Album Review – Sothoris / Domus Omnium Mortuorum (2025)

Enter the house of all the dead to the sound of the scorching newborn spawn by this ruthless Blackened Death Metal horde from Poland.

Forged in the fires of Miłosław, Poland in 2016, the ruthless Blakened Death Metal horde Sothoris arises from their Stygian lair once again to darken the skies to the sound of their newborn spawn, entitled Domus Omnium Mortuorum, or “house of all the dead” in English, following up on their 2022 sophomore album Wpiekłowstąpienie. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Krzysztof Kostencki at Tetra Wave Studio, with artwork by Bartosz Szczepaniak and Maksymilian Krasoń, and band photo session by Maciej “Wuja” Chomik, the new album by vocalist Raven, guitarists Hex and Setrial, bassist Lord Ghash, and drummer Hrist sees the band offer their trademark mixture of Black Metal ferocity and Death Metal power while its lyrical layer showcases a study of human wickedness, being therefore a must-listen for fans of extreme music with a deep and dark meaning.

A wicked intro gradually morphs into a scathing beast named Wieczornica (“evening party”), spearheaded by the hellish riffs by Hex and Setrial, whereas Szkarłat (“scarlet”) offers a more visceral display of Blackened Death Metal, with Raven gnarling rabidly like a demonic entity while the rumbling bass and blast beats by Lord Ghash and Hrist sound utterly demolishing. Then with an incandescent name like Lawa (“lava”) the music had to be absolutely scorching, which is exactly what we get, with the venomous roars by Raven crushing our putrid souls mercilessly, whereas Hrist then hammers his drums in the Behemoth-fueled Byłem Faustem (“I was Faust”), which will surely make their world renowned countrymen proud.

Dzieci Diabła (“the devil’s children”) is another thunderous display of extreme music by Sothoris, with the band’s guitar duo firing pure malignancy through their unstoppable, vile axes, and the band takes no prisoners in their quest for Black and Death Metal in Pro Memoria, or “for the sake of memory” from Latin, led by the inhumane drumming by Hrist. Needless to say, it should sound brilliant if played live. Then presenting elements of progressive music added to their core essence we have Dym (“smoke”), where Hex and Setrial once again steal the show with their heavy-as-hell riffage, and last but not least, we’re treated to one final metallic cult by Sothoris titled Piętno (“stigma”), where the bass lines by Lord Ghash will hammer your cranial skull mercilessly.

“This album uses a certain artistic game. We go back in time to the 19th century. The starting point for this idea, the inspiration is the monument of Karl Robert Lachmann, the only son of a German, aristocratic family, who died in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), vandalized by cemetery robbers, located in the mausoleum in Jałowiec,” commented frontman Raven, and if you have what it takes to enter the band’s house of the all dead, you can find those Stygian beings on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their sulfurous music on Spotify, and purchase Domus Omnium Mortuorum from BandCamp or from the Fetzner Death Records webstore as a CD or a cassette. But you better be warned, once you enter such a vile and cryptic house, your life (and death) will never be the same.

Best moments of the album: Szkarłat, Byłem Faustem and Pro Memoria.

Worst moments of the album: Dym.

Released in 2025 Fetzner Death Records/ADG Records

Track listing
1. Wieczornica 5:31
2. Szkarłat 5:43
3. Lawa 6:39
4. Byłem Faustem 6:03
5. Dzieci Diabła 4:53
6. Pro Memoria 4:52
7. Dym 4:57
8. Piętno 5:25

Band members
Raven – vocals
Hex – lead guitars
Setrial – rhythm guitars
Lord Ghash – bass
Hrist – drums

Album Review – Brimstone Gate / Return from the Brimstone Portal (2023)

This Teutonic army will attack your senses with their debut album, paying tribute to 90’s Black and Death Metal from Norway, Sweden and England while also presenting some modern influences.

Formed in 2020 in the beginning of the coronavirus pandemic in Hamm, a city in North Rhine-Westphalia, Germany, Black/Death Metal horde Brimstone Gate has just unleashed their debut album, entitled Return from the Brimstone Portal, paying tribute to 90’s Black and Death Metal from Norway, Sweden and England while also presenting some modern influences. Recorded by the band’s two founding members Carsten Nachtigall and Michael Gruen, mixed and mastered by Michael “Obelxxx” Elsner, and displaying a classic artwork licenced by iStock and re-worked and designed by Michael Gruen, Return from the Brimstone Portal is recommended for admirers of the music by Belphegor and Zyklon, showcasing all the talent and hard work by Simon Stellmacher (Niflhel) on vocals and bass, and Carsten Nachtigall (Niflhel) and Michael Gruen (Niflhel, Deathstruction) on the guitars and drum programming.

Cinematic, somber and atmospheric from the very first second, Beyond the Gate works as an intro to a horror movie, dragging our souls to the Stygian lair ruled by Brimstone Gate in Return from the Brimstone Portal, exploding into a technical yet visceral form of Death Metal with Simon roaring like a beast, therefore adding an extra dosage of dementia to the overall result; and the guitars by Carsten and Michael bring fire to their music in Voices of the Dead, accompanied by the song’s massive beats in another solid display of German Death Metal. Then spearheaded by the venomous screams by Simon we have Emperor of the Painful Realm, sounding infernal from start to finish to the song’s hammering drums.

The second half of the album begins with another bestial creation by the quintet named Path to Your Liberation, offering Simon’s rumbling bass and the always scorching riffs and solos by Casrten and Michael, and it’s then time for a neck-breaking extravaganza entitled The Void Darkened, displaying the band’s usual savagery spiced up by another demonic drum explosion. There’s no time to breathe as those Teutonic metallers keep darkening the skies with their fusion of Black and Death Metal in Death Arises in the Wind, showcasing more of their piercing, dirty riffs; whereas closing the album it’s time for the six-minute tune Lost Nightsun, sounding bold and austere while led by the deep roars by Simon, albeit a bit too lengthy in the end.

The new opus by Brimstone Gate is available for a full listen on YouTube and on Spotify, but of course if you’re an admirer of extreme music with an epic background story you can purchase a copy of the album (and consequently show all your support to the underground scene) directly from their own BandCamp page. Don’t forget to also follow the band on Facebook and on Instagram for tour dates, news and so on, and to subscribe to their YouTube channel for more of their incendiary music. Those German metallers are on absolute fire in Return from the Brimstone Portal, the first step in their promising career, and an amazing display of the always entertaining Black and Death Metal scene from one of the meccas of heavy music worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Return from the Brimstone Portal, Emperor of the Painful Realm and Path to Your Liberation.

Worst moments of the album: Lost Nightsun.

Released in 2023 ADG Records

Track listing
1. Beyond the Gate (Intro) 1:33
2. Return from the Brimstone Portal 5:00
3. Voices of the Dead 4:37
4. Emperor of the Painful Realm 4:11
5. Path to Your Liberation 5:26
6. The Void Darkened 5:12
7. Death Arises in the Wind 5:36
8. Lost Nightsun 6:26

Band members
Simon Stellmacher – vocals, bass
Carsten Nachtigall – guitars, drum programming
Michael Gruen – guitars, drum programming

Live lineup
Dominik Zillmann – vocals
Carsten Nachtigall – guitars
Michael Gruen – guitars
Robin Vieler – bass, backing vocals
Daniel Müller – drums