Album Review – Papa Necrose / Anthropomorphy Execution (2026)

This ruthless Death Metal beast from Brazil is ready to unleash hell once again with their third full-length opus, delivering sharp criticism of religion, world wars, and the darker trajectories of power and authority.

Formed in 2010 in the harshest corners of Salvador, the capital of Brazil’s northeastern state of Bahia, the ruthless Death Metal beast known as Papa Necrose is ready to unleash hell once again with their third full-length opus, poetically entitled Anthropomorphy Execution, following up on their 2021 sophomore Open Infected Body. Recorded, mixed and mastered at Evil Live Studios, with drum editing by Hugo Elias (Infected Cells), and showcasing a sinister cover art by Alex Shadrin of Nether Temple Design, the new album by frontman Alessandro Necrose , guitarists Carlos Silva and Danilo Vagner, bassist Éric Gusmão, and drummer Luquian Silva marks a moment of maturation for the band, keeping their raw, aggressive style intact while also exploring more complex song structures, technical riffing, and layered compositions influenced by the most technical 90’s Death Metal the likes of Death’s Human and Pestilence’s Testimony of the Ancients. Lyrically, the album delivers sharp criticism of religion, focusing on the role of Catholicism in historic humanitarian crises, world wars, and the darker trajectories of power and authority.

Carlos and Danilo begin slashing their axes in great fashion in Fall, Die, and Break, and when Luquian starts hammering his drums it’s absolute hell and chaos, followed by Disenchant Them, another bestial Death Metal extravaganza with a strong Thrash Metal vibe, with Éric pounding his bass while Alessandro roars like a rabid creature. Then after the phantasmagorical, eerie (but not very exciting) interlude Between Voices and Fear, we’re treated to the title-track Anthropomorphy Execution, a ruthless tune where Éric’s bass sounds absolutely metallic, providing the band’s guitar duo with exactly what they need to fire their deadly riffs; and they speed things up and get even more infuriated in the Death Metal attack titled Bleeding Social Membrane, led by another infernal vocal performance by Alessandro.

Hammered in the Mind lives up to the legacy of 90’s Death Metal while also presenting the band’s own technical and even progressive twist, while in Eighteen Years Awake we face pure violence and hatred flowing from all instruments, in special from the nonstop, savage drums by Luquian. Cathedral of Death sounds absolutely fast, furious and demented from start to finish, with Alessandro barking like a rabid entity while his bandmates offer a killer fusion of rage and dexterity; whereas in Silenced by Death all cryptic background sounds and other elements add an extra touch of darkness to their core Death Metal. Finally, we’re invited to one final mosh pit in The Thousand Yard Gaze, featuring a guest guitar solo by James Murphy (Death, Obituary, Cancer), with Éric and Luquian bringing forth their most intricate sounds of the entire album for our total delight.

Delivering scorching riffs, crushing drums, and an atmosphere designed for those who crave the raw edge of the genre since their inception, Papa Necrose tackle human contradictions, religious hypocrisy, war, death, and other societal ills through their music, exposing the underbelly of the world we live in, exactly like what they have to offer in their new album. Having said that, if you want to join such a talented Death Metal army and experience their rebellious music in all of its glory, you can find those Brazilian death dealers on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their demented sounds on Spotify, and above all, purchase the excellent Anthropomorphy Execution from the Awakening Records’ BandCamp and Big Cartel. Religion, war, death and power have always been a dangerous combination, and albums like Anthropomorphy Execution by Papa Necrose are among us to prove once and for all that Death Metal will forever be the best way to channel all that evil in a positive and exciting way.

Best moments of the album: Bleeding Social Membrane, Eighteen Years Awake and Cathedral of Death.

Worst moments of the album: Between Voices and Fear.

Released in 2026 Awakening Records

Track listing
1. Fall, Die, and Break 4:52
2. Disenchant Them 4:31
3. Between Voices and Fear 1:10
4. Anthropomorphy Execution 5:08
5. Bleeding Social Membrane 7:19
6. Hammered in the Mind 3:38
7. Eighteen Years Awake 4:43
8. Cathedral of Death 4:05
9. Silenced by Death 4:09
10. The Thousand Yard Gaze 6:50

Band members
Alessandro Necrose – vocals
Carlos Silva – guitar
Danilo Vagner – guitar
Éric Gusmão – bass
Luquian Silva – drums

Guest musician
James Murphy – guitar solo on “The Thousand Yard Gaze”

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