Album Review – Necrodeath / Arimortis (2025)

Behold the last recorded testimony before the war is over for one of the most important Blackened Thrash Metal bands of all time.

The moment you hear it, you know it’s Necrodeath. Formed back in 1984 in the Italian city of Genoa, this unrelenting act is one of the real iconic Blackened Thrash Metal bands of all time, helping to shape the Italian metal scene and the international underground as it is today throughout their 40 years of existence. However, as all good things must come to an end, the band formed of Flegias on vocals, Pier on the guitars, GL on bass and Peso on drums is set to release their last recorded testimony before the definitive dissolution of the band, entitled Arimortis, followed by a farewell tour which will last throughout 2025, and after which the curtain will fall. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Pier Gonella, and featuring a sinister artwork by Max Bottino, Arimortis is everything you’ve learned to love in the music by Necrodeath and more, representing a beyond amazing conclusion to the band’s demolishing and thrilling path.

​The quartet wastes no time and invites us all for one last wild ride inside the pit in Storytellers of Lies, with Flegias sounding like a demented beast on vocals, or in other words, this is how anyone should start a Thrash Metal album. Then a sinister start evolves into another blackened attack by the band titled New God, spearheaded by the Slayer-inspired riffs by Pier; and Peso puts the pedal to the metal in Necrosadist, offering our putrid years another explosion of visceral Thrash Metal perfect for some mosh pit action, whereas Arimortis is another song with a sinister, atmospheric intro that quickly morphs into their undisputed thrashing madness, with Flegias roaring manically supported by the pounding drums by Peso. And to make things even more infernal we have Near-Death Experience, the perfect soundtrack for (guess what?) almost dying, with Pier once again delivering sheer animosity through his riffage.

Necrodeath still have a lot more fuel to burn in Arimortis, starting with Alien, with the creepy vociferations by Flegias exhaling pure Black Metal, followed by No More Regrets, a cadenced, grim and melodic creation by the quartet that will sound great during their upcoming last tour. It’s then time for over seven minutes of first-class, no shenanigans Thrash Metal the likes of Exodus and Anthrax entitled Metempsychosis (part two), inspiring us all to bang our heads nonstop to the demolishing beats by Peso, while Hangover sounds even more ferocious and thunderous thanks to the rumbling bass by GL and the always hammering drums by Peso, putting a demented ending to the album and to their entire discography.

​“Arimortis is a term of Latin origin which indicates the end of a war, the moment in which the fallen are honoured and altars are erected in their name (‘arae mortis’, the altars of death). Even today in some parts of Italy the term ‘arimo’ is used to declare the end of the games. We wanted to use this allegory to seal a path that lasted forty years, full of satisfactions, disappointments and revenge. The songs that make up the album contain several references to our long career,” commented Flegias, and you can fight alongside Necrodeath in their last crusade by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by streaming their evil music on Spotify or any other streaming service, and of course by purchasing their final beast from BandCamp or from Time To Kill Records, or by clicking HERE. And as their blackened war nears the end, may their putrid souls rest in pieces.

Best moments of the album: Storytellers of Lies, Necrosadist and Hangover.

Worst moments of the album: Alien.

Released in 2025 Time To Kill Records

Track listing
1. Storytellers of Lies 3:37
2. New God 3:12
3. Necrosadist 3:57
4. Arimortis 3:39
5. Near-Death Experience 3:07
6. Alien 4:21
7. No More Regrets 5:37
8. Metempsychosis (part two) 7:21
9. Hangover 3:46

Band members
Flegias – vocals
Pier – guitars
GL – bass
Peso – drums

Album Review – Greh / Dysphoric Devotion (2025)

A beyond talented German trio will take you on a Blackened Death Metal journey through a dark universe in which light and shadow constantly alternate.

A musical journey through a dark universe in which light and shadow constantly alternate, Dysphoric Devotion, the first full-length album by Karlsruhe, Germany-based Blackened Death Metal outfit Greh,  is a “world of sound” that is characterized by both raw violence and intense rage. Recorded and produced by Greh, mixed and mastered by Hard Drive Sounds, and displaying a sinister artwork by Aaron Bonogofsky, the new opus by Martin Kocula (Grau, Lethes Fluten) on vocals, Gjero Krsteski (Hellgreaser) on the guitar, and Maurice Monne (Act of Rage, Hard Strike) on drums is highly recommended for fans of Hexis, Konvent, Triptykon, and Primitive Man, among others, representing a reflection of human existence, full of contradictions, abysses and an irrepressible longing for redemption.

Maurice slams his drums mercilessly in the opening tune Chained Thoughts, generating a reverberating atmosphere boosted by the Stygian riffage by Gjero; whereas the title-track Dysphoric Devotion brings more of the trio’s hammering hybrid of Doom and Death Metal, with Martin’s brutal vocals spreading hatred and fear majestically. Illusional Cenotaph brings forward another three and a half minutes of heaviness and sluggish sounds perfect for some sick headbanging, followed by Thy Breath Not Mine, based on a true story about a near-death experience caused by a blood clot in the lungs during sleep, exploring the painful struggle between life and death and the eventual realization and fascination of nothingness; musically speaking, they blast our faces with one more round of demented Death Metal for our total delight.

The trio goes full Doom Metal in All Flesh Decays, with Gjero leading the pace with his damned riffage, not to mention how visceral the roars and gnarls by Martin sound from start to finish, and there’s no sign of the band slowing down or sounding any softer in Growth In Pain, with Maurice pounding his drums nonstop. The second to last song of the album, titled Through The Eye, will darken your minds and thoughts to the venomous growls by Martin in a slow, steady and evil celebration of darkness; whereas they conclude the album on a very high note with the pulverizing Enter My Oblivion, again showcasing their passion for all things heavy and grim, with Martin once again sounding infernal with his guttural roars.

Immerse yourself in powerful Death Metal riffs that collide with Atmospheric Doom Metal passages in Dysphoric Devotion, while distorted walls of guitars, booming drums and dark vocals create an oppressive atmosphere that will stay with you for a long time, and you can do so by following the band on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their hard hitting creations on Spotify, and obviously by purchasing their new album from BandCamp (or simply click HERE for all things Greh). Light and shadow, rage and violence, and a humongous dosage of heaviness in the form of blackened music. This is exactly what you’ll get in Dysphoric Devotion, and I can’t wait to see what’s next for this talented trio hailing from Germany.

Best moments of the album: Dysphoric Devotion, Thy Breath Not Mine and Enter My Oblivion.

Worst moments of the album: Growth In Pain.

Released in 2025 Fetzner Death Records

Track listing
1. Chained Thoughts 3:03
2. Dysphoric Devotion 3:52
3. Illusional Cenotaph 3:36
4. Thy Breath Not Mine 3:28
5. All Flesh Decays 3:46
6. Growth In Pain 3:16
7. Through The Eye 2:54
8. Enter My Oblivion 5:07

Band members
Martin Kocula – vocals
Gjero Krsteski – guitar
Maurice Monne – drums

Album Review – The Halo Effect / March Of The Unheard (2025)

Let’s join this Swedish melodeath juggernaut in their march of the unheard to the sound of their incendiary sophomore album.

Gothenburg, Sweden’s own Melodic Death Metal outfit The Halo Effect may have begun as five old friends just making music for fun, but they’re now one of the most beloved new bands in Heavy Metal. Now in 2025 fans of bands like Dark Tranquility, Insomnium and Soilwork have a lot to celebrate with March Of The Unheard, a triumphant successor brimming with everything that made their 2022 debut Days of the Lost an instant breakthrough, showcasing all the talent and passion for heavy music by frontman Mikael Stanne (Dark Tranquillity, Grand Cadaver, Cemetery Skyline), guitarists Jesper Strömblad (Ceremonial Oath, Cyhra, Dimension Zero) and Niclas Engelin (We Sell The Dead, In Flames), bassist Peter Iwers (Fleetburner, In Flames), and drummer Daniel Svensson (In Flames, Diabolique).

Their Swedish melodeath vein pulses harder than ever in the opener Conspire To Deceive, with Jesper and Niclas slashing their axes in the best Scandinavian style, followed by Detonate, which will work majestically if played live, a pedal-to-the-metal creation by the band where Mikael’s roars and Daniel’s beats match flawlessly; and there’s no sign of slowing down at all, as the quintet continues to distill their Melodic Death Metal attack in great fashion in Our Channel To The Darkness. Then investing in a more cadenced, traditional sound, it’s time for Cruel Perception, led by the classic drums by Daniel, followed by What We Become, one of those songs perfect for some sick headbanging thanks to the pounding drums by Daniel, supported by the metallic bass lines by Peter.

After that, we face the epic, imposing interlude This Curse Of Silence, working as an intro to the title-track March Of The Unheard, offering our avid years an overdose of first-class Melodic Death Metal with nuances of classic Heavy and Power Metal. Needless to say, Mikael is once again bestial on vocals, which is also the case in Forever Astray, another great option for banging our heads while the band’s guitar duo continues to deliver sheer electricity form their sonic weapons. A grim start then evolves into another massive feast of hammering drums and sharp riffs in Between Directions, albeit not as powerful as the other songs; whereas in A Death That Becomes Us the band gets back to a more ferocious yet very melodic sonority, with Mikael leading his horde in another strong candidate for their live performances. There’s more classic Swedish metal music for the masses with Mikael roaring to the riffage by Jesper and Niclas in The Burning Point, before the album ends with the stunning Coda, an atmospheric and epic outro that puts a climatic conclusion to the entire record.

After all is said and done, March Of The Unheard isn’t just another opus of Gothenburg melodeath; it announces that The Halo Effect still have fresh ideas for the genre, 30 years after their members helped catapult it to international acclaim. Now united under one banner, they are gunning for global success once again, and you can know more about the band and enjoy their classy music by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their music on Spotify, and of course by purchasing their new album by clicking HERE, joining The Halo Effect on their exciting and metallic march of the unheard.

Best moments of the album: Detonate, What We Become, March Of The Unheard and A Death That Becomes Us.

Worst moments of the album: Cruel Perception and Between Directions.

Released in 2025 Nuclear Blast

Track listing
1. Conspire To Deceive 3:57
2. Detonate 3:58
3. Our Channel To The Darkness 3:29
4. Cruel Perception 4:04
5. What We Become 3:47
6. This Curse Of Silence 2:01
7. March Of The Unheard 2:59
8. Forever Astray 3:41
9. Between Directions 4:29
10. A Death That Becomes Us 4:07
11. The Burning Point 3:48
12. Coda 3:54

Band members
Mikael Stanne – vocals
Jesper Strömblad – guitars
Niclas Engelin – guitars
Peter Iwers – bass
Daniel Svensson – drums

Album Review – Barshasketh / Antinomian Asceticism (2025)

This Scotland-based Black Metal beast returns with their first full-length in five years, their most direct album to date evoking authentic, purple-blue visions of the late 90’s.

It’s been a long and winding road for Black Metal beast Barshasketh from their earliest days in 2007 as a solo project of KG aka Krigeist in his native Wellington, New Zealand on to his relocation to Edinburgh, Scotland and building an actual band, from breakout third album Ophidian Henosis in 2015 on to the even-mightier Barshasketh in 2019, but even amidst all the lineup shuffles and geographical distance covered, one fact has remained firm, and that’s purest Black Metal, intentionally free of genre cross-pollination, chiseled and refined with patience and persistence, which is also the case with their newborn spawn Antinomian Asceticism, their first full-length in five years. Recorded by the band’s guitarist GM at Sonorous Studio and Necromorbus Studio, mixed and mastered by Tore Stjerna at Necromorbus Studio, and displaying a beautifully sinister artwork by Rodrigo Pereira Salvatierra (with additional illustrations and layout by Fenomeno Design), the new album by the aforementioned KG on vocals, guitars and keyboards, GM on the guitars, BB on bass, and MK on drums, vocals and keyboards is their most direct and concise record in many a year, with its melding of mysticism and might evoking authentic, purple-blue visions of the late 90’s as soundly as it stands upon palatably modern ground.

The bells tolling warn the listener of the brutal Black Metal attack that’s about to come in Radiant Aperture, with the devilish vocals by KG sounding truly haunting and evil; and KG and GM sound ruthless with their piercing, caustic Black Metal riffage in Nitimur in Vetitum, supported by the rumbling bass by BB. Lebenswelt Below is a Blackened Doom extravaganza where MK hammers his drums in absolute darkness, exploding into sheer savagery made in the pits of the underworld, whereas they continue to evoke the fires of the netherworld in Charnel Quietism, a classic Black Metal feast where KG once again vociferates like a demonic entity.

Phaneron Engulf is another song with a beyond sinister start, darkening our minds and hearts to the minimalist guitar lines by KG and GM, but the fact it’s an instrumental piece takes away a bit of its strength; followed by the title-track Antinomian Asceticism, keeping the album’s overall vibe grim and vile with MK’s sluggish, visceral beats inspiring us all to headbang in the name of evil. And the album ends with the fulminating Black Metal aria Exultation of Ceaseless Defiance, again presenting the band’s trademark riffs, beats and the always infernal gnarls by KG.

Torches ablaze, hearts enflamed. Eternal strife is the fuel. Barshasketh, which by the way derives from the Hebrew term Be’er Shachat, roughly translating as “pit of corruption”, are on absolute fire throughout their entire new album, proving that the five-year wait for new material from such an amazing horde was absolutely worth it. You can get more information about them on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their music on Spotify or on Apple Music, and of course purchase a copy of the caustic Antinomian Asceticism from BandCamp or from the W.T.C.Productions webstore, fueling the band’s Black Metal machine to keep roaring in the name of pure darkness and evil for all eternity from the bottomless pit with more amazing albums like their demented new offering.

Best moments of the album: Radiant Aperture, Lebenswelt Below and Antinomian Asceticism.

Worst moments of the album: Phaneron Engulf.

Released in 2025 W.T.C.Productions

Track listing
1. Radiant Aperture 6:47
2. Nitimur in Vetitum 5:46
3. Lebenswelt Below 6:48
4. Charnel Quietism 7:14
5. Phaneron Engulf 4:21
6. Antinomian Asceticism 7:26
7. Exultation of Ceaseless Defiance 5:08

Band members
KG – vocals, guitars, keyboards
GM – guitars
BB – bass
MK – drums, vocals, keyboards

Album Review – Lord Agheros / Anhedonia (2025)

One of the leading Atmospheric and Avantgarde Black Metal names in Italy returns with its cinematic, emotional and dramatic seventh studio album.

One of the leading Atmospheric and Avantgarde Black Metal names in Italy, Catania, Sicily-based entity Lord Agheros takes us into a musically extreme world that mixes Nordic-style Black Metal with ancient and melancholic atmospheres linked to symphonic and ambient elements in its newborn spawn Anhedonia, the seventh studio album in its brilliant career. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Lord Agheros at Molon Labe Studio, with graphic project and layout by Federico De Luca, the new album by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Gerassimos Evangelou offers a beautiful slab of what he likes to call “Atmospheric Emotional Black Metal”, bringing forward the cinematic essence of Ulver, the Avantgardism of Ihshan, the strength of Wolves In The Throne Room, the Mediterranean touch of Moonspell, and the dramatic elements of Empyrium.

A melancholic, soothing start evolves into a deep feast of harsh and ethereal vocalizations that lasts for over six minutes in Lament of the Lost, flowing into Harmony of Despair, which also starts in a serene manner before Gerassimos delivers devilish riffs and beats boosted by a grandiose backdrop, also presenting delicate piano notes and endless fire. Eclipse of Hope offers another enfolding dosage of his emotional version of Atmospheric Black Metal, alternating harsh, visceral moments and delicate passages, whereas a reverberating sound will enfold you in darkness in Lost Dreams Ritual, taking too long to take off despite its interesting tribalistic vibe.

Sorrow’s Shroud is a lot heavier, more introspective and somber than its predecessors, with Gerassimos kicking some ass with both his harsh vociferations and serene, soothing instrumental passages; flowing into the beyond atmospheric Soul’s Descent into the Void, with its piano notes matching beautifully with the female vocals by a mysterious guest vocalist, also connecting with the melodic track Tears in the Silence, where Gerassimos focuses on the ethereal sound of his acoustic guitar alongside the gentle sound of the piano, and ending with the Avantgarde Metal feast named Ancient Echoes, with all vocalizations and ambient elements putting a pensive conclusion to the album.

In a nutshell, Anhedonia is a sort of musical journey between esoteric and oriental sounds, Ambient-wave elements and references to Nordic musical traditions, but without losing the identity of the project made by the beauty of the atmospheres that blend inextricably with the sonic extremism of Black Metal. Hence, don’t forget to follow Gerassimos and his Lord Agheros on Facebook and on Instagram, to stream his music on Spotify, and of course to buy a copy of his striking new album from BandCamp or from My Kingdom Music’s BandCamp or webstore. As it is for years now, always expect the unexpected. Because this was, is, and will always be the main path of Lord Agheros.

Best moments of the album: Harmony of Despair, Sorrow’s Shroud and Soul’s Descent into the Void.

Worst moments of the album: Lost Dreams Ritual.

Released in 2025 My Kingdom Music

Track listing
1. Lament of the Lost 6:30
2. Harmony of Despair 3:46
3. Eclipse of Hope 4:34
4. Lost Dreams Ritual 5:02
5. Sorrow’s Shroud 5:50
6. Soul’s Descent into the Void 4:44
7. Tears in the Silence 5:12
8. Ancient Echoes 4:13

Band members
Gerassimos Evangelou – vocals, all instruments

Metal Chick of the Month – Laura Nardelli

From lucidity into darkness…

Another year begins, another badass bassist arrives at The Headbanging Moose to kick your goddamn ass mercilessly! A true she-demon who masters the dark arts of Black, Death and Doom Metal, she’s not only a beast armed with her bass, but she’s also a guitarist, a tattoo artist, a body artist and an illustrator with a massive portfolio. Her name is Laura Nardelli, also known as Aura Negativa or Daphoene, the bassist for Italian Black/Death Metal horde Askesis, who’s also part of the bands Bottomless, and who was also involved in a very interesting project named Ponte del Diavolo under the moniker Laurus. Oh Yeah, Laura is an unstoppable force of extreme music, and you’re certainly going to be mesmerized by her undeniable talent both as a musician and as an artist, darkening our hearts in the best way imaginable.

Born on January 25, 1993 in Italy, which means our humble tribute to her contributions to the world of heavy music will also be our birthday gift to her, Laura seems to be quite reserved in terms of her personal life, letting her music and her art speak on her behalf. There aren’t any interviews with her available anywhere, which makes it difficult to talk about her origins, her idols and influences, and even her opinion in non-music or arts subjects, but that doesn’t mean she doesn’t deserve to be feature on The Headbanging Moose; quite the contrary, it will be a true pleasure reviewing her amazing career so far, starting with her main band, the sulfurous Askesis.

Forged in the fires of Venice in 2013, the ruthless entity Askesis, or ἄσκησις, meaning “ascetism” or “self-discipline” in Ancient Greek, has been blasting a beyond caustic mix of Black and Death Metal in their sound, delivering a listening experience that is raw and violent while simultaneously captivating and hypnotic. Since the band’s genesis, the core lineup has featured Laura Nardelli on bass (as well as on the guitars from 2018 to 2022) and Samuele Scalise on drums, who have been joined by vocalist Nico Fabbri and guitarists Gregorio Di Angilla and Juri Vatova in 2022. Their songs are linked by an existentialist theme that takes up concepts from Ancient Greek myths, projecting them into today’s world. The band invites the listeners to confront their own fears, contradictions, and desires, encouraging introspection and contemplation on the complexities of existence.

Under the moniker of Aura Negativa, Laura has released with Askesis the EP The Path to Absence, in 2016, followed by a 2018 demo titled Black Ontology, and more recently their 2023 debut full-length opus Beyond the Fate of Death, this one in particular drawing inspiration from The Myth Of Sisyphys by Albert Camus to express their personal visions of our “non-existence”, plus a split with Italian Black Metal band Nox Interitus titled Wrecks from Cosmos (which you can listen in full HERE and HERE), released in 2016.

As aforementioned, the band’s name, meaning “asceticism” from Ancient Greek, is “man’s horror of the being of which his own phenomenon is an expression, of the will to live, of the core and essence of a world recognized as full of pain,” and you can experience all that in their music by streaming or purchasing their albums on BandCamp and on Spotify, plus you can also enjoy some live footage of the band like this full show at Summer Metal Festival in Codroipo, Italy, in 2019, or simply click HERE for all things Askesis, letting their blackened sounds penetrate deep inside your psyche.

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Laura is also the bassist for two other amazing bands, Bottomless and Restos Humanos. Bottomless are an Italian Doom Metal band hailing from Treviso, Veneto and Bologna, Emilia-Romagna formed in 2016 by drummer David Lucido, vocalist and guitarist Giorgio Trombino, and bassist Sara Bianchin, with Sara being replaced by Laura in 2023. The band already had two albums released when Laura joined them, but in 2024 they released a split named Graveyard Thunder together with Brazilian Doom Metal band Witching Altar, with each band recording three songs for the split, and you can enjoy all six songs on BandCamp and on Spotify, with the songs by Bottomless being titled Burning of the Vampire, Lightning in the Realms of Death, and Shadows Call. If the music by Bottomless is dark and sluggish, Italian/Colombian act Restos Humanos play a visceral fusion of Death Metal and Grindcore, and while Laura was part of the band in the mid-2010’s (replacing Sara Bianchin as their bass player on stage in a few concerts) they recorded the live album Grindin’ the Garage, in 2016, available in full on BandCamp.

Apart from those, you can also find her contributions to a phenomenal Italian Blackened Doom Metal band named Ponte del Diavolo, which means means “devil’s bridge” in Italian, formed in the winter of 2020 in a jam involving members of Feralia, Inchiuvatu, Abjura and Askesis. Laura, who went by the monicker of Laurus during her period with the band from 2020 until 2024, played bass in three of their EPs, those being Mystery of Mystery (2020), Sancta Menstruis (2022), and Ave Scintilla! (2022), and in their 2024 full-length album Fire Blades from the Tomb. You can enjoy all of those albums on Spotify or any other streaming service, as well as the official videos for the songs Demone, Covenant and Nocturnal Veil.

As aforementioned, Laura is also an accomplished dark and esoteric tattoo and body artist, specializing in black work, dotwork, linework, medievale, sketchy, and hatching, working at Iguana Tattoo, while she’s also responsible for several artworks for different metal bands out there, always under her darkly beautiful nickname Aura Negativa. For instance, she took care of the artwork for the 2016 EP The Path to Absence, by her band Askesis; of the artwork for the 2024 single Moth to a Flame, by Italian Symphonic/Melodic Death Metal band Bloody Unicorn; of the artworks and logos of all her releases with Ponte del Diavolo, those being Mystery of MysterySancta Menstruis, Ave Scintilla! and Fire Blades from the Tomb; or the artwork for the 2020 album Necrofagia, by Italian Avantgarde Black Metal band Prometeus; of the artwork for the 2020 single The Hanged Ballad and the 2021 EP Dark Italian Art, by Italian Progressive Black/Heavy Metal horde Selvans; and last but certainly not least, of the design for the 2023 album Helvegr, by Norwegian Black Metal masters Tsjuder. She’s indeed a determined, inexorable she-wolf of heavy music as you can see, and I honestly can’t wait to witness the next steps in her already solid and vibrant career both as a musician and as an artist.

Laura Nardelli’s Official Facebook page
Laura Nardelli (Tattoo & Graphic Artist)’s Official Facebook page
Laura Nardelli (Tattoo & Body Artist)’s Official Instagram
Laura Nardelli (Artworks)’s Official Instagram

Askesis’ Official Facebook page
Askesis’ Official Instagram

The Year In Review – Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2024

“Fans still compare me to Bruce Dickinson. I have people coming up to me and saying, Don’t you know that could’ve been you? And I tell them, That was me! I just didn’t want it..” – Paul Di’Anno

It’s hard to put into words the loss of our beloved Paul Andrews (17 May 1958 – 21 October 2024), better known by his stage name Paul Di’Anno, one of the most iconic musicians in the history of heavy music, helping Iron Maiden be what they’re today by giving that edgier vibe to the albums Iron Maiden and Killers, therefore influencing all future generations of musicians not only in Heavy Metal, but also in Punk Rock and Rock N’ Roll. He was a legend and will be sorely missed by anyone who loves good music. There’s not much we can do at The Headbanging Moose to honor his life and work, but we’ll keep celebrating heavy music in his name for as long as we can. I wish he could have played one final show in Toronto so Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I could have registered such a unique moment in the city, but unfortunately time is not always in our favor. Anyway, it might be a very sad year to the metal community worldwide with an irreplaceable loss like that, but heavy music lives on, and that’s why here we have once again The Headbanging Moose’s Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2024, excluding EP’s, best of’s and live albums, to keep the spirit alive and keep raising our horns to countless metal musicians like our great Paul Di’Anno.

1. Judas Priest – Invincible Shield (REVIEW)
Nothing can stand in the way of the Metal Gods as they raise the invincible shield of Heavy Metal.
Best song of the album: The Serpent and the King

2. Werewolves – Die For Us (REVIEW)
Australia’s most savage beast is back with their fifth studio opus, a lecture in Death Metal perfect for beating anyone back to life.
Best song of the album: Spittle-Flecked Rant

3. Aborted – Vault of Horrors (REVIEW)
These Death Metal and Deathcore beasts open their demonic vault of horrors to bring brutality, gore and evil to our damned souls.
Best song of the album: Death Cult

4. Necrowretch – Swords of Dajjal (REVIEW)
This French Blackened Death Metal horde returns blacker than ever with a magnificent opus dedicated to the Islamic Antichrist.
Best song of the album: Vae Victis

5. Gaerea – Coma (REVIEW)
The torchbearers of present-day Black Metal arise again, erupting with intensity, casting forth black ashes over the world.
Best song of the album: Coma

6. Blood Incantation – Absolute Elsewhere (REVIEW)
Blood Incantation offer us all two sensational compositions that are as confounding as they are engaging in their scope.
Best song of the album: The Stargate [Tablet I]

7. Benighted – Ekbom (REVIEW)
Let’s dive into the auditory abyss with this Brutal Death Metal and Grindcore entity armed with their newborn beast.
Best song of the album: Fame of the Grotesque

8. Fleshgod Apocalypse – Opera (REVIEW)
One of the torchbearers of Symphonic Death Metal worldwide returns with their strongest opus to date.
Best song of the album: I Can Never Die

9. Arhat – Secrets of Ancient Gods (REVIEW)
The newborn spawn by this Ukrainian horde will take you on a journey into the world of ancient gods and mysterious rituals.
Best song of the album: Abyss of Flame

10. Grand Magus – Sunraven (REVIEW)
Sweden’s own Heavy and Doom Metal institution is back with a new collection of battle hymns inspired by the tale of Beowulf and Grendel.
Best song of the album: Skybound

And here we have the runner-ups, completing the top 20 for the year:

11. Ecclesia – Ecclesia Militans (REVIEW)
12. The Last of Lucy – Godform (REVIEW)
13. Rotting Christ – Προ Χριστού (Pro Xristou) (REVIEW)
14. Rage – Afterlifelines (REVIEW)
15. Ingested – The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams (REVIEW)
16. Blaze Bayley – Circle of Stone (REVIEW)
17. Striker – Ultrapower (REVIEW)
18. Kerry King – From Hell I Rise (REVIEW)
19. Accept – Humanoid (REVIEW)
20. Hiraes – Dormant (REVIEW)

In addition, as I always like to say, sometimes a band doesn’t need to release a full album to kick some ass, and that’s why we also have our Top 10 EP’s of 2024 to show that sometimes less is more, or maybe I should say, less is heavier!

1. Rifftera – Coda (REVIEW)
2. Trollwar – Tales from the Frozen Wastes (REVIEW)
3. Atavistia – Inane Ducam (REVIEW)
4. Ways. – Are We Still Alive? (REVIEW)
5. Enforced – A Leap Into The Dark (REVIEW)
6. Gutvoid – Breathing Obelisk (REVIEW)
7. Onslaught Kommand – Visions of Blood and Gore (REVIEW)
8. Golgothan Remains – Bearer of Light, Matriarch of Death (REVIEW)
9. Infernalivm – Conquering the Most High (REVIEW)
10. Dragoncorpse – Fall of House Abbarath (REVIEW)

Do you agree with our list? What are your top 10 albums of 2024? Also, don’t forget to tune in every Tuesday at 10pm BRT on Rádio Coringão to enjoy the best of classic and underground metal with Jorge Diaz and his Timão Metal, and every Thursday at 8pm UTC+2 on Midnight Madness Metal e-Radio for the best of underground metal with The Headbanging Moose Show!

Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year! See you in 2025!

In the end, there’s no Christmas-inspired song this year, nor anything festive like that, but I’ll leave you with the official video for one of the most important songs ever recorded by Iron Maiden, one with a strong punk and thrash vibe, with the one and only Paul Di’Anno on vocals. Let’s raise our horns to him forever and ever, my fellow metalheads! RIP legend!

Album Review – Misanthropia / Envy The Dead (2024)

These Dutch Black Metal veterans are back with a concept album that conjures a dark, gritty atmosphere inspired by historical horrors like Jack The Ripper and necromancy.

For over 20 years, Nijmegen, Netherlands-based Melodic Black Metal horde Misanthropia has been carving a path through the metal scene with their unique blend of blackened fury and Death Metal aggression, and that grim path continues now in 2024 with their fifth full-length offering, entitled Envy The Dead. Engineered, mixed and mastered by Mike Wead (Mercyful Fate, King Diamond), Envy The Dead is a concept album that conjures a dark, gritty atmosphere inspired by historical horrors like Jack The Ripper and necromancy. Moving away from symphonic elements, it embraces a Progressive Death and Thrash Metal vibe with influences from Dimmu Borgir, Cradle of Filth, Necrophobic, Mayhem, and Death, all carefully brought into being by Bram Koller on vocals and guitars, Dennis Schoenmaker also on the guitars, Pepijn Heilbron on bass, and Hugo de Waal on drums.

The cryptic, cinematic intro Envy the Dead will drag you to the world of horrors ruled by Misanthopia before they crush your soul in Malediction and Laughter, where Bram leads his horde with his austere, sulfurous gnarls supported by the violent yet intricate beats and fills by Hugo. Bram and Dennis showcase their passion for the riff in Organs, for a Fair Price, evolving into a bestial fusion of Death and Black Metal; followed by Prosperity by Cocaïne, presenting over five minutes of Melodic Black Metal for the masses spearheaded by the rumbling drums by Hugo with the help of Pepijn’s massive bass lines. And Hugo continues his path of devastation in Maze of Madness, enhancing the visceral reach of the riffage blasted by Bram and Dennis.

River Dumplings reminds me of some old school creations by Dimmu Borgir with the bands own Melodic Death and Black Metal twist, in special the harsh, piercing vociferations by Bram, whereas the quartet delivers another round of their flammable, caustic sounds in Coughing in the Coffin House, led by the classic beats by Hugo and supported by Pepijn’s devilish bass. Fade into the Abyss, the second single of the album, brings forward the band’s most aggressive side, resulting in a feast of Black and Death Metal where Bram’s vocals sound and feel truly haunting; and their last breath of obscurity and fear, entitled A Deadly Embrace, a Sinister Grace, will pierce our minds with it Melodic Black Metal vocalizations and riffs, not to mention how thrilling the drums sound and feel throughout the entire song.

The incendiary, harsh and devilish Envy The Dead is already available in full on YouTube and on Spotify, but of course you can join Misanthropia in their darkened path by purchasing your favorite version of the album by clicking HERE. Don’t forget to also follow those talented Dutch metallers on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, helping them keep the spirit of both old school and present-day Black Metal alive, therefore inspiring the band to keep moving forward in the name of extreme music for at least another 20 years.

Best moments of the album: Malediction and Laughter, Prosperity by Cocaïne and Fade into the Abyss.

Worst moments of the album: Maze of Madness.

Released in 2024 WormHoleDeath

Track listing
1. Envy the Dead 2:23
2. Malediction and Laughter 6:12
3. Organs, for a Fair Price 5:47
4. Prosperity by Cocaïne 5:37
5. Maze of Madness 6:25
6. River Dumplings 4:21
7. Coughing in the Coffin House 5:10
8. Fade into the Abyss 4:15
9. A Deadly Embrace, a Sinister Grace 0:41

Band members
Bram Koller – vocals, rhythm guitars
Dennis Schoenmaker – lead & rhythm guitars
Pepijn Heilbron – bass
Hugo de Waal – drums

Album Review – Gore Force V / At Full Force (2024)

Get ready for an overdose of visceral Death Metal, acid humor, violence, and of course, pigs, in the new album by this unrelenting Belgian brigade.

Formed in the already distant year of 2007 in Zwijndrecht, both a village and a municipality located in the Flemish province of Antwerp, in Belgium, the Death Metal squad known as Gore Force V (or Gore Force 5) is back in action after three EPs, those being Happy as Pigs in Shit (2011), It Came from Behind (2012) and Metally Challenged (2017), with their first full length opus, titled At Full Force. Recorded by Sennen, Joshua K and Sasha B at Soundhound Studio, mixed by Sennen, and mastered by Sven Janssens, the new album by the aforementioned Sennen on vocals, Wesley Heyndrickx and Buysse Jeroen on the guitars, Dominique Michiels on bass and Jan de Maeyer on drums is a ruthless feast of violence, heaviness and (why not?) comedy, with the album’s artwork showing that once you hit play, get ready for some laughs while you’re brutally assaulted inside the circle pit by some nasty pigs.

Molokai Deathslam 2.0 : The Re-Slammening carries a wicked name for an even wilder sound, with Wesley and Buysse extracting sheer heaviness from their riffs, sounding absolutely brutal from start to finish; and the story progresses in Superior Mating Rituals, quickly exploding into a boisterous fusion of Death Metal and Deathslam, with Sennen barking manically until the end. The names of their songs are a thing of beauty, and in the case of Rudolph The Red Nosed Rapist the music is also pulverizing, as heavy as it can be spearheaded by the pounding drums by Jan. Jean Baptiste : De indoctrineer beer sounds a bit weird compared to the other songs, but it’s still a good option for slamming into the pit; then back to a more in-your-face, venomous sound and approach we have The Doryhole, with the infuriated beats by Jan matching perfectly with the guttural by Sennen. Their second to last explosion of demented Death Metal is offered to us all in Panda Porking Power Ranger, with the band’s stringed triumvirate formed of Wesley, Buysse and Dominique hammering their axes mercilessly; and last but not least, let’s all dive into the circle pit to Domates Soslu Pit Ninjalar (or “pit ninjas in tomato sauce” from Turkish), the most pulverizing of all songs, with Sennen sounding inhumane on vocals.

The band has  already stated that mid-2025 they will be dropping another EP to finish off the Grinding Nemo trilogy in order to keep everyone’s attention for the next full album, which will drop somewhere 2026. Hence, while we wait for their new material next year and in 2026, you can enjoy At Full Force in its entirety on YouTube and on Spotify, follow the band on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, and of course click HERE to grab a copy of the album and supported those Belgian death metallers. Gore Force V definitely know how to mix good quality Death Metal with a huge dosage of acid humor, some violence, and of course, pigs, and they’re coming at us ruthlessly armed with their new album, inviting us all for some quality slamming at full force.

Best moments of the album: Rudolph The Red Nosed Rapist and Domates Soslu Pit Ninjalar.

Worst moments of the album: Jean Baptiste : De indoctrineer beer.

Released in 2024 Independent

Track listing
1. Molokai Deathslam 2.0 : The Re-Slammening 3:40
2. Superior Mating Rituals 3:31
3. Rudolph The Red Nosed Rapist 2:30
4. Jean Baptiste : De indoctrineer beer 2:03
5. The Doryhole 2:21
6. Panda Porking Power Ranger 2:39
7. Domates Soslu Pit Ninjalar 3:18

Band members
Sennen – vocals
Wesley Heyndrickx – guitars
Buysse Jeroen – guitars
Dominique Michiels – bass
Jan de Maeyer – drums

Album Review – Vile Species / Disqualified As a Human (2024)

Get ready to be pulverized by 20 minutes of first-class Grindcore made in Greece not recommended for the lighthearted.

Formed in late 2019 in Athens, Greece, the ruthless Grindcore brigade known as Vile Species has just unleashed upon us all their pulverizing new album, titled Disqualified As A Human, the follow-up to their 2022 opus Against the Values of Civilization. Recorded, mixed and mastered by David Prudent at Made in Hell Studio, and displaying a stylish artwork by Giannis Nakos of Art Remedy Design (Suffocation, Vomitory, and many more), the new beast by Sotiris on vocals, Mat on the guitar, Chris on bass and vocals, and Michalis on drums offers our avid ears 20 minutes of first-class Grindcore not recommended for the lighthearted, in special the ones who should not be qualified as humans as the title of the album already states.

The album begins in full force with the title-track Disqualified As a Human, a lesson in Grindcore led by the brutally furious beats by Michalis, followed by Once a Body, Now a Corpse, another blast of sheer violence where Sotiris barks like a demonic creature for our total delight, whereas Those Who Act Violent is also as putrid and demented as it can be, keeping their animosity flowing strong. In Αγκυλωτός Σκοταδισμός, which means “hooked obscuration” in Greek, the visceral riffs by Mat sound utterly insane; and Mat and Chris show no mercy for their axes in Self Inflicted Mind Imprisonment, proving Greek Grindcore is perfect for some brutal slamming. There’s no sign of those guys slowing down, as it’s absolute madness blasted by the quartet in Preaching Hatred – Side Casualties, and by now I guess you know Injected With Apathy is going to be another round of Grindcore insanity made in Greece, while hammering drums and caustic riffs set the tone in the fulminating Plebs in Despair.

Battering Scum is by far one of the most demented songs of the album, if that’s humanly possible, with Sotiris roaring manically nonstop. Then Michalis sounds like a demolishing machine in Predetermined Decadence Pt.3, whereas in The Sound they let their Brutal Death Metal vein arise to the deep gnarling by Sotiris. The Invisible Ones offers us all a massive wall of insanity, violence and obscurity blasted by the band in the name of our good old Grindcore, followed by The Cradle Has Fallen, again injecting the aggression and heaviness of Death Metal into their sound, with Michalis once again taking the lead behind his drums. And continuing their path of savagery in the form of Grindcore we have A Cross Up the Ass = God As a Weapon, before all comes to an end in Sverkoma, offering a little over a minute of the carnivorous riffs by Mat while Chris pounds his bass ruthlessly until the very end.

This precious gem of the Greek Grindcore scene is available in full on YouTube, but of course you can purchase the album on BandCamp, or grab a vinyl copy of it from countless places as this is a co-release between EveryDayHealth, Gore Kitty Records, Helldog Records, Nihilocus Records, Nothing to Harvest, Nostril Bush and Throne of Lies Records, and there’s also a CD and tape release in the horizon. You can also find the band on Facebook and on Instagram, keeping up to date with all things Vile Species, and keeping more than pumped for some quality time inside the circle pit together with this amazing Greek band armed with their ruthless new album.

Best moments of the album: Disqualified As a Human, Once a Body, Now a Corpse, Battering Scum and The Cradle Has Fallen.

Worst moments of the album: Preaching Hatred and A Cross Up the Ass = God As a Weapon.

Released in 2024 Independent

Track listing
1. Disqualified As a Human 1:47
2. Once a Body, Now a Corpse 1:24
3. Those Who Act Violent 0:54
4. Αγκυλωτός Σκοταδισμός 1:25
5. Self Inflicted Mind Imprisonment 1:12
6. Preaching Hatred – Side Casualties 1:24
7. Injected With Apathy 1:08
8. Plebs in Despair 1:16
9. Battering Scum 1:37
10. Predetermined Decadence Pt.3 1:04
11. The Sound 1:33
12. The Invisible Ones 1:32
13. The Cradle Has Fallen 1:52
14. A Cross Up the Ass = God As a Weapon 1:18
15. Sverkoma 1:16

Band members
Sotiris – vocals
Mat – guitar
Chris – bass, vocals
Michalis – drums