Album Review – Blackbraid / Blackbraid III (2025)

Behold the stunning next chapter in the musical and spiritual journey of the witch hawk of Black Metal hailing from the Adirondack Mountains.

A solo indigenous Black Metal project from the depths of the Adirondack wilderness, creating music as raw and powerful as the mountains from whence it came, New York’s own Atmospheric Black Metal entity Blackbraid, the brainchild of the beyond talented vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Sgah’gahsowáh, is finally back with the highly anticipated follow-up to his critically acclaimed 2023 album Blackbraid II. Fully composed and performed by Sgah’gahsowáh, with drums, recording, mixing and mastering done by Neil Schneider (of the excellent bands Calling of Phasmic Presence, Diplegia, Telepathic Ceremony and Vintertodt), and displaying a stunning artwork with painting by Adam Burke of Nightjar Illustration and ilustration by Adrian Baxter, with visual development and graphic design by Wolf Mountain Productions, the breathtaking Blackbraid III is another beast of an album by our witch hawk Jon Krieger, showcasing a huge step forward in his already beautiful career and, therefore, resulting in a must-listen for fans of contemporary Atmospheric and Melodic Black Metal.

The acoustic, atmospheric intro Dusk (Eulogy) warms up our souls for the blackened feast titled Wardrums At Dawn On The Day Of My Death, with Sgah’gahsowáh powerfully declaiming the song’s dark and poetic words (“Awakened by a western wind / The blood of chaos seeps into dawn / A call to war in honor and death / The warrior’s fate to ride the storm / Ride”), always supported by Neil’s insane beats and fills. The Dying Death Of A Sacred Stag is another massive chant with pensive, introspective lyrics (“Upon a great throne of black mountains / Born in the heart of the storm / A keeper of shadow and twilight / A sentinel of lands long forlorn / Born within the eyes of the storm”) while our dauntless witch hawk keeps slashing his axe nonstop; and we’re then treated to the ethereal interlude The Earth Is Weeping before all hell breaks loose in God Of Black Blood, featuring a guest guitar solo by Randy Moore, a tribal, ruthless aria by Sgah’gahsowáh perfect for dancing and prancing around the fire like a true Native American.

It’s impressive how Sgah’gahsowáh can craft delicate yet obscure instrumental pieces like Traversing The Forest Of Eternal Dusk, setting the tone for the absolute demolishing Tears Of The Dawn, a lecture in Atmospheric Black Metal with the pounding drums by Neil walking hand in hand with the visceral roars and scorching riffage by Sgah’gahsowáh. Like Wind Through The Reeds Making Waves Like Water, the last interlude of the album, once again sounds enfolding, melancholic and whimsical, soothing our heats and souls before we face the flawless And He Became The Burning Stars…, one of the best Blackbraid songs of all time, with all harsh vociferations, scathing riffs and blast beats flowing perfectly until the very last second, taking us on a way one journey into the heart of the Adirondack Mountains. And finally, we have Fleshbound, an amazing cover version for a classic by Lord Belial, from their 2005 album Nocturnal Beast (check out the original HERE), and Sgah’gahsowáh’s rendition is just as visceral, aggressive and detailed.

Ready to embark on a North American headlining tour this year with support from Lamp of Murmuur, Dödsrit, and Gudsforlad, Sgah’gahsowáh and his Blackbraid are poised to conquer the entire world of heavy music with the third chapter in his musical and spiritual journey, and not only you can find the album in full on YouTube and on Spotify, but you should definitely purchase it from BandCamp or from the project’s official merch store in the United States or in the European Union. Don’t forget to also give Sgah’gahsowáh a shout on Instagram, and to stream all of his songs and albums on YouTubeSpotify or any other streaming service. Because the witch hawk of Black Metal is back, sounding heavier and more epic than ever, with the first-class music found in his new album majestically echoing through the misty mountains.

Best moments of the album: Wardrums At Dawn On The Day Of My Death, God Of Black Blood, Tears Of The Dawn and And He Became The Burning Stars…

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Independent

Track listing
1. Dusk (Eulogy) 1:02
2. Wardrums At Dawn On The Day Of My Death 4:54
3. The Dying Death Of A Sacred Stag 7:44
4. The Earth Is Weeping 3:39
5. God Of Black Blood 5:52
6. Traversing The Forest Of Eternal Dusk 3:39
7. Tears Of The Dawn 9:18
8. Like Wind Through The Reeds Making Waves Like Water 2:49
9. And He Became The Burning Stars… 9:50
10. Fleshbound (Lord Belial cover) 4:03

Band members
Sgah’gahsowáh – vocals, guitars, bass

Guest musicians
Neil Schneider – drums (session)
Randy Moore – lead guitars on “God of Black Blood”

Album Review – Necht / The Inevitable Suffering EP (2025)

This mysterious Symphonic Black/Death Metal cult returns with a scorching new EP presenting five “sermons” conjuring both the epic power of a cosmic battle and the grim reality of its earthly implications.

Following on quickly from their 2024 debut album The Prophecy of Karnifor, the mysterious Calgary, Alberta-based Symphonic Black/Death Metal cult Necht returns with a brand new EP, entitled The Inevitable Suffering. Operating jointly from the frozen wastelands of Canada and the damp gloom of Northern Ireland, the cult formed of Zenith Maharg on vocals, Ascendant Zhargor on the guitars, Ascendant демон on bass, and Ascendant Vlasfimos on drums presents in The Inevitable Suffering five “sermons” of Atmospheric Black Metal conjuring both the epic power of a cosmic battle and the grim reality of its earthly implications, each based on the myths and history of the Enkari – the early civilization from which the cult arose – as told in the controversial Enkari-B’ahn Scolls.

Like a creature arising from the underworld, the imposing, epic intro Over Ten Thousand Spears, B’ahn Rises Red kicks off Necht’s black mass before we face The Night That Knows No Dawn, starting in a cinematic manner and quickly exploding into the band’s trademark darkness led by the demented drumming by Ascendant Vlasfimos and the haunting gnarls by Zenith Maharg. Dread Is the Consort of the Dark is another harsh and infuriated display of Symphonic and Melodic Black Metal spearheaded by the Stygian riffage by Ascendant Zhargor, sounding perfect for a ceremonial black mass; and the visceral guitar lines by Ascendant Zhargor are boosted by the rumbling bass and drums by Ascendant демон and Ascendant Vlasfimos in As Oars Through Blood, offering Zenith Maharg exactly what he needs to darkly declaims the song’s impious words, morphing into the phantasmagorical outro …and so Across the Bloody Lake We Did Sail in Silence, putting a beyond obscure ending to one more successful gathering of the cult of the sun.

Such an amazing cult from the underground nailed it once again with The Inevitable Suffering, which is available for purchase from BandCamp or by clicking HERE, and for streaming on Spotify, and you can always join Necht and worship the sun together with them by following the cult on Facebook and on Instagram. “The Cult believed themselves to be spiritually bound to their sun-god, B’ahn, who was locked in a ceaseless battle for survival against His all-powerful mother, the Dragon Karnifor, as She sought to swallow Him and the world. The souls of dead Cultists could rise to join B’ahn in His struggle on the cosmic plains – and thus hold the Dragon back for just a little longer – but only if those Cultists died in battle. Thus, to the Cult, the only means to prevent the Apocalypse of the Dragon was, ironically, to prosecute an endless war on earth, which of course resulted in great misery for their people,” explained Zenith Maharg, leader of the Temple. “Thus, The Inevitable Suffering – for the Cult believed the suffering of war was fundamentally to be embraced as the only means of saving humanity.”

Best moments of the album: The Night That Knows No Dawn and Dread Is the Consort of the Dark.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Independent

Track listing
1. Over Ten Thousand Spears, B’ahn Rises Red 2:04
2. The Night That Knows No Dawn 6:08
3. Dread Is the Consort of the Dark 6:12
4. As Oars Through Blood 4:18
5. …and so Across the Bloody Lake We Did Sail in Silence 1:18

Band members
Zenith Maharg – vocals
Ascendant Zhargor – guitars, choir
Ascendant демон – bass, choir
Ascendant Vlasfimos – drums

Album Review – Eminentia Tenebris / Whispers of the Undying (2025)

This French Black Metal entity returns with its fourth studio album, formed of eight epic and melodic pieces centered around the exaltation of heroism and bravery within an ancient and mythical war-torn universe.

Founded in Le Mans, Pays de la Loire, France in 2020 as a one-man band by Cryo, Atmospheric/Melodic Black Metal entity Eminentia Tenebris is unleashing its highly anticipated fourth album, Whispers of the Undying, following up on its 2023 album Rise of a New Kingdom. Whispers of the Undying, which marks the arrival of Erroiak on vocals and Daeris as the lyricist, as well as Septev handling all mixing, mastering, and layout, and displaying a classy artwork by Rein Van Oyen, is formed of epic and melodic pieces centered around the exaltation of heroism and bravery within an ancient and mythical war-torn universe. The album title should be interpreted as a metaphor for a timeless force that endures through eternity (via “whispers”), representing the survival of heroic deeds in collective memory over time (and thus never dying, or “undying”).

The duo’s cryptic Black Metal attack begins in full force in Forever Etched, an extended intro that works majestically, warming us all up for Echoes of Triumph, where Cryo delivers striking riffs, bass lines and blast beats nonstop, therefore boosting Erroiak’s visceral roars to a whole new level, sounding vile while at the same time absolutely epic. The galloping pace crafted by Cryo sounds and feels truly inspiring in The Great Betrayal, with all background elements adding an extra touch of obscurity to the music, and after such a demonic metal attack the duo offers a delicate start in Beneath the Moon, gradually morphing into another Black Metal extravaganza led by Cryo’s venomous riffage.

Through Chaos and Shadow is a first-class explosion of Melodic and Atmospheric Black Metal by Eminentia Tenebris, with Erroiak proving why he was chosen by Cryo to be the new voice of the band; followed by Embers of Glory, presenting another gentle, serene intro that will embrace our blackened souls, an ode to heroism and glory, with Erroiak roaring amidst a fusion of Epic and Black Metal. Then we have Marching as One, bringing forward another round of their darkened, epic sounds, with Cryo’s riffs and blast beats walking hand in hand with Erroiak’s desperate gnarls; and lastly, the duo will head into the battlefield one final time to the sound of Time’s Cruel Reign, with Cryo’s Black Metal beats enhancing the song’s heaviness to a whole new level.

Ultimately, Whispers of the Undying questions the legacy one wishes to leave behind and pays tribute both to heroic figures and to the power of nature, before which humankind must remember to remain humble. Hence, if you want to experience such a harsh, detailed and multi-layered album of extreme music in all of its glory, you can purchase a copy of it from the project’s own BandCamp or from the Antiq Records webstore, and don’t forget to also check what Cryo and his Eminentia Tenebris are up to on Facebook and on Instagram, and to stream more of the project’s idiosyncratic creations on YouTube and on Spotify, or simply click HERE for all things Eminentia Tenebris. As the album progresses, the narrator transforms from a triumphant protector to a tormented soul, whose powerlessness in the face of time’s ravages leads him to self-reflection at the moment of death, and there’s nothing better than the first-class fusion of Atmospheric and Melodic Black Metal by Eminentia Tenebris to support his dark and infernal path.

Best moments of the album: Echoes of Triumph, Through Chaos and Shadow and Marching as One.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Antiq Records

Track listing
1. Forever Etched 1:43
2. Echoes of Triumph 4:26
3. The Great Betrayal 4:20
4. Beneath the Moon 5:21
5. Through Chaos and Shadow 4:35
6. Embers of Glory 5:05
7. Marching as One 4:44
8. Time’s Cruel Reign 5:04

Band members
Erroiak – vocals
Cryo – guitars, bass, drums

Album Review – Deciduous Forest / Fields of Yore (2025)

Behold the debut offering by this Australian lone wolf, guiding listeners on a richly atmospheric journey through memory, emotion, and myth.

As the creative vessel for Brisbane, Australia-based vocalist, multi-instrumentalist and composer Snjór, the stunning Atmospheric Black Metal entity Deciduous Forest guides listeners on a richly atmospheric journey through memory, emotion, and myth, offering deeply captivating immersive soundscapes where melancholy and grandeur coexist, weaving together elements of Atmospheric Black Metal, Neofolk, and cinematic ambient music. Recorded by Adam Merker at Anders Debeerz, mastered by Chris Themelco at Monolith Studios, featuring guest drummer Chris Chapman, and with photography by Snjór, layout by David Mir, and logo by Luke Mills, the enfolding Fields of Yore is the debut album by Snjór’s newborn solo endeavor, offers inspiring and emotionally charged music that stands firmly among the genre’s most evocative storytellers, being therefore perfect for fans of Agalloch, Wolves in the Throne Room, and Midnight Odyssey.

The Formless Dark is undoubtedly an imposing and enfolding tune by Snjór, with his keys adding an extra touch of epicness to the sound while Chris brings sheer heaviness through his beats, whereas Ghost Of Lies continues to pave the album’s darkened path, with Snjór’s visceral riffs and deep vociferations hammering our cranial skulls in the name of Atmospheric Black Metal, sounding even more Stygian than the opening tune. The song that carries the name of the album, Fields Of Yore, lives up to the legacy of Atmospheric Black Metal, sounding impressive from start to finish with its ethereal rhythm and classy keys, a multi-layered, dynamic and charming tune that will beautifully darken the skies for all eternity; followed by Ages Past, the longest song of the album, also offering an array of layers, striking roars and riffs, epic keyboards and Doom Metal-infused drums, dragging us into Snjór’s cryptic lair and embracing us in pitch black darkness. Lastly, Snjór brings some peace to our blackened hearts with Anemoia, starting in a beyond ethereal manner before morphing into a Blackened Doom-inspired aria.

In a nutshell, Fields of Yore is a richly textured and absolutely vibrant journey, sounding at the same time haunting and luminous, with the introspective beauty of the aforementioned Agalloch, the expansive bleakness of Wolves in the Throne Room, and the cosmic scope of Midnight Odyssey being all woven into one evocative sonority. Hence, you can get more details about Snjór and his Deciduous Forest from the project’s official Instagram, and of course grab a copy of such a unique and immersive album from BandCamp. If this is just the debut album by Deciduous Forest, I can’t even imagine what’s next in Snjór’s musical path, leaving us eager for more as we wander through his vast fields of yore.

Best moments of the album: Fields Of Yore and Ages Past.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Gutter Prince Cabal

Track listing
1. The Formless Dark 6:34
2. Ghost Of Lies 9:24
3. Fields Of Yore 12:16
4. Ages Past 13:25
5. Anemoia 5:08

Band members
Snjór – vocals, guitars, bass, keyboards

Guest musician
Chris Chapman – drums (session)

Album Review – Cromlech / Of Owls and Eels (2025)

A Teutonic entity arises from the underworld once again with its sophomore offering, transcending the limitations often associated with solo Black Metal projects.

Forged in the fires of Berlin, Germany back in the already distant year of 1994 by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Impurus (aka Eugen Herbst), of bands like Albez Duz, Dies Ater and Cryogenic, but remaining dormant for nearly 30 years until the release of its 2023 debut Cold and Stiff, the venomous Black Metal entity known as Cromlech (which means a megalithic construction made of large stone blocks) arises from the underworld once again with its sophomore offering, entitled Of Owls and Eels. While musically and atmospherically definitely being a Black Metal album, Of Owls and Eels is also a daring effort of a seasoned musician expressing himself in an authentic way without paying attention to genre conventions, bringing forth seven songs that completely transcend the limitations often associated with solo Black Metal projects.

The beyond cryptic and Stygian intro Old Incineration Hymn will embrace your soul in darkness before Impurus distills his venomous sounds in Past Forever, starting in a more than atmospheric way and surgically evolving into a Black Metal monster exhaling sheer darkness, with the eerie sounds and noises crafted by Impurus sounding truly unsettling. The title-track Owls in the Fog also brings forward Impurus’ trademark fusion of classic Black Metal with Atmospheric and Symphonic Black Metal, with his scathing riffage living up to the legacy of the genre. Impurus continues to growl in the name of extreme music in Ice Curse, also showcasing a potent amount of epicness and obscurity in his music; and then it’s time for an eerie interlude titled Eels (Part I), a bit too lengthy despite its introspective, cinematic vibe, flowing into The Quiet Witness, where Impurus goes full Blackened Doom, sending shivers down our spines while he extracts pure malignancy from his guitars, bass and drums, all boosted by his otherworldly keyboards, prepping us all for his final strike entitled Mordlust, a lecture in Black Metal where his vocals and keys once again clash in a beautiful way, sounding absolutely devastating until the very last second.

Dynamic, unpredictable, and unmistakably quirky, Of Owls and Eels proves that Germany is still fertile soil for Black Metal excellence, an album where cold blackened riffs and high-level drumming merge seamlessly with eerie keyboards and surreal, almost hallucinatory soundscapes, resulting in a journey through shadow, memory and dream. Just listen for yourself by purchasing the album from the Darkness Shall Rise Productions’ BandCamp or webstore, and don’t forget to also follow Impurus and his caustic Cromlech on Facebook and on Instagram, and to stream his creations on Spotify, keeping the fires of Teutonic Black Metal burning through the ages, as Impurus continues to pave the darkened path he started with this new album by Cromlech almost three decades after the project was born.

Best moments of the album: Owls in the Fog, Ice Curse and Mordlust.

Worst moments of the album: Eels (Part I).

Released in 2025 Darkness Shall Rise Productions

Track listing
1. Old Incineration Hymn 2:00
2. Past Forever 7:09
3. Owls in the Fog 6:35
4. Ice Curse 5:44
5. Eels (Part I) 3:51
6. The Quiet Witness 7:19
7. Mordlust 6:36

Band members
Impurus – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Khôra / Ananke (2025)

Behold this lecture in Atmospheric and Progressive Extreme Metal infused with grandiose orchestrations, endless darkness and energy, and beautiful musicianship.

What started in 2012 in Germany by multi-instrumentalist Ole (of bands like Autokrator, Lycanthropy and Deathstruck) as a one-man project has now turned into a force to be reckoned with in the extreme music scene worldwide. Currently located in Dublin, Ireland, Atmospheric and Progressive Black/Death Metal entity Khôra (in Plato’s account, Khôra is neither being nor nonbeing but an interval between in which the “forms” were originally held) has just unleashed their sophomore opus, entitled Ananke, a more-than-worthy follow-up to their 2020 debut Timaeus. Recorded at Studio Henosis (vocals), Perdition Studio (guitars), Stemcellar Studio (bass), Trackmix Studio (drums), and Steamsaw Studio (orchestrations), mixed and mastered by Frederic Gervais at Studio Henosis, and showcasing a darkly hypnotizing artwork by Simon Chognot of Cold Mind Art, the new album by Ole on the guitars and drums alongside Frédéric (Orakle) on vocals, Göran (Setherial, Svartghast) on bass, and Kjetil (Profane Burial, Haimad) on keyboards and orchestrations, plus an array of special guests including Rune ‘Blasphemer’ Eriksen (Mayhem), Kristian Niemann (Therion), Wolfgang Rothbauer (Thirdmoon), and André ‘Cosmocrator’ Søgnen (The Wretched End), among others, is a lecture in Extreme Metal infused with grandiose orchestrations, endless darkness and energy, and beautiful musicianship, or in other words, a must-listen for fans of the genre.

Featuring a guest guitar solo by Blasphemer (Aura Noir, Vltimas), atmospheric and captivating sounds permeate the air in Empyreal Spindle, exploding into a dark yet very technical feast of Progressive Black Metal led by Ole’s intricate beats and fills. Then we have Legion of the Moirai, with guest vocals by Arnhwald R. (Deathcode Society), sounding even more imposing and somber, with all background orchestrations blackening the skies while Frédéric roars and barks manically nonstop; followed by Wrestling with the Gods, featuring a guest guitar solo by Kristian Niemann (Sorcerer), another striking fusion of Progressive Black and Death Metal where the riffs and bass by Ole and Göran, respectively, exhale aggressiveness, melody and groove. And guest Bill Kranos (Arkhangelsk, Savaoth) delivers striking vocals and a wicked guitar solo in In the Throes of Ascension, a slab of sheer brutality and darkness with Ole stealing the spotlight with his inhumane drumming.

The band then fires a beyond cryptic and epic interlude titled Arcane Creation, setting the stage for the unrelenting On a Starpath, with the harsh vocals by guest Wolfgang Rothbauer (In Slumber, Thirdmoon) crushing your spinal cord mercilessly while the clean vocals by Frédéric and the keys by Kjetil are a lecture in Progressive Metal. It’s pedal to the metal in the infuriated The Sentinel, spearheaded by Ole’s demented vocals and infernal beats while Göran keeps hammering his bass in the name of heavy music; and their Black Metal vein pulses even harder in Supernal Light, with Kjetil  embellishing the airwaves with his keys and orchestrations. The last song of the album, entitled Crowned, offers more of the bands Stygian sounds infused with tons of progressiveness and heaviness, even presenting elements from Doom Metal, a stylish and embracing aria by Ole and his henchmen flowing into the cinematic outro Q.E.D, which puts a sinister, Mephistophelian ending to such a fantastic opus.

You can enjoy this precious gem of the underground metal scene in all of its glory on YouTube and on Spotify, and of course show your total support to Khôra by purchasing the album from the Les Acteurs de l’Ombre Productions’ BandCamp or webstore. The guys from Khôra, who are also waiting for you on Facebook with more nice-to-know information about the band, simply nailed it with Ananke, raising the bar high for their upcoming releases without a shadow of a doubt, and positioning their newborn spawn as one of the best and most diverse and dynamic albums of the year.

Best moments of the album: Legion of the Moirai, In the Throes of Ascension, The Sentinel and Crowned.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Les Acteurs de l’Ombre Productions

Track listing
1. Empyreal Spindle 5:18
2. Legion of the Moirai 4:39
3. Wrestling with the Gods 3:57
4. In the Throes of Ascension 3:54
5. Arcane Creation 2:33
6. On a Starpath 4:08
7. The Sentinel 4:01
8. Supernal Light 4:33
9. Crowned 6:47
10. Q.E.D 1:19

Band members
Frédéric – vocals, additional effects
Ole – guitars, drums, vocals on “The Sentinel”
Göran – bass
Kjetil – keyboards, orchestrations, effects

Guest musicians
Blasphemer – guitar solo on “Empyreal Spindle”
Daniel Müller – bass on “Empyreal Spindle” and “Legion of the Moirai”
Cosmocrator – effects on “Empyreal Spindle” and “Q.E.D”
Arnhwald R. – vocals on “Legion of the Moirai”
PJ O’Connell – guitar solos on “Legion of the Moirai”, “On a Starpath” and “Supernal Light”
Kristian Niemann – guitar solo on “Wrestling with the Gods”
Bill Kranos – vocals on “In the Throes of Ascension”, effects on “Wrestling with the Gods”, guitar solos on “In the Throes of Ascension”, “The Sentinel” and “Crowned ”
Wolfgang Rothbauer – harsh vocals on “On a Starpath”

Album Review – Vyr Muk / Crimson Fields of Sorrow (2025)

This dauntless Ukrainian lone wolf returns with a harsh and visceral new album, a raw and atmospheric journey through desolation, sorrow, and the decaying remnants of civilization.

A musical project of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Vladyslav Blizniuk from Kharkiv, Ukraine which debuted in 2023, Black/Death Metal entity Vyr Muk, or “whirlpool of torment” from Ukrainian, focuses on dark, deep themes including suffering, personal struggles, and the Russian invasion of Ukraine, making it a very personal and intimate project. Mixed and mastered at Anti Social Riddim Studios, and displaying a sinister artwork by Oleksandr Koval, the project’s brand new opus, titled Crimson Fields of Sorrow, is a logical continuation to its 2024 EP Shadows Falling on The Dead Cities, offering us all a raw and atmospheric journey through desolation, sorrow, and the decaying remnants of civilization, immersing the listener in a sonic battlefield where each track is a blade forged from chaos, cutting through the veil of illusion and apathy.

The visceral riffs by Vladyslav will cut your skin deep in Voracity / Ненажерливість, already offering a phantasmagorical, haunting blend of Black Metal boosted by his devilish gnarls and endless obscurity; whereas after a serene yet dark piano intro we’re treated to a Melodic and Atmospheric Black Metal aria titled Cold Steel / Холодна сталь, again translating his personal struggles into captivating extreme music. The harsh vociferations by our lone wolf set the tone in The Era of Rot / Епоха гнилі, where once again he invests in a sharp, austere sonority led by his scorching riffs and blast beats. And get ready for a nine-minute voyage through the realms of darkness and solitude to the sound of Bitterness of Loss / Горіч втрати, starting in an enfolding and melancholic manner, presenting elements of Doom Metal added to its drums and cadaverous guitar lines. Vladyslav’s horror movie-inspired keys darken the skies in the closing tune Oh How It Was / Ой як же було, an instrumental feast of Symphonic Black Metal that sounds as epic as it is cinematic.

Exploring themes of war, existential decay, and inner torment, with lyrics presented in Ukrainian, Crimson Fields of Sorrow (already available in full on YouTube and on Spotify) is a ritual of grief and defiance, a hymn for the fallen and a curse upon the void, and you can put your damned hands on such a personal and acid album by purchasing it from BandCamp or by clicking HERE. Don’t forget to also follow the multi-talented Vladyslav and his Vyr Muk on Instagram, showing your support not only to Ukrainian extreme music, but to Ukraine as a whole during such difficult times to their citizens. Because Crimson Fields of Sorrow is not just music. It is a howl from the void. It is struggle, grief, and truth, and you should definitely give it a listen to be part of that harsh yet unique sonic experience.

Best moments of the album: Voracity / Ненажерливість, The Era of Rot / Епоха гнилі and Bitterness of Loss / Горіч втрати.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Independent

Track listing
1. Voracity / Ненажерливість 6:04
2. Cold Steel / Холодна сталь 6:28
3. The Era of Rot / Епоха гнилі 6:32
4. Bitterness of Loss / Горіч втрати 9:00
5. Oh How It Was / Ой як же було 4:37

Band members
Vladyslav Blizniuk – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Spiritwood / The Apparition of Horns (2025)

This Finnish Black Metal entity arises once again with a sulfurous new album, a deep plunge into the experimental and avantgarde abyss, where every note is a lament and every silence, an omen.

From the deepness of the eternal night, Finnish Atmospheric Black Metal entity Spiritwood rises from the underworld with a brand new album titled The Apparition of Horns, the project’s sixth studio album delivering an aural ritual of isolation and decay enfolded by an avantgarde fusion of Atmospheric Black Metal with Doom Metal and occult mysticism, all masterfully crafted by the lone wolf known as Mr. Spiritwood. A deep plunge into the experimental and avantgarde abyss, where every note is a lament and every silence, an omen, the album is highly recommended for fans of Burzum, Blut Aus Nord, Shining, Dolorian, Leviathan, Gehenna, and Darkspace, among others, intertwining the coldness of nature with echoes of suffocating anguish.

Mr. Spiritwood wastes no time and fills every single space in the air with his vile gnarls and atmospheric sounds in Woodland Meditation, as raw and phantasmagorical as it can be, followed by the title-track The Apparition of Horns, a lecture in classic Black Metal with atmospheric and doom influences, with the dirty guitars by our lone wolf exhaling sulfur. Harbinger of Scourges sounds even more sluggish, grim and devilish, with the pounding drums by Mr. Spiritwood smashing our souls mercilessly, whereas in The Circle we’re treated to truly cryptic, haunting lyrics (“It accentuates the rotting bodies / And their pervasive aura of death / Eventually tightening the grip like the beast on it’s prey / Call to erase the memories of those already abandoned / Fell whispers that brought you and your kind here / Nothing but carrion under the veil of dusk / Succumbed and quiet empty souls / Haunting in oblivion”) amidst a Stygian wall of sounds. Such a demonic being speeds things up in Ascending Through the Contours of Emptiness, also vociferating with tons of anguish and darkness in his heart, flowing into the obscure and piercing closing tune Diagrams of the Dying Multiverse, with his visceral riffs and drums matching perfectly with his devilish gnarls.

A dreadful atmosphere where philosophy and wilderness collide in pure, unearthly darkness, the follow-up to the project’s 2023 album Plaguescape Dimensions definitely showcases a macabre evolution in the music by Mr. Spiritwood, who’s awaiting for you at his lair on Facebook and on Instagram, and of course you can join him in absolute darkness by purchasing his excellent new album by clicking HERE. Grim, obscure and eerie sounds set the tone throughout The Apparition of Horns, spreading sulfur across the earth and, consequently, inspiring Mr. Spiritwood to drag more and more unbelievers to the darkest side of music with his creations.

Best moments of the album: The Apparition of Horns, The Circle and Diagrams of the Dying Multiverse.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Loudriver Records

Track listing
1. Woodland Meditation 6:44
2. The Apparition of Horns 7:48
3. Harbinger of Scourges 7:02
4. The Circle 5:32
5. Ascending Through the Contours of Emptiness 8:35
6. Diagrams of the Dying Multiverse 9:24

Band members
Mr. Spiritwood – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Wurmian / Immemorial Shrine (2025)

Enter the shrine of first-class Melodic Death and Doom Metal crafted by this one-man project from France, and let the echoes from his debut album guide you on a brooding and immersive journey through sorrow, introspection, and existential desolation.

Founded in 2024 by Antoine Scholtès, the mastermind behind Atmospheric Black Metal project Inherits The Void, Clermont-Ferrand, Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes, France-based act Wurmian emerges with a mission to resurrect the essence of classic Melodic Death and Doom Metal. Drawing inspiration from the melancholic and introspective tones of bands like October Tide, Horrified, and Edge of Sanity, the project’s debut offering, titled Immemorial Shrine, embraces the duality of soaring melodies and crushing heaviness. Mastered by Simon Da Silva at The Empty Hall Studio, and displaying a classic logo by Dipayandas Art and a stunning, doomed artwork by Silvana Massa, Immemorial Shrine is a somber odyssey into solitude and decay, a brooding and immersive journey through sorrow, introspection, and existential desolation, turning it into a compelling listen for fans of both classic and modern death and doom.

Antoine begins embellishing the airwaves with his melodious guitar lines in Aeon Afterglows, reminding me of both old school and contemporary Paradise Lost with a harsher twist; whereas in the title-track Immemorial Shrine he showcases all his passion for Black and Death Metal without forgetting to add a good share of Doom and Gothic Metal to his sound, and the final result is simply beautiful. His Melodic Doom Metal attack goes on in Haven, with his guttural vocals and pounding drums being perfect for some sick headbanging, and our lone wolf speeds things up in Spires of Sorrow, offering a rawer, more direct Death Metal attack led by his classic beats and fills. Then back to a more pensive, melancholic sonority, Antoine roars with tons of anguish in Yearning Unseen, also delivering piercing, sharp riffs, followed by Sleeping Giants, another stunning composition by this multi-talented French musician that overflows Atmospheric Black and Death Metal for our total delight. And the closing song of the album, The Everflowing Stream, is another lecture in Doom Metal, with Antoine enhancing the acidity of his riffs and the depth of his Stygian roars for our vulgar delectation.

In the end, prepare to embark on a melancholic odyssey that echoes the spirit of the 90’s Death and Doom Metal while forging a path into the present in Immemorial Shrine, already available in full on YouTube and on Spotify. Hence, don’t forget to follow the project on Facebook and on Instagram for news, and maybe some live performances in the future in case Antoine assembles a live band for his shows, and above all, to purchase  Immemorial Shrine from  Wurmian’s own BandCamp or from the Pest Records’ BandCamp, or simply by clicking HERE. After all is said and done, simply enter the shrine of first-class Melodic Death and Doom Metal crafted by Wurmian. Let the echoes guide you.

Best moments of the album: Immemorial Shrine, Haven and Sleeping Giants.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Pest Records

Track listing
1. Aeon Afterglows 4:55
2. Immemorial Shrine 4:54
3. Haven 6:33
4. Spires of Sorrow 4:36
5. Yearning Unseen 5:27
6. Sleeping Giants 5:21
7. The Everflowing Stream 7:19

Band members
Antoine Scholtès – vocals, all instruments