Album Review – Penthos / Erevos (2025)

This Hellenic horde will darken the skies once again with their sophomore album, conceptually dealing with dark aspects of Greek mythology while sonically delivering Black Metal in the Scandinavian vein.

Having chosen the daimon of grief, despair, and sadness for their band’s name, Athens, Greece-based Black Metal horde Penthos will unleash hell once again armed with their sophomore offering, entitled Erevos (or έρεβος in Greek, which translated into English as “Erebus” literally means “darkness”), following up on their excellent 2022 self-titled debut. Consisting of nine bleak reveries drenched in murky atmosphere, the new opus by Apaisios on vocals and guitars, Vauban and JA also on the guitars, Zizka  on bass, and Algos on drums is an album which has traditional Black Metal written all over it. Regardless of the facts that they hail from Greece and the album conceptually deals with dark aspects of Greek mythology, Erevos doesn’t sound much Greek at all; rather than sonically following in the footsteps of Necromantia or Rotting Christ, the quintet chose to create Black Metal in the Scandinavian vein.

In ancient Greek, Nekyia (νέκυια) refered to a ritual or ceremony involving the evocation of the dead, often to gain knowledge or insight about the future, while in the album it’s an atmospheric and grim tune that works as an extended intro, haunting our souls before the band comes ripping with Dancing Dead, a lecture in old school Black Metal showcasing all elements we love in the genre, from the devilish gnarls by Apaisios to the visceral riffs by the band’s guitar trio, not to mention Algos’ obscure blast beats. Bloodstained Path is another blast of pure evil and darkness by such a talented horde, with the guitars by Apaisios, Vauban and JA sounding even heavier and more piercing, dragging us to the underworld together with them; followed by Όλεθρος (Olethros), which means “destruction”, “ruin”, or “perdition”, and can refer to both physical destruction and to spiritual ruin or death, carrying a connotation of the destruction necessary for renewal, but also implying a final, devastating end. Musically speaking, it’s just as infernal and visceral as its predecessors.

In Greek mythology, Thanatos is a figure who represents death, the son of Nyx (Night) and Erebos (Darkness), and the music couldn’t have sounded more demonic, with the Stygian, evil vocalizations by Apaisios exhaling Black Metal magic. Charon then offers six minutes of absolute darkness and chaos, with the classic blast beats and fills by Algos walking hand in hand with Zizka’s menacing bass while also presenting striking guitar lines and wicked solos for our total delight; followed by Lady in Black (Witch II), the most obscure song of the entire album hands down, with all band members transpiring pure Black Metal, in special Apaisios with his evil screams from the underworld. Echoes from the Sanatorium is another detailed, multi-layered fusion of classic Scandinavian Black Metal with their Greek twist, before the album ends with another demonic Black Metal attack entitled Forlorn Voyage, where their scathing riffs and rumbling bass and drums will pulverize your senses.

Listeners won’t find any anxious attempts at innovation on Erevos; instead, the album presents a professional studio production of over 40 minutes of well-composed Black Metal in the traditional way. Hence, go check what those ruthless Greek black metallers are up to on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their venomous music on Spotify, and of course put your damned hands on Erevos by purchasing it from the Darkness Shall Rise Productions’ BandCamp or webstore (in CD, LP, or cassette formats). Penthos are ready to spread their dark wings over the entire world of heavy music with their second black mass, opening the gates of hell to the sound of their Stygian arias and, consequently, bringing sheer doom and despair to our putrid hearts and souls in the name of classic Black Metal.

Best moments of the album: Dancing Dead, Thanatos and Lady in Black (Witch II).

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Darkness Shall Rise Productions

Track listing
1. Nekyia 4:01
2. Dancing Dead 4:55
3. Bloodstained Path 3:58
4. Όλεθρος (Olethros) 3:48
5. Thanatos 3:59
6. Charon 6:01
7. Lady in Black (Witch II) 4:42
8. Echoes from the Sanatorium 5:32
9. Forlorn Voyage 3:20

Band members
Apaisios – vocals, guitars
Vauban – guitars
JA – guitars
Zizka – bass
Algos – drums

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