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 – Morbific / Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh (2025)

This rotten-to-the-core Death Metal trio from Finland is back with their ruthless third studio album, their best, darkest and most disgusting melding of form and content to date.

A rotten-to-the-core, festering, mouldering and disgusting Death Metal trio (de)formed in the filthy and profaned boneyard of Kitee, Finland in early 2020, featuring Jusa Janhonen on vocals and bass, Olli Väkeväinen  on the guitars, and Onni Väkeväinen on drums, Morbific are ready to demolish our putrid souls with their third full-length album, titled Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh, a ruthless display of classic Death Metal that follows up on the horror and insanity of their 2021 debut Ominous Seep of Putridity and their 2022 sophomore album Squirm Beyond the Mortal Realm. Recorded by Jesse Räsänen at Vaskela Metal Forgery, produced by Morbific, mixed by the band’s own Jusa Janhonen, mastered by Mikko Saastamoinen, and displaying a sick cover art by Chase Slaker (with additional art by Martyrdoom Illustrations), Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh is undoubtedly Morbific’s best melding of form and content, conveying its dark, disgusting, and unconventional aura across every element.

A sinister intro quickly explodes into a filthy, raw Death Metal attack titled Smut Club (For the Chosen Scum), with Jusa roaring deeply supported by the bestial drums by Onni, and the trio goes full Death Metal in Panspermic Blight, pounding our putrid souls with their scorching riffs and demented beats and vociferations. Menagerie of Grotesque Trophies carries a beautiful title for a display of pure savagery, with the gore infested guttural by Jusa sending shivers down our spines; followed by Promethean Mutilation, living up to the legacy of 90’s Death Metal, sounding ruthless and vile with Olli extracting sheer aggression from his riffs and solos. And Womb of Deathless Deterioration (Trapped in the Essence of Putrescence) is another slab of brutality by Morbific, exhaling heaviness thanks to the grim roars by Jusa, despite sounding a bit generic if compared to the previous songs.

Then the Stygian, horror movie-like interlude Stifling Stagnant Reek will darken your minds and thoughts before Crusading Necrotization brings forward the trio at their most inhumane shape and form, blending their core Death Metal with the obscurity of Blackened Doom. Hydraulic Slaughter also showcases a “charming” name for a beyond heavy and demonic tune led by the razor-edged riffage by Olli; whereas From Inanimate Dormancy offers our damned ears almost six minutes of violence and gore blasted by the band, or in other words, it’s a headbanging tune led by the infernal growling by Jusa. Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh (A Travesty of Human Anatomy) is yet another six-minute descent into a world of violence and obscurity, with the crushing drums by Onni hammering our cranial skulls nonstop in great fashion, and last but not least, they still have energy left for one final attack titled Slithering Decay, offering two minutes of classic Death Metal spearheaded by Olli’s savage riffs.

The unrelenting, filthy Finnish bastards of Morbific are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with more of their gore infested music, their tour dates and so on, and don’t forget to also stream all of their demented creations on Spotify or on any other platform available out there. Furthermore, in order to show them your utmost support and your deep passion for Death Metal, you can purchase a copy of the infernal Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh from their own BandCamp or from the Me Saco Un Ojo Records’ BandCamp, proving you’re a loyal servant of all things Death Metal. I guess it won’t take long for us to hear from Morbific again in the near future, blasting our faces with another slab of violence and gore like what’s found in their new album, and I bet you’re all eager for more of the depraved music crafted by such an amazing trio from Finland.

Best moments of the album: Panspermic Blight, Promethean Mutilation and Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh (A Travesty of Human Anatomy).

Worst moments of the album: Womb of Deathless Deterioration (Trapped in the Essence of Putrescence).

Released in 2025 Memento Mori/Me Saco Un Ojo

Track listing
1. Smut Club (For the Chosen Scum) 3:48
2. Panspermic Blight 3:51
3. Menagerie of Grotesque Trophies 4:35
4. Promethean Mutilation 3:29
5. Womb of Deathless Deterioration (Trapped in the Essence of Putrescence) 5:04
6. Stifling Stagnant Reek 1:25
7. Crusading Necrotization 4:16
8. Hydraulic Slaughter 3:53
9. From Inanimate Dormancy 5:58
10. Bloom of the Abnormal Flesh (A Travesty of Human Anatomy) 6:01
11. Slithering Decay 2:04

Band members
Jusa Janhonen – vocals, bass
Olli Väkeväinen  – guitars, backing vocals
Onni Väkeväinen – drums

Album Review – Ritual Ascension / Profanation of the Adamic Covenant (2025)

This cryptic American Abstract Death/Doom Metal outfit will drag you further down the abyss to the sound of their anti-religious and blasphemous concept debut full-length monstrosity.

Coalesced around 2023, after Minneapolis, Minnesota’s own Death/Doom Metal beast Aberration completed their debut album, when three of its members, D.H. (Silurian, Suffering Hour) on vocals, J.H. (Annihilation Cult, Feral Light, Void Rot) on the guitars and bass, and E.C. (Annihilation Cult, Feral Light, Umbral Twilight) on drums and percussion, reconvened to continue creating together and to keep pushing their deviant ideas forward, American Abstract Death/Doom Metal outfit Ritual Ascension is unleashing upon us all their horrendous debut full-length monstrosity, Profanation of the Adamic Covenant. Recorded by Adam Tucker at Signaturetone Recording, mixed by D.H. at Black Dust Studios, mastered by Will Killingsworth at Dead Air Studios, and displaying a cryptic, grim artwork by Belial NecroArts, the album takes the masterful death-doom horror of early Temple Nightside and Grave Upheaval, and transfigures it further into the darkest abysses of surrealism.

The bells are tolling in the name of obscure music, opening the gates of the underworld to the gargantuan, venomous gnarls by D.H. in Womb Exegesis, a Blackened Doom aria where E.C. hammers his drums like a demonic entity. The same devilish aura from the opening track permeates the air in Pillars of Antecedence, even more sluggish and grim thanks to the slow and steady beats by E.C. while J.H. extracts minimalist yet visceral riffs from his axe, followed by Cursed Adamic Tongues, the shortest song of the album, and also the most punishing, violent one, with D.H. gnarling like a true demon while J.H. and E.C. build a beyond ruthless atmosphere. Then like the soundtrack to a black, sulfurous cult, the trio delivers the disturbing Consummation Rites, offering us all over ten minutes of apocalyptic passages, somber riffs, vile roars and endless despair; and last but definitely not least, Ritual Ascension will take us on a one-way trip to the netherworld in Kolob (At the Throne of Elohim), a massive wall of Doom and Death Metal masterfully crafted by the trio, spearheaded by the always caustic, austere riffs by J.H. armed with his venomous axe.

Not only the music by Ritual Ascension is harsh and disturbing, but Profanation of the Adamic Covenant is also an anti-religious, blasphemous, behemoth concept album dealing with some of the darkest and most sinister aspects in the history and theology of the so called Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (also known as the Mormon Church), and shaped by direct experiences by some of the band members themselves within said religious movement as well, inviting the listeners to a wild, sinister musical journey while casting them further down the abyss, into a bottomless sepulcher of confusion and of complete chthonic torment. Having said all that, you can find more information about such a distinct trio of death and doom on Instagram, and purchase a copy of their caustic debut from the Sentient Ruin Laboratories’ BandCamp or webstore, feeding your inner demons with their chaotic music while you enjoy your eternal descent into the abyss.

Best moments of the album: Pillars of Antecedence and Kolob (At the Throne of Elohim).

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Sentient Ruin Laboratories

Track listing
1. Womb Exegesis 9:02
2. Pillars of Antecedence 8:58
3. Cursed Adamic Tongues 5:24
4. Consummation Rites 10:52
5. Kolob (At the Throne of Elohim) 13:22

Band members
D.H. – vocals
J.H. – guitars, bass
E.C. – drums, percussion

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 – Infirmum / From The Depths I Cried (2024)

This Finnish Symphonic Doom Metal band returns with their captivating sophomore album, offering an atmospheric journey through the darkest corners of the human soul.

Formed in early 2019 in the Finnish city of Jyväskylä, Symphonic Doom Metal outfit Infirmum has been approaching the genre in a unique and complex way with a sound that explores aspects of classical music combined with the traditional weight and melancholy of doom, having already released their debut album Walls of Sorrow, in 2020, followed by the EP The Great Unknown, in 2022. Now in 2024, the band formed of Sabine Blodwin (Moonwitch, Draconian Opera, Pettalom) on vocals, Taka Eliel (Sanctuary of Hate) on vocals and bass, Erna Siikavirta (Lordi, Children of Bodom, Sinergy, Arthemesia, Deathlike Silence) on keyboards, Joonas Siikavirta (Begrim) and Timo Solonen (Grain of Pain) on the guitars, Hanna-Leena “Hanska” (Mourning Wood) on drums, and Elya on cello is unleashing their sophomore opus, titled From The Depths I Cried, pointing to an exciting new direction in their career. Recorded by the band itself, mixed by Tuomas Kokko at Electric Fox Studios, and mastered by Samu Oittinen at Fantom Studio, the album brings forward heavy music that can be described as profound and conflicted, exploring the darkest sides of human emotions, diving into the depths of madness, pain, sickness, and death, while still finding brief moments of hope, offering an atmospheric journey through the darkest corners of the human soul.

Eerie sounds gradually grow in intensity in the sluggish, grim and visceral opening track Pact until the phantasmagorical keys by Erna give the song a strong Doom Metal vibe, with the vocal duet of Sabine and Taka sounding truly haunting, whereas the following tune, titled Everlasting, begins in a even more obscure way, again presenting cryptic background elements before Hanna-Leena begins hammering her drums in the name of doom and with Taka gnarling like a demonic entity nonstop, not to mention how melodic and melancholic the cello by Elya sounds and feels. Then the band goes full Blackened and Funeral Doom in Burn, sounding as heavy as it can be to the massive drums by Hanna-Leena and the guttural roars by Taka.

Deception is another eight-minute feast of darkened sounds with an enfolding atmosphere, with Sabine hypnotizing us all with her darkly melodic vocals supported by the band’s classic riffs and the always charming cello by Elya; and the crying sound of the cello sets the tone in Peace, taking the song’s melancholy to a whole new level. Furthermore, the name of the song is deceiving as the peace they’re singing about might be just outside, while inside you can feel all of their grief and pain. It’s then time for Infirmum to blast their heaviest sonority in Ephemeral, with the sharp riffs by Timo and Joonas walking hand in hand with the hammering drums by Hanna-Leena, while Erna and Elya build a whimsical background to add extra layers to their music. Lastly, a ritualistic start morphs into one final shot of doom by Infirmum titled Icamiabas, with the keys by Erna exhaling obscurity. It’s not the strongest song of the album, but still a decent one to conclude the band’s black mass.

Not many bands can blend the ethereal sounds of Symphonic Metal with the sheer heaviness of Doom Metal like what Infirmum have to offer in their new album (already available in full on Spotify), and you can show your support and admiration for such an amazing band from the land of ice and snow by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, and above all that, by grabbing a copy of From The Depths I Cried from BandCamp, from Record Shop X, or by clicking HERE. As mentioned, Infirmum are exposing the darkest sides of human emotions in their newborn spawn, inviting us all for a one-way trip to the depths of doom.

Best moments of the album: Everlasting, Deception and Ephemeral.

Worst moments of the album: Icamiabas.

Released in 2024 Independent

Track listing
1. Pact 9:01
2. Everlasting 7:57
3. Burn 5:18
4. Deception 8:07
5. Peace 8:28
6. Ephemeral 7:51
7. Icamiabas 5:46

Band members
Sabine Blodwin – vocals
Taka Eliel – harsh vocals, bass
Timo Solonen – guitars
Joonas Siikavirta – guitars
Erna Siikavirta – keyboards
Hanna-Leena Lassila – drums
Elya – cello

Album Review – Gutvoid / Breathing Obelisk EP (2024)

One of the best still-young Death Metal entities from Canada challenges you to stand before their Breathing Obelisk.

Since their formation in 2019, the ascent of Toronto, Canada’s Death Metal entity Gutvoid has been nothing if not meteoric. From their 2019 debut EP Astral Bestiary to their 2022 full-length opus Durance of Lightless Horizons, the band churned forth a world-eating metal of death that duly devoured the listener whole. Currently formed of Brendan Dean on vocals and guitars, Daniel Bonofiglio also on the guitars, Justin Boehm on bass, and D.W. Lee on drums, the band is unleashing upon us their brand new 31-minute EP Breathing Obelisk, a grim and visceral creature embraced by the otherworldly artwork by Marcio Blasphemator that will surely cement their status as one of the best still-young Death Metal entities around.

Those four demented metallers transport us to their Stygian realm with their minimalist notes in Swamp Consumed, gradually evolving into a darkened Death Metal entity to the visceral roars by Brendan and the hammering drums by D.W. Lee, presenting elements from Doom Metal and Blackened Doom embedded in their core (and evil) essence, whereas For We Are Many, the first single of the album (which they played live with Tomb Mold and Horrendous in Toronto), is a lecture in Progressive Death Metal sounding dissonant, intricate and disturbing, with Brendan and Daniel making an amazing guitar duo while Justin supports them with his menacing bass (not to mention it’s easy to sense elements from Brendan’s Fathomless Ritual in the riffs). Let’s then embark on one more cryptic, grim voyage together with Gutvoid in When The Living Dome Opens, again presenting their trademark vociferations, low-tuned, groovy bass lines and pounding drums, sounding dark and evil until the very end; and the last song of the EP, entitled Shodar, offers us all seven minutes of solid, melodic and visceral Death Metal led by the strident riffs by Brendan and Daniel, an awesome headbanging feast by the quartet where Brendan continues to deeply gnarl like a demonic entity.

After all is said and done, Gutvoid challenge you to stand before their Breathing Obelisk, and you can do that by following them on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, by listening to their wicked music on Spotify, and by purchasing a copy of their new EP from Blood Harvest’s BandCamp page or webstore as a CD, a MLP or a cassette. In other words, do you think you have what it takes to face Gutvoid’s menacing and caustic Breathing Obelisk?

Best moments of the album: For We Are Many and Shodar.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 Blood Harvest

Track listing
1. Swamp Consumed 9:50
2. For We Are Many 5:51
3. When The Living Dome Opens 7:20
4. Shodar 7:03

Band members
Brendan Dean – vocals, guitars
Daniel Bonofiglio – guitars
Justin Boehm – bass
D.W. Lee – drums

Album Review – Darkflight / Entropy (2024)

This Bulgarian doom trio will darken your senses with their fifth full-length album, a monumental work of sadness and despair taking the listener on a soul reaping journey through afterlife and purgatory.

Formed in the already distant year of 2000 in the city of Varna, Bulgaria, crafting a hybrid of Blackened Doom with fantasy-influenced lyrics, the unyielding Atmospheric Black/Doom Metal entity Darkflight has just unelashed upon mankind their fifth full-length opus, titled Entropy, following up on their 2017 album The Hereafter. Stronger than ever, and showcasing a melodic brilliance, the album proves that the band has matured and created a monumental work of sadness and despair, taking the listener on a soul reaping journey through afterlife and purgatory, all carefully brought into being by Milen Todorov on vocals and bass, Ivo Iliev on the guitars and synths, and Valentin Deskov on drums, being therefore perfect for admirers of the music by My Dying Bride, Anathema, and Katatonia.

The band’s obscure, old school Doom Metal feast begins with the lugubrious A Sad Place to Call Home, with Valentin delivering those traditional sluggish beats, darkening the skies while Milen declaims the song’s deep lyrics with tons of passion. Second Genesis is even more melodic, whimsical and atmospheric, blending the finesse of Atmospheric Black Metal with nuances of Progressive Rock while Ivo sounds fantastic on the guitars, delivering an amazing solo halfway through it; and  a mysterious female guest vocalist bring an extra touch of finesse to So Much to Tell, a beautiful ballad by Darkflight that brings melancholy and hope to our blackened hearts, whereas more of their fusion of rock and metal sounds is offered to us all in Vague Echoes, with the soothing guitars and synths by Ivo sounding very comforting and enfolding.

Then a pensive, deep start to the passionate vocals by Milen kick off the also embracing tune Buried Together, a beautiful ballad led by the intense vocals by Milen, while Rebirth follows a similar pattern, being at the same time dark, atmospheric and mesmerizing, with Ivo having an amazing performance with his piano and synths, or in other words, it’s definitely a song to listen to together with your loved ones. Your Time Has Passed is a more straightforward tune by Darkflight, bringing forward their trademark dark sounds infused with Gothic Rock and Metal elements, also offering another blast of Milen’s ethereal vocal lines while Valentin dictate’s the song’s gorgeous pace behind his drums. They keep embellishing the airwaves with their Atmospheric Black, Doom and Gothic Metal in Towards the Ruins, where once again Ivo and Valentin generate the perfect ambience for Milen to shine on vocals; and closing the album the trio offers more of their soothing, penetrating sounds in the form of Be Well, not as amazing as the rest of the album but still a solid ballad by those Bulgarian rockers.

In a nutshell, Entropy is a very well-crafted and detailed journey through the realms of Atmospheric Black and Doom Metal that truly deserves a full listen by any fan of good heavy music, and if you also want to know more about Darkflight, their tour dates and plans for the future, you can start following the band on Facebook, stream their music on Spotify or any other streaming service, and above all that, grab a copy of their striking new album from Symbol of Domination’s BandCamp page. The dark, pensive and mournful musical journey crafted by Darkflight in their new album will simply crush your hearts and souls, positioning them as one of the must-see names of the Bulgarian scene, and adding an extra layer of doom to the metal community worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Second Genesis, Vague Echoes and Your Time Has Passed.

Worst moments of the album: Be Well.

Released in 2024 Symbol Of Domination/Australis Records

Track listing
1. A Sad Place to Call Home 6:02
2. Second Genesis 6:40
3. So Much to Tell 4:40
4. Vague Echoes 5:40
5. Buried Together 4:45
6. Rebirth 4:52
7. Your Time Has Passed 3:38
8. Towards the Ruins 5:36
9. Be Well 5:00

Band members
Milen Todorov – vocals, bass
Ivo Iliev – guitars, synths
Valentin Deskov – drums

Album Review – Funeral Winds / 333 (2024)

Dedicated to the one whose name is three hundred and thirty three, the eighth studio opus by this unstoppable one-man army offers us all raw and cold Black Metal that throws the grit right in your face.

“This album is dedicated to He, whose name is three hundred and thirty three, and that thrice one.”

Poisonous and true Black Metal to the bones, the Stygian, irreligious one-man Black Metal entity Funeral Winds is the true essence of Black Metal music, staying loyal to to the original values of Black Metal, hateful and relentlessly contemptuous in sound and vision, since the project’s inception in Rotterdam, in the Netherlands, in the now distant year of 1991. Now in 2024 the unstoppable vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Hellchrist Xul (aka Maurits Jansen) returns from the pits of the underworld with his devilish eighth studio opus, titled 333, which refers to the Dweller in the Abyss, the Demon of Dispersion, also known as Choronzon. Seen as the last great obstacle between the adept and enlightenment, Choronzon needs to be faced to be able to move beyond the Abyss. Stylistically, 333 is raw and cold Black Metal that throws the grit right in your face, a worthy follow-up to all of the previous efforts brought into being by Hellchrist Xul and his Funeral Winds.

The winds of Black Metal bring to our putrid ears the venomous opening tune Sovereign of Shadows, where Hellchrist Xul doesn’t waste a single second and begin to roar manically while also offering his usual infernal riffage, exploding into the vile and obscure Eternal Nightmare, an overdose of Black Metal insanity hitting us hard with its demonic guitars and bass, pounding drums, and a strong sense that all hope is lost and that we must all succumb to the void. Cast the Gauntlet of Doom sounds even darker than its predecessors, a haunting chant where Hellchrist Xul delivers Doom Metal-inspired sluggish beats while he keeps vociferating in the name of pure evil; followed by Ancient Wrath Unleashed, a brutal Black Metal attack that exhales heaviness and sulfur, with the strident riffs by Hellchrist Xul walking hand in hand with his classic blast beats.

In The Damned Ones Shall Rise we face nonstop savagery and sulfur flowing from all instruments, another classic Funeral Winds composition that lives up to the legacy of old school Black Metal; whereas Forever Cursed and Bound brings forward four minutes of absolute evil where the project’s core Black Metal is complemented by a grim Blackened Doom vibe, perfect for banging your head in total darkness. Then get ready to be dragged into the Stygian realm ruled by Funeral Winds in Birthed By Pure Malevolence, a nonstop, visceral Black Metal onrush with Hellchrist Xul enhancing the animosity of his harsh gnarls to a whole new level. And last but not least, Hellchrist Xul will darken the skies for all eternity with the seven-minute aria Conjuration of the Blind One, with the howling winds once again opening the gates of the underworld for Hellchrist Xul’s diabolical vociferations, flowing in a vile and somber manner while also bringing forward bursts of old school Black Metal, ending in a beyond phantasmagorical vibe.

Hellchrist Xul is undoubtedly an unstoppable force of the Black Metal scene, with 333 being an amazing depiction of al his passion for the style, his talent and his hard work. Hence, don’t forget to give him and his Funeral Winds a shout on Facebook and on Instagram, to subscribe to his YouTube channel and to stream his wicked creations on Spotify, and obviously to purchase a copy of the sulfurous 333 from his own BandCamp page, from the Osmose Productions’ BandCamp page, or simply by clicking HERE. Dedicated to the one whose name is three hundred and thirty three, the new album by Funeral Winds is a continuation of Hellchrist Xul’s descent into the underworld, cementing his name as one of the driving forces of the underground scene and setting the stage for a new chapter in the coming years, remaining always true to the foundations of our beloved Black Metal.

Best moments of the album: Eternal Nightmare, Ancient Wrath Unleashed and Birthed By Pure Malevolence.

Worst moments of the album: Cast the Gauntlet of Doom.

Released in 2024 Osmose Productions

Track listing
1. Sovereign of Shadows 4:01
2. Eternal Nightmare 6:02
3. Cast the Gauntlet of Doom 4:01
4. Ancient Wrath Unleashed 4:53
5. The Damned Ones Shall Rise 3:52
6. Forever Cursed and Bound 4:07
7. Birthed By Pure Malevolence 4:23
8. Conjuration of the Blind One 7:11

Band members
Hellchrist Xul – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Bull of Apis Bull of Bronze / The Fractal Ouroboros (2023)

A rising force in the American Black Metal scene returns with their stunning, antifascist sophomore album, a brief on occult liberation in seven parts.

Playing what they like to label as “Antifascist Black Metal Liberation Rituals”, the cryptic Colorado, United States-based Black Metal entity Bull of Apis Bull of Bronze stands as a knife pointed to the throat of any who seek to maintain the oppressive systems of white supremacy and fascism that continue to fester in our societies. Formed of Achaierai (aka Cooper Stapleton) on vocals and synths, Athshean (aka Dylan Rupe) on the guitars, bass, harmonium and synths, and Yaeth (aka Jon Lervold) on drums, the band is unleashing upon our rotten society their sophomore opus, titled The Fractal Ouroboros, the follow-up to their 2019 effort Offerings of Flesh and Gold. Mixed and mastered by Jon Lervold at Big Name Recording Studio, and displaying a stunning artwork by Alex CF, The Fractal Ouroboros is as grim and dark as it’s delicate and touching, being a must-listen for admirers of classic Black Metal with a strong atmospheric and epic vein.

As if a ritual was about to begin, tribalistic drums and eerie sounds permeate the air in the opening aria Trophy, growing in intensity until exploding in a dissonant, visceral Black Metal extravaganza led by the harsh roars by Achaierai and the piercing riffs by Athshean, while also morphing into an atmospheric creature during its last part before all erupts once again as majestic Black Metal. Their mysterious, uncanny Black Metal feast goes on in A History of Cages and Broken Bones, with the sinister riffs by Athshean making a beautiful paradox with the Blackened Doom drums by Yaeth; and the guitars by Athshean will darken your thoughts in Suffocate O Earthen Lungs; They Now Lungs of Ash, also showcasing flammable words majestically growled by Achaierai (“A fire to burn our beginning away / A fire to erase the roots / A fire to destroy indigene / A fire to keep us gasping”), whereas the Atmospheric Black Metal tune Annihilation starts in an ethereal, enigmatic vibe and moves on in a smooth and compelling manner, with Achaierai delivering his deepest, most delicate clean vocals while declaiming the song’s poetic lyrics (“The sunset fires catch / The dust, hanged throughout the air / Screaming glints against a bruising sky”).

More of the trio’s tribal sounds are offered to the listener in Liberation Ritual, an extended interlude that will drag your soul to their Stygian realm, sounding absolutely hypnotizing and working perfectly as the predecessor to Our Overt Apocalypse, bringing forward 13 minutes of dark passages, somber nuances and pensive tones,  with Yaeth sounding bestial behind his drums and, therefore, adding an extra touch of heaviness and insanity to the music while Achaierai continues to bark and roar nonstop. Not only that, the song also offers several different layers, breaks, variations and everything else we love in Atmospheric Black Metal, not to mention how devilish the riffage by Athshean feels. Lastly, Bull of Apis Bull of Bronze will attack our senses one final time with 15 minutes of first-class Black Metal titled Ekstasis, Enstasis, and The Fractal Ouroboros, with Achaierai leading his bandmates with his desperate screams while Athshean and Yaeth sound absolutely demolishing and ruthless with their riffs, bass lines and pounding drums, resulting in a fantastic and climatic conclusion to the album that leaves us eager for more of their music in a not-so-distant future.

“Over three years in the making, The Fractal Ouroboros is the embodiment of grief, catharsis, and empowerment”, commented the band about their imposing new album, and if you want to know more about this multi-talented American trio you can find them on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their music on Spotify, and of course grab your copy of the demolishing The Fractal Ouroboros from their own BandCamp page, as well as from the Vita Detestabilis Records’ BandCamp page, from the Fiadh Productions’ BandCamp page, or from Apple Music. Dismantle the police, dismantle all prisons, protect trans kids, black lives matter, indigineous voices matter. This is Bull of Apis Bull of Bronze, and they’re among us to open our eyes against all that’s wrong in our world with The Fractal Ouroboros, a brief on occult liberation in seven parts that will help them easily cement their names in the Black Metal scene worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Trophy, Suffocate O Earthen Lungs; They Now Lungs of Ash and Ekstasis, Enstasis, and The Fractal Ouroboros.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Vita Detestabilis Records/Fiadh Productions

Track listing
1. Trophy 11:52
2. A History of Cages and Broken Bones 6:49
3. Suffocate O Earthen Lungs; They Now Lungs of Ash 10:51
4. Annihilation 9:41
5. Liberation Ritual 5:49
6. Our Overt Apocalypse 13:31
7. Ekstasis, Enstasis, and The Fractal Ouroboros 15:57

Band members
Achaierai – vocals, synths
Athshean – guitars, bass, harmonium, synths
Yaeth – drums