A Stygian Mexican entity returns with their third album, offering a well-balanced blend of Black Metal with Doom and Post-Metal, with its atmosphere pressing down on the listener like a hand to the throat.
Against the backdrop of harrowing, plaintive music are the hollow echoes of an aggrieved, possessed-sounding woman, adding more malice to the music than anything possibly contrived. Eclipsed Realms, the third studio album by San Juan del Río, Mexico-based Black Metal entity Muerto (the Spanish word for “dead”), is a worthy follow-up to their 2023 sophomore Dust Fire Dust. Displaying a Stygian artwork by Ricardo González, the new opus by Penelope Matamoros on vocals and bass, Juan Mondragon (Necronos, Castleumbra) on the guitars, and Eddel Jared on drums offers a well-balanced blend of Black Metal with Doom and Post-Metal, as well as avantgarde touches, with its atmosphere pressing down on the listener like a hand to the throat, being therefore highly recommended for fans of Amenra, Emptiness, Opera IX, and Deathspell Omega, just to name a few.
Penelope begins distilling her venomous gnarls in Serpentine Echoes, while Juan and Eddel fire a scathing fusion of Black and Death Metal with Post-Metal nuances, sounding chaotic, cryptic and vile from start to finish. Then the minimalist and somber guitars and bass by Juan and Penelope set the tone in Veil of Desolation, evolving into a sluggish beast of Blackened Death and Doom Metal that will haunt your souls for all eternity; followed by Burning Shadows, as acid and visceral as its predecessors, with Penelope once again roaring like a true she-demon while Eddel smashes his drums with zero mercy for anyone who dares to cross his path. He keeps demolishing our putrid bodies in Wilderness, while the strident riffage by Juan couldn’t have sounded more obscure; and in Decay a Post-Black Metal start gradually evolves into a sinister feast of otherworldly sounds, keeping the album as dark and sulfurous as possible. Lastly, get ready for total annihilation with the eight-minute beast entitled Radiance, led by Penelope’s devilish vociferations and the always scorching Black Metal guitar lines by Juan.
Masterfully juggling various emotions in an aura of suffocating darkness, the new offering by Muerto presents a refreshing rawness in a time of overly processed music, and if you want to experience such a thrilling fusion of raw and dark sounds you can purchase the album from their own BandCamp or from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main store, US store or EU store, as well as stream it as many times as you want on any platform like Spotify. Don’t forget to also follow the band on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with all things Muerto, therefore darkening your minds and souls even more. The music presented by those Mexican metallers in Eclipsed Realms is truly embracing, harsh and hypnotizing, leaving us eager for more of their suffocating sounds in a not-so-distant future.
Best moments of the album: Serpentine Echoes and Radiance.
Worst moments of the album: None.
Released in 2026 Transcending Obscurity Records
Track listing
1. Serpentine Echoes 4:46
2. Veil of Desolation 6:48
3. Burning Shadows 4:55
4. Wilderness 4:36
5. Decay 6:31
6. Radiance 8:23
Band members
Penelope Matamoros – vocals, bass
Juan Mondragon – guitars
Eddel Jared – drums