song’s epicness to a whole new level, with once again Will growling manically while the sound of their guitars exhales harmony and electricity; and they continue to fill every single space in the air with their striking fusion of Deathcore and symphonic elements in Unbreakable, leaning towards the sound from Pain Remains. Then a serene start ignites Glenwood, another epic and atmospheric creation by the band overflowing melancholy and darkness, albeit a bit generic in the end.

Will keeps roaring like a true lion in Lionheart, where Austin makes sure his beats and fills are not only heavy-as-hell, but also complex enough to keep the music as vibrant and fresh as possible, followed by Death Can Take Me, another pulverizing display of Symphonic Deathcore where the crushing drums by Austin walk hand in hand with Will’s desperate screams. Then presenting elements from traditional metal styles like Heavy and Thrash Metal we have War Machine, with its background keys elevating its punch, not to mention the excellent job done by Adam and Andrew armed with their axes. Their second to last metallic attack is offered in the form of A Nameless Hymn, with Michael and Austin sounding ruthless with their heavy-as-hell kitchen; and last but definitely not least, Lorna Shore bring forth a masterpiece of darkness entitled Forevermore, starting in an almost Atmospheric Black Metal manner before morphing into a grandiose feast of symphonic elements intertwined with the sheer heaviness of Deathcore, or in other words, it’s definitely a beautiful conclusion to such an epic album.

Lorna Shore are neither dire misery goats, nor flower-picking pollyannas and definitely not lapdogs currying favor from those who would exalt the ordinary, inviting us all to embrace I Feel The Everblack Festering Inside Of Me and, therefore, become part of the band’s own movie. “I think a lot of bands – especially in deathcore – they write stuff that they think is cool, but they’re not necessarily writing stuff that’s true to them,” commented Will Ramos. “I think between everything that we’ve been through over the last couple years, those things have helped push the band to think bigger. We’re putting our heart and soul into it. I think it’s those little experiences that we’ve been through that help shape that. It doesn’t necessarily work for everybody, but it works for us.” Furthermore, you can get in touch with one of the torchbearers of modern-day Deathcore via Facebook and Instagram, stream their vicious, down-tempo creations on Spotify, and of course grab your copy of the poetically titled I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me by clicking HERE or HERE. When heroes are hard to find, try looking inside yourself first. and when good heavy music is hard to find, simply enjoy the phenomenal new album by Lorna Shore.

Best moments of the album: Prison of Flesh, Unbreakable, Lionheart and Forevermore.

Worst moments of the album: Glenwood.

Released in 2025 Century Media Records

Track listing
1. Prison of Flesh 7:00
2. Oblivion 8:19
3. In Darkness 6:43
4. Unbreakable 4:49
5. Glenwood 6:43
6. Lionheart 5:44
7. Death Can Take Me 7:16
8. War Machine 4:53
9. A Nameless Hymn 5:14
10. Forevermore 9:47

Band members
Will Ramos – vocals
Adam De Micco – guitar
Andrew O’Connor – guitar
Michael Yager – bass
Austin Archey – drums

2 thoughts on “Album Review – Lorna Shore / I Feel the Everblack Festering Within Me (2025)

  1. Pingback: Concert Review – Lorna Shore (Great Canadian Toronto, Mississauga, ON, 10/27/2025) | THE HEADBANGING MOOSE

  2. Pingback: The Year In Review – Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2025 | THE HEADBANGING MOOSE

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