Album Review – Enragement / Extinguish All Existence (2025)

Playing their own blend of Technical and Brutal Death Metal, this Finnish entity will extinguish all existence to the sound of their invigorating and powerful new album.

Playing their own blend of Technical and Brutal Death Metal that’s insanely heavy and yet incredibly varied, Helsinki, Finland-based entity Enragement returns with their fourth full-length beast, an invigorating, powerful expression that ticks all the boxes entitled Extinguish All Existence. Following up on their 2022 album Atrocities, and showcasing a sinister artwork by Daemorph Art, the new album by Atte Ojanne and Tuomas Iivanainen on vocals and guitars, Juhana Korkka Heinonen on vocals and bass, and Lasse Sannikka on drums is a striking depiction of the band’s raw power, aggression and versatility, cementing their name not only in the local Finnish scene, but also everywhere else in the world where the fusion of violence and dexterity is truly appreciated.

Lasse shows no mercy for our souls and begins blasting his drums in Vorarephilia, a demented onrush of Technical Death Metal boosted by the band’s deranged growls and screeches, and things get even more serious and intricate in Abyssal Hellscapes, with the strident guitar lines by Atte and Tuomas bringing an extra dosage of violence to the band’s already demonic sounds. Then a Doom Metal-infused intro morphs into another killer attack by Enragement titled Pathogenesis, where their sulfurous vociferations match perfectly with the finesse and rage flowing from their riffs and solos; whereas the quartet keeps smashing our frail bodies with their blend of Death Metal in Parasitic Ingress, with Lasse once again sounding inhumane behind his drums, followed by Harbingers of Degradation, one of the heaviest, most infuriated songs of the album while also presenting extremely detailed and complex lines, with Lasse stealing the spotlight with his ruthless drumming.

Vesuvius is perhaps the “weakest” of all songs, although it’s still a pulverizing display of the band’s core Technical Death Metal, and it’s pedal to the metal in the technical yet venomous Hypercarnivorous, with the guitar duel by Atte and Tuomas exhaling heaviness and intricacy in an overdose of sonic madness by those talented Finnish metallers. After that, an infuriated attack of harsh growls, blast beats and razor-edged riffs will penetrate deep inside your soul in Insectiferous Abomination, living up to the legacy of complex and violent extreme music, and it’s time to break our necks headbanging to the utterly heavy Natural Mass Asphyxiation, with Juhana and Lasse making sure the earth trembles to the sound of their vicious kitchen. Then we have the title-track Extinguish All Existence closing the album on the most demented note you can think of, where the entire band sounds infernally awesome and with Atte, Tuomas and Juhana bursting their lungs screaming in the name of Death Metal.

In a nutshell, Enragement have struck the right balance with Extinguish All Existence, making their album satisfying, interesting, and also hugely enjoyable, in special for admirers of the bestial music crafted by Cutterred Flesh, Devourment, Abominable Putridity, Blood Red Throne, Katalepsy, Benighted, and Aborted, just to name a few. You can find more details about such an amazing Finnish band on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their awesome music on Spotify, and above all that, show them your utmost support by purchasing their new album from their BandCamp or from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main store, US store or EU store. It’s time to extinguish all existence, and the music found in the new album by Enragement will most definitely work as a great soundtrack for the cleansing of our putrid and decaying world.

Best moments of the album: Abyssal Hellscapes, Harbingers of Degradation and Extinguish All Existence.

Worst moments of the album: Vesuvius.

Released in 2025 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. Vorarephilia 3:49
2. Abyssal Hellscapes 3:58
3. Pathogenesis 4:15
4. Parasitic Ingress 3:42
5. Harbingers of Degradation 3:37
6. Vesuvius 4:06
7. Hypercarnivorous 3:46
8. Insectiferous Abomination 3:49
9. Natural Mass Asphyxiation 3:34
10. Extinguish All Existence 5:22

Band members
Atte Ojanne – vocals, guitar
Tuomas Iivanainen – vocals, guitar
Juhana Korkka Heinonen – vocals, bass
Lasse Sannikka – drums

Album Review – Monument of Misanthropy / Vile Postmortem Irrumatio (2024)

Austria’s own ruthless Technical/Brutal Death Metal titans return with an even more infuriated concept album, this time revolving around the life of serial killer Ed Kemper.

Formed in 2010 in the stunning city of Vienna, Austria, Technical/Brutal Death Metal titans Monument of Misanthropy return once again with a sickening concept album based on a serial killer, and this time it revolves around Ed Kemper. The album is titled Vile Postmortem Irrumatio, which is Latin for “a cheap postmortem raid”, where the band formed of vocalist George “Misanthrope” Wilfinger (Miasma, Raising The Veil), guitarists Julius Kössler (Spire of Lazarus) and Joe Gatsch (Scävenger), bassist Raphael Hendlmayer, and session drummer Eugene Ryabchenko (Fleshgod Apocalypse) delves into aspects of his life, using violent music to add meaning to it; their visceral and incisive music with highly expressive vocals perfectly capturing the terrifying aura around the figure, all embraced by a disturbing artwork by Daemorph Art (The Last of Lucy, Cutterred Flesh), being highly recommended for fans of Cattle Decapitation, Benighted, Aborted, Blood Red Throne, and Depravity, among others.

The wicked intro First Time It Makes You Sick to Your Stomach offers a sinister narration that will warn you of all the violence that’s about to come in How to Make a Killer, blasting our ears with an overdose of brutality with Eugene pulverizing everything and everyone that crosses his path, and with the venomous growling by George being the icing on the cake in such an amazing display of Brutal Death Metal. The same level of gore and dementia is offered to us all in The Atascasdero Years, with the guitars by Julius and Joe enhancing George’s vile gnarls to a whole new level, whereas Hits One and Two is utterly inspired by the sick creations by the mighty Cattle Decapitation, a lesson in violence while also sounding very technical and intricate. Why Did You Keep Their Heads is another eerie, visceral interlude that will send shivers down your spine until Manipulating the Experts explodes in our faces in another onrush of demonic Technical Death Metal, with George once again haunting our souls with his grim gnarling.

After that, the title-track Vile Postmortem Irrumatio will smash you like a putrid and gory insect, with the band’s fusion of enraged roars, striking riffs and solos, and stone crushing drums sounding fantastic form start to finish; whereas the band continues their path of extreme aggression and insanity in The Devil’s Slide, with the infuriated blast beats by Eugene inviting us all to the eye of the circle pit. Not sure if another interlude was necessary, although Oh, I Suppose You’re Gonna Want Sit Up and Talk All Night Now makes sense taking into account the album’s theme, morphing into A Nice Beheading for MoM, where the riffage and solos by Julius and Joe bring a welcome melodic touch to their infernal music. Then the massive kitchen by Raphael and Eugene will make your head tremble in Pueblo Paranoia, almost four minutes of unhappy, demonic Brutal Death Metal, flowing into their cover version for Dying Fetus’ Your Treachery Will Die with You (check the original one HERE, from their 2009 album Descend into Depravity), and the band’s rendition of it is just as demented and violent.

The guys from Monument of Misanthropy are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, tour dates and so on, on YouTube and on Spotify with more of their caustic music, and if you want to put your hands on the excellent Vile Postmortem Irrumatio you can purchase it from their BandCamp page, from Transcending Obscurity Records by clicking HERE, HERE or HERE, or click HERE for all things Monument of Misanthropy. Big Ed and the boys are inviting you for a gruesome and sick party in their excellent new album, overflowing brutality while at the same time being an amazing and detailed work musically speaking, and I don’t think you should miss it or the same Big Ed will definitely pay you a not-so-friendly visit when you least expect.

Best moments of the album: How to Make a Killer, Hits One and Two and Vile Postmortem Irrumatio.

Worst moments of the album: Oh, I Suppose You’re Gonna Want Sit Up and Talk All Night Now.

Released in 2024 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. First Time It Makes You Sick to Your Stomach 0:39
2. How to Make a Killer 3:13
3. The Atascasdero Years 3:12
4. Hits One and Two 2:46
5. Why Did You Keep Their Heads 0:55
6. Manipulating the Experts 3:12
7. Vile Postmortem Irrumatio 2:52
8. The Devil’s Slide 3:08
9. Oh, I Suppose You’re Gonna Want Sit Up and Talk All Night Now 1:20
10. A Nice Beheading for MoM 3:06
11. Pueblo Paranoia 3:55
12. Your Treachery Will Die with You (Dying Fetus cover) 3:37

Band members
George “Misanthrope” Wilfinger – vocals
Julius Kössler – guitars
Joe Gatsch – guitars
Raphael Hendlmayer – bass

Guest musician
Eugene Ryabchenko – drums (session)