Album Review – Foetorem / Incongruous Forms Of Evergrowing Rot (2026)

Erupting from the depths of Denmark with a new onslaught of putrid Death and Doom Metal, this ruthless creature will unleash hell armed with their debut full-length offering.

Erupting from the depths of Kolding, Denmark with a new onslaught of putrid Death and Doom Metal, sounding heavier, darker and more merciless than before with riffs dripping decay, drums pounding like collapsing stone and vocals dredged from the deepest rot, the ruthless creature known as Foetorem (which translates to “stench of decay”) is unleashing hell with their debut full-length opus, poetically titled Incongruous Forms Of Evergrowing Rot. Recorded, mixed and produced by the band’s own Daniel Farre and Claus Andersen, mastered by Dan Lowndes at Resonance Sound Studio, and displaying a sinister artwork by N. Zuki of Belial NecroArts, with logo by Giancarlo Melgar and layout by Alice Mingotti and Giorgio Spewo, the newborn spawn by the aforementioned Claus Andersen and Daniel Farre on vocals and guitars, alongside Ric Broe Goldschmidt on bass and Geistaz on drums, spews psalms of death that drag the listener into miasmic landscapes, conjuring abhorrent visions of human ruination, becoming a must-listen for fans of Spectral Voice, Krypts, Mortiferum, and Hooded Menace, just to name a few.

The quartet shows no mercy for our putrid bodies and kick off their soul devouring feast with Reeks of Moldy Guts, where the vocals by Claus and Daniel are absolutely haunting from start to finish, and their violent Death Metal vein explodes in Escalating Rot, led by the caustic riffage by Claus and Daniel while Geistaz sounds like a stone crusher on drums. In Oozing With Pustulent Fluids the sound is just as carnivorous as the title, with the menacing bass by Ric walking hand in hand with another ruthless drumming by Geistaz in a lecture in extreme music made in the beautiful Denmark; followed by Mors Viaturis – the Death Traveler, perhaps the most Doom Metal of all songs, as sluggish and grim as it can be albeit a bit tiresome in the end.

Then after the cryptic interlude Grotesque Decomposition we face a wall of brutality and hatred in the form of Rebirth in Morbid Disgust, alternating between the sheer savagery of Death Metal and the gloomy heaviness of Doom Metal, all spiced up by another cadaverous vocal performance by Claus and Daniel. After that, it’s time for the skies to go pitch black to the sound of Tapestries of Misery, offering total doom annihilation to our putrid ears while Geistaz dictates the pace with his devilish beats. Claus, Daniel and Ric’s stringed attack bring forward their most deranged, metallic and thunderous sounds in Decay of the Flesh, sounding brutal and relentless from start to finish, followed by Peeled Face Mask, presenting one last blast of their ass-kicking hybrid of Death and Doom Metal, and leaving us completely disoriented after all is said and done.

A suffocating surge of filth sharpened into pure ruin, showcasing no light, no hope, only the stench of inevitable collapse rising, Incongruous Forms Of Evergrowing Rot can be purchased via mailorder or BandCamp, and you can also join Foetorem in absolute darkness on Facebook and on Instagram, and stream their obscure music on any platform like Spotify. Foetorem stand on the verge of their most defining chapter yet, promising to expand their oppressive sonic palette, delving deeper into the putrid atmospheres and melodic decay that have become their signature, and if you nurture a deep passion for extreme music, you’re certainly in for a treat.

Best moments of the album: Escalating Rot, Rebirth in Morbid Disgust and Decay of the Flesh.

Worst moments of the album: Mors Viaturis – the Death Traveler.

Released in 2026 Everlasting Spew Records

Track listing
1. Reeks of Moldy Guts 5:13
2. Escalating Rot 4:44
3. Oozing With Pustulent Fluids 4:26
4. Mors Viaturis – the Death Traveler 5:35
5. Grotesque Decomposition 0:31
6. Rebirth in Morbid Disgust 5:15
7. Tapestries of Misery 5:10
8. Decay of the Flesh 3:55
9. Peeled Face Mask 5:38

Band members
Claus Andersen – vocals, guitars
Daniel Farre – vocals, guitars
Ric Broe Goldschmidt – bass
Geistaz – drums

Album Review – Papa Necrose / Anthropomorphy Execution (2026)

This ruthless Death Metal beast from Brazil is ready to unleash hell once again with their third full-length opus, delivering sharp criticism of religion, world wars, and the darker trajectories of power and authority.

Formed in 2010 in the harshest corners of Salvador, the capital of Brazil’s northeastern state of Bahia, the ruthless Death Metal beast known as Papa Necrose is ready to unleash hell once again with their third full-length opus, poetically entitled Anthropomorphy Execution, following up on their 2021 sophomore Open Infected Body. Recorded, mixed and mastered at Evil Live Studios, with drum editing by Hugo Elias (Infected Cells), and showcasing a sinister cover art by Alex Shadrin of Nether Temple Design, the new album by frontman Alessandro Necrose , guitarists Carlos Silva and Danilo Vagner, bassist Éric Gusmão, and drummer Luquian Silva marks a moment of maturation for the band, keeping their raw, aggressive style intact while also exploring more complex song structures, technical riffing, and layered compositions influenced by the most technical 90’s Death Metal the likes of Death’s Human and Pestilence’s Testimony of the Ancients. Lyrically, the album delivers sharp criticism of religion, focusing on the role of Catholicism in historic humanitarian crises, world wars, and the darker trajectories of power and authority.

Carlos and Danilo begin slashing their axes in great fashion in Fall, Die, and Break, and when Luquian starts hammering his drums it’s absolute hell and chaos, followed by Disenchant Them, another bestial Death Metal extravaganza with a strong Thrash Metal vibe, with Éric pounding his bass while Alessandro roars like a rabid creature. Then after the phantasmagorical, eerie (but not very exciting) interlude Between Voices and Fear, we’re treated to the title-track Anthropomorphy Execution, a ruthless tune where Éric’s bass sounds absolutely metallic, providing the band’s guitar duo with exactly what they need to fire their deadly riffs; and they speed things up and get even more infuriated in the Death Metal attack titled Bleeding Social Membrane, led by another infernal vocal performance by Alessandro.

Hammered in the Mind lives up to the legacy of 90’s Death Metal while also presenting the band’s own technical and even progressive twist, while in Eighteen Years Awake we face pure violence and hatred flowing from all instruments, in special from the nonstop, savage drums by Luquian. Cathedral of Death sounds absolutely fast, furious and demented from start to finish, with Alessandro barking like a rabid entity while his bandmates offer a killer fusion of rage and dexterity; whereas in Silenced by Death all cryptic background sounds and other elements add an extra touch of darkness to their core Death Metal. Finally, we’re invited to one final mosh pit in The Thousand Yard Gaze, featuring a guest guitar solo by James Murphy (Death, Obituary, Cancer), with Éric and Luquian bringing forth their most intricate sounds of the entire album for our total delight.

Delivering scorching riffs, crushing drums, and an atmosphere designed for those who crave the raw edge of the genre since their inception, Papa Necrose tackle human contradictions, religious hypocrisy, war, death, and other societal ills through their music, exposing the underbelly of the world we live in, exactly like what they have to offer in their new album. Having said that, if you want to join such a talented Death Metal army and experience their rebellious music in all of its glory, you can find those Brazilian death dealers on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their demented sounds on Spotify, and above all, purchase the excellent Anthropomorphy Execution from the Awakening Records’ BandCamp and Big Cartel. Religion, war, death and power have always been a dangerous combination, and albums like Anthropomorphy Execution by Papa Necrose are among us to prove once and for all that Death Metal will forever be the best way to channel all that evil in a positive and exciting way.

Best moments of the album: Bleeding Social Membrane, Eighteen Years Awake and Cathedral of Death.

Worst moments of the album: Between Voices and Fear.

Released in 2026 Awakening Records

Track listing
1. Fall, Die, and Break 4:52
2. Disenchant Them 4:31
3. Between Voices and Fear 1:10
4. Anthropomorphy Execution 5:08
5. Bleeding Social Membrane 7:19
6. Hammered in the Mind 3:38
7. Eighteen Years Awake 4:43
8. Cathedral of Death 4:05
9. Silenced by Death 4:09
10. The Thousand Yard Gaze 6:50

Band members
Alessandro Necrose – vocals
Carlos Silva – guitar
Danilo Vagner – guitar
Éric Gusmão – bass
Luquian Silva – drums

Guest musician
James Murphy – guitar solo on “The Thousand Yard Gaze”

Album Review – Decipher / ΘΕΛΗΜΑ (Thelema) (2026)

Almost three years after the release of their dark and sinister debut, this Greek Blackened Death Metal horde returns from the pits of the underworld with their sophomore black mass.

Almost three years after the release of their dark and sinister debut Arcane Paths to Resurrection, Athens, Greece-based Blackened Death Metal horde Decipher returns from the pits of the underworld with their sophomore black mass, entitled ΘΕΛΗΜΑ, or Thelema, a Greek word meaning “will,” “desire,” or “purpose,” used in philosophy and religion (especially biblical contexts for God’s will). Featuring a Stygian artwork by Artem Grigoryev (Dödsrit, Nightbringer), the new opus by Kostas Gerochristos (Lucifer’s Child) on vocals and guitars, Kostas Xatzis also on the guitars, Kostas Ragiadakos (Dephosphorous) on bass, and Nodas Chatzopoulos on drums elaborate on the music forged on their debut album, adding better nuance and structure to the songs whilst retaining the sound and appeal. Allowed better expression, the songs are comparatively longer and have a narrative quality to them without straying too far from the core sound.

The quartet summons the powers of the dark spirits already in Return to Naught, where their Rotting Christ and Behemoth inspirations clash in a stunning way, led by the devilish growling by Kostas Gerochristos. Then Nodas takes control of the band’s Black Metal sound armed with his hammering beats in The Black March, supported by the stringed attack by his bandmates, and their caustic riffs ignite the no shenanigans Blackened Death Metal beast Seven Scars, the most aggressive of all songs, with Kostas Gerochristos roaring like a rabid creature. Nodas keeps the atmosphere as grim and violent as possible in Bound to the Wheel,  a classic Black Metal tune boosted by the band’s Greek spices, whereas their Hellenic vein gets even stronger in Hail Death, with their strident, piercing riffs once again sending shivers down our spines. Kostas Gerochristos and Kostas Xatzis continue to extract Black and Death Metal energy from their guitars in Towards Renaissance, supported by the rumbling bass by Kostas Ragiadakos, morphing into the cryptic instrumental outro Litany, putting a sinister ending to their black mass.

In summary, the music found in ΘΕΛΗΜΑ is the kind of Black Metal that gets its priorities straight, with the right focus on riffs, feeling, intensity, and passion, being therefore highly recommended for admirers of the dark arts crafted by Emperor, Yoth Iria, Bolzer, Lucifer’s Child, Varathron, Necromantia, Ravencult, and Dodsferd, among others. You can find those Greek black metallers on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with their news and live concerts, stream their obscure sounds on Spotify, and purchase your copy of their flammable new album from their own BandCamp or from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main store, US store or EU store. Because in the end, God’s will doesn’t really matter in heavy music. It’s the majestic Black Metal played by bands like Decipher in their new album that truly does.

Best moments of the album: Return to Naught, Seven Scars and Hail Death.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. Return to Naught 4:29
2. The Black March 7:08
3. Seven Scars 5:53
4. Bound to the Wheel 6:05
5. Hail Death 7:43
6. Towards Renaissance 6:47
7. Litany 4:51

Band members
Kostas Gerochristos – vocals, guitars
Kostas Xatzis – guitars, backing vocals
Kostas Ragiadakos – bass
Nodas Chatzopoulos – drums

Concert Review – Lamb of God (Great Canadian Toronto, Mississauga, ON, 03/20/2026)

Metalheads from all over the GTA walked with Lamb of God in hell once again on a fantastic Friday night of pure heavy music.

OPENING ACTS: Sanguisugabogg, Fit For An Autopsy and Kublai Khan Tx

After a full day of rain in Toronto and vicinities, the weather finally settled down closer to the evening, and it was only slightly cold (for Canadian standards, of course, as it was still very cold for anyone else) when the almighty LAMB OF GOD took the always welcoming Great Canadian Toronto by storm with their undisputed North America 2026 Tour, featuring the more than special guests SANGUISUGABOGG, FIT FOR AN AUTOPSY and KUBLAI KHAN TX, on a night of pure adrenaline and a celebration of heavy music. It was a true honor for Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I to cover such an amazing night, and as the show at the casino was one hundred percent SOLD OUT, you can imagine how much fun everyone who attended the show had inside the massive circle pits formed during all four concerts.

It was around 7pm when Columbus, Ohio’s own Brutal Death Metal/Deathcore entity SANGUISUGABOGG kicked off the party with their vicious attack. Having released the excellent Hideous Aftermath in 2025, available on both BandCamp and Spotify, the band formed of the unstoppable frontman Devin Swank, guitarist Drew Arnold, bassist Ced Davis, and drummer Cody Davidson put on a phenomenal performance onstage, already inspiring the crowd to headbang and slam like true metalmaniacs until the very last second. What a wild kickoff, with the very romantic songs Face Ripped Off and Dead as Shit making the entire casino shake. I’m sure Sanguisugabogg will return to Toronto with their undisputed violence sooner than you can say their name, spell their name, or read their logo. Any of these work.

Setlist
Rotted Entanglement
Face Ripped Off
Felony Abuse of a Corpse
Abhorrent Contraception
Dead as Shit

Band members
Devin Swank – vocals
Drew Arnold – guitars
Ced Davis – bass
Cody Davidson – drums

The bar was set super high with Sanguisugabogg, but of course nothing that New Jersey’s own Death Metal/Deathcore beast FIT FOR AN AUTOPSY couldn’t take care of armed with their venomous and melodic brutality. Frontman Joe Badolato was having an amazing time onstage “managing” the vicious circle pit going, and the crowd roared back at him during their incendiary performance. Playing songs from their already solid discography (available on Spotify), including some killer tunes from their latest opus The Nothing That Is, from 2024, those being Lower Purpose, Hostage, and Savior of None / Ashes of All, the band delivered everything their fans were expecting and more, with the intense crowd surfing getting to a point I lost count of how many of the “banana boys” crossed my path after letting their peels being touched by all fans inside the pit. Maybe I should say the entire venue went bananas during Fit For An Autopsy, right?

Setlist
Lower Purpose
It Comes for You
The Wretch
Black Mammoth
Hostage
Savior of None / Ashes of All
Warfare
Pandora
Far From Heaven

Band members
Joe Badolato – lead vocals
Pat Sheridan – guitars, backing vocals
Tim Howley – guitars
Will Putney – guitars
Peter “Blue” Spinazola – bass
Josean Orta – drums

Although I’m familiar with the music by Texan Metalcore ensemble KUBLAI KHAN TX, I didn’t know they were so famous and loved by the Toronto fans. Every single person in the room was having an amazing time during their performance, singing all songs along with the band led by the charismatic Matt Honeycutt. The guy didn’t stop a single second onstage, and that obviously translated into a lot of action inside the pit. In addition, it’s impressive how heavy their kitchen formed of bassist Eric English and drummer Isaac Lamb sounds, in special the utterly thunderous bass by Eric. The guy was making my chest tremble with his jabs. If you know nothing about those talented and humble guys, you can check their ass-kicking music on Spotify, like their 2024 album Exhibition of Prowess, but get ready as they will smash your cranial skull mercilessly.

Setlist
Darwinism
Supreme Ruler
Low Tech
Antpile
Boomslang
The Hammer
The Mountain of Corsicana
Antpile 2
Self-Destruct
Mud
Swan Song
Theory of Mind

Band members
Matt Honeycutt – vocals
Nicholas Adams – guitar, backing vocals
Eric English – bass, backing vocals
Isaac Lamb – drums

LAMB OF GOD

At long last, it was time to walk with Richmond, Virginia’s own Groove Metal masters LAMB OF GOD in hell during their absolutely heavy, vibrant and flammable performance. Having released the phenomenal Into Oblivion just a week before the show (available on Spotify and also on the special Into Oblivion website), the band fronted by the iconic D. Randall “Randy” Blythe showed no mercy for our necks and bodies with another killer performance in Canadian lands. It’s so cool how Lamb of God moved from a small venue like The Opera House when they first played in Toronto years and years ago, to selling out such a massive venue like the casino. To be fair, that’s expected when the music in question is so good, catchy and electrifying.

Randy was on fire during their entire show, as well as his bandmates, with Mark Morton and Willie Adler showing why they’re two of the best metal guitarists of the current scene. John Campbell and his trademark headbanging were also excellent, not to mention Art Cruz delivered a striking drum solo for our total delight. Before the show, he hid a few drumsticks around the venue for fans to try to find them, an initiative that I personally considered very cool (despite the fact I couldn’t find any of them). All that talent made their already amazing songs like Ruin, Laid to Rest and 11th Hour sound even stronger live, driving fans wild during their entire set, and maybe because it was a Friday night at a venue with no curfew we were also treated to a classic that hadn’t been played before Friday, the awesome Omerta.

Their new songs also sounded incredible, in special the infuriated Parasocial Christ, making the circle pit move even faster. There were some tunes that were screamed by the entire crowd together with the band, like 512, Walk With Me in Hell, and Memento Mori, three of my favorite Lamb of God songs, and you can imagine how happy I was seeing so many fans from all ages having such a great time with Randy and his henchmen. And as the icing on the cake, we could all scream, raise our fists, headbanging and jump up and down together with the boys during their metal masterpiece Redneck, putting a beyond epic and climatic ending to the show.

I wish I could have stayed longer at the casino after the show to eat something and maybe even try my luck, but the lines to get into the casino were insane. I’m not complaining, as I love the fact a metal concert can make a casino so busy and vibrant, and I can’t wait to enjoy one of the best venues in the GTA again in a few weeks. Anyway, back to the concert, it’s more than obvious that it won’t take long for Lamb of God to return to the city as they’re undoubtedly one of Toronto’s favorite metal acts. I dare to say they’re THE favorite metal band of a huge chunk of the new-ish generation of metalheads, and as Randy himself said in a recent interview, just like he wants to keep playing with Lamb of God until his last breath, we also want to headbang with Lamb of God until ours.

Setlist
Ruin
Laid to Rest
Blood Junkie
Into Oblivion
Resurrection Man
Grace
Desolation
512
Walk With Me in Hell
Parasocial Christ
Omerta
11th Hour

Encore:
Memento Mori
Sepsis
Redneck

Band members
D. Randall “Randy” Blythe – vocals
Mark Morton – guitar
Willie Adler – guitar
John Campbell – bass
Art Cruz – drums

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Album Review – Engorgement / They Rot Beneath Our Floor (2026)

More than thirteen years on from the release of their horrifying debut, UK’s own Brutal Death Metal machine is finally back with a new assault on morality, enlightenment and good taste.

More than thirteen years on from the release of their horrifying debut album Excruciating Intestinal Lacerations, UK’s own Brutal Death Metal machine Engorgement is finally back with a new assault on morality, enlightenment and good taste, beautifully titled They Rot Beneath Our Floor. Mixed and mastered by Brutal Death Metal master Floor Van Kuijk (of Korpse, Sijjeel, Carnifloor and many more) at GLDCHN Studios, and completed with with a suitably sickening artwork by Christian Castro, the new beast by Stu Hine on vocals, Ricky Hill on the guitar, Richard Lynn on bass, and Mitch Rider on drums is a must-listen for fans of bands the likes of Slob, Traumatomy, Gorevent, and Colpocleisis, their new testament to mankind’s inhumanity that is gloriously repugnant, raw, bloody and pustulent beyond belief.

The nightmarish intro Prelude To Your Dismemberment feels like it was taken from a gory slasher movie, dragging us to the Stygian realm of blood and violence ruled by Engorgement before they demolish our senses with Keep Festering. It’s quite impossible for any band to sound any heavier than this, with the pig-like screeches by Stu sounding inhumane to say the least. Then in Rot Beneath Our Floor the band continues their path of destruction, with the crushing beats by Mitch matching perfectly with the rumbling bass by Richard, followed by Sanctum Of Gore, another lecture in Brutal Death Metal, inviting us all to slam like putrid metalmaniacs inside the pit while Ricky hammers his axe mercilessly. And Watching Your Body Twitch is undoubtedly one of the most demented of all songs, with the old school Death Metal riffage by Ricky taking the song’s demented vibe to new (and vile) heights.

With a name like Complete Bowel Extraction we couldn’t expect any less than sheer gore and aggression by those UK slammers, and Mitch makes sure the earth trembles with his infernal beats and fills; whereas in Unmerciful Redemption the indomitable Stu doesn’t get tired of barking, gnarling and screeching like a wild beast, supported by the heavy artillery crafted by Richard and Mitch. There’s no time to breathe as their Brutal Death Metal extravaganza goes on in full force in Resurrection, showcasing another depraved vocal performance by Stu, and they conclude the album with a sound that’s as demonic and heavy as all previous songs in the form of Blunt Force Osteotomy, led by the cryptic riffage by Ricky while Mitch pounds his drums nonstop in the name of pure violence, flowing into the short and weird album’s Outro.

In a nutshell, UK’s heaviest and sickest exponents of shocking brutality invite you to a journey into the heart of darkness with They Rot Beneath Our Floor, a lesson in Brutal Death Metal that transpires violence, gore and hatred. Those four ruthless UK metallers are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, more of their music, and their tour dates (if you can survive their bludgeoning live performances, of course), and don’t forget to also stream their slab of savagery on Spotify, and to put your putrid hands on their new album from Comatose Music’s BandCamp or webstore (or click HERE for all things Engorgement). It might have taken over a decade for Engorgement to assault us once again with their undisputed brutality, but based on the high quality and the extreme violence found in They Rot Beneath Our Floor, I’m sure those guys won’t take long to hammer our cranial skulls again with another killer album of Brutal Death Metal madness.

Best moments of the album: Keep Festering, Watching Your Body Twitch and Blunt Force Osteotomy.

Worst moments of the album: The outro could have been a bit longer, more detailed and dynamic.

Released in 2026 Comatose Music

Track listing
1. Prelude To Your Dismemberment 1:37
2. Keep Festering 3:32
3. Rot Beneath Our Floor 3:55
4. Sanctum Of Gore 3:11
5. Watching Your Body Twitch 5:05
6. Complete Bowel Extraction 4:14
7. Unmerciful Redemption 5:38
8. Resurrection 4:56
9. Blunt Force Osteotomy 4:13
10. Outro 0:24

Band members
Stu Hine – vocals
Ricky Hill – guitar
Richard Lynn – bass, backing vocals
Mitch Rider – drums

Album Review – Karmian / Horror Vacui (2026)

These Modena-based melodeath masters explore the psychological and existential void behind real acts of Italian murder and madness in their obscure sophomore opus.

With a career stretching from their early beginnings in 2005 to their present incarnation, Modena-based act Karmian has become one of the most distinctive voices of Italian Melodic Death Metal, known for merging aggression, drama, and conceptual storytelling. Their musical evolution culminates now in 2026 in their most ambitious work to date, their sophomore opus Horror Vacui, following up on their critically acclaimed 2018 debut Surgere et Cadere. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Luca “Cocco” Cocconi and Simone Sighinolfi at Audiocore Studio, and displaying a stunning artwork by Sheila Franco, the newborn spawn by vocalist Andrea Bertolazzi, guitarists Andrea Baraldi and
Michele Perla, bassist Luca Marmi, and drummer Nicholas Badiali explores the psychological and existential void behind real acts of Italian murder and madness, transforming nine true-crime cases into allegorical portraits of emptiness, collapse, and human frailty, being therefore a must-listen for admirers of the music by Kataklysm, Heaven Shall Burn, At The Gates, Dark Tranquillity, and In Flames.

It doesn’t take long for the band to crush our skulls with their violent blend of melodeath in One Thousand Shining Bubbles, featuring guest Nicole Pisani on the talharpa (a traditional, ancient Northern European bowed lyre), with Andrea Baraldi and Michele delivering a striking axe duet for our total delight. Beastmaster of the Void sounds even more infuriated thanks to the ruthless beats and fills by Nicholas while Andrea Bertolazzi growls and roars like a rabid beast; followed by Gott mit Uns nicht, where “Gott mit uns” (“God [is] with us”) is a phrase commonly used in heraldry in Prussia (from 1701) and later by the German military, but their version “God is not with us” exhales pure melodeath led by their caustic riffs and relentless drums. And after a doom-ish intro the band blasts more of their trademark sonority in The Call of the Abyssal Bell, with their guitars walking hand in hand with Andrea Bertolazzi’s guttural.

Black Magical Soap Opera has a very cool name for a metal song, offering more of our beloved Gothenburg sound (but made in Italy, of course), sounding heavy-as-hell and even presenting elements from classic Death Metal; while Temple of the Fleshless Goddess is an excellent option for headbanging like a maniac during their live performances, with Luca and Nicholas generating a metal earthquake armed with their respective bass and drums. Libido et Mors, or “lust and death” from Latin, sees Andrea Baraldi and Michele once again shred their axes in great fashion, resulting in a lesson in modern-day Melodic Death Metal, whereas Beyond the Dream Gate of Fear keeps the album at a high level of aggression without forgetting the band’s trademark harmony. Furthermore, Andrea Bertolazzi sounds inhumane as usual on vocals, bringing an extra dosage of rage to their music. And lastly, Maker of Angels reminds me of Amon Amarth at times, which is obviously great, closing the album with an overdose of evil roars, visceral riffs, and hammering drums.

Whether navigating historical epics or psychological abysses, the work by Karmian is defined by a commitment to exploring the deeper forces that drive human behavior, such as resistance, decline, obsession, and the void within, and Horror Vacui stands as the culmination of this journey, a mature, uncompromising statement of artistic vision, philosophy, and Melodic Death Metal identity. If you want to know more about the band, their music, and obviously their incendiary live concerts, you can find them on Facebook and on Instagram, get caught in a mosh by listening to their high-octane songs on Spotify, and purchase the excellent Horror Vacui from Rockshots Records. Karmian definitely know how to transform the cases of murder, insanity and violence from their homeland into first-class heavy music, and their new opus is there to prove how precise they are in such a unique and devilish art.

Best moments of the album: Beastmaster of the Void, Black Magical Soap Opera and Libido et Mors.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Rockshots Records

Track listing
1. One Thousand Shining Bubbles 6:38
2. Beastmaster of the Void 3:21
3. Gott mit Uns nicht 4:38
4. The Call of the Abyssal Bell 6:17
5. Black Magical Soap Opera 3:54
6. Temple of the Fleshless Goddess 3:23
7. Libido et mors 3:40
8. Beyond the Dream Gate of Fear 4:16
9. Maker of Angels 4:43

Band members
Andrea Bertolazzi – vocals
Andrea Baraldi – guitars
Michele Perla – guitars
Luca Marmi – bass
Nicholas Badiali – drums

Guest musicians
Nicola Pisani – talharpa on “One Thousand Shining Bubbles”
Luca “Cocco” Cocconi – keyboards on “One Thousand Shining Bubbles” and “The Call of the Abyssal Bell”
Simone Sighinolfi – keyboards on “One Thousand Shining Bubbles” and “The Call of the Abyssal Bell”

Interview – Nelson Acerbus (Semper Acerbus)

It’s time for a nice and fun chat with the unstoppable frontman for Texas-based Metalcore band Semper Acerbus, talking about their new album, touring and more.

Nelson Acerbus (Semper Acerbus)

The Headbanging Moose: Thanks for your time, guys! Could you please start by introducing yourselves to our readers? Who are Semper Acerbus, when did the band start, and what’s the main goal with your music?

Nelson Acerbus: Hello all, this is Nelson, vocalist for Semper Acerbus, we are a metalcore band from Texas and we started in December of 2016. Our man goal is expressing ourselves in our own creative musical way and if we get followers along this journey, that a big plus!

THM: You new album Following Omens is a wild metal journey across deserts, dunes, mountains, and woodlands. Could you give u more details about the album, the whole idea behind it etc.?

NA: This album represents everything that we have embodied along our music journey, kinda letting it all out plus using things that we have not explored more in the past. More clean singing, more intricate guitar parts, odd time signatures, fun stuff like that.

THM: Some of my favorite songs of the album are Suffering Awaits, The Gallows and District Coward, and coincidentally all three are very Death Metal. Was that the intention? It feels like Semper Acerbus can be considered a Metalcore band with a strong Death Metal vein. Do you agree with that?

NA: You are absolutely right, specially Suffering Awaits, its a straight death metal song, myself and Jaime, one of our guitar players grew up listening to death metal so we love doing stuff like that.

THM: Who are your biggest idols and influences in music and in life in general, and what’s their impact on your creative process and your music?

NA: First names that comes to mind musically, Jesse Leach, Max Cavalera, Chuck Schuldiner, Michael Sweet and many more, helped shape the way I saw music, helped me embrace what I wanted to do in life.

THM: The artwork by Federico Bossinga of Abstract Chaos Design feels absolutely dark and apocalyptic, matching perfectly with your music. How did you get in touch with the artist, and how was the process to get to the final artwork?

NA: We have worked together for a long time, he always brings my ideas to life, he is a great talent. As we always do, I send him an idea, he sends back my idea as an image and then it’s a yay or nay or changes here and there.

Album Review – Semper Acerbus / Following Omens (2026)

THM: How’s the metalcore (or any other type of heavy music) scene nowadays in Del Rio, Texas? Are there any other bands from your area you would recommend to our readers?

NA: There’s no other metalcore band in Del Rio TX, we are a very small town in the middle of nowhere with a big tastes for tex-mex music and culture. We are the sore thumb lol!

THM: Now that Following Omens is out, what does the future hold for Semper Acerbus? Any plans for touring outside of the United States, like in Canada or at any European summer festival? You guys need to bring your music to Toronto for sure!

NA: We want to tour as much as possible, we have offers overseas and nationally that we want to definitely make it happen. We had a run in Canada last year that fell through so, HEY PROMOTERS! Come book us!!

Semper Acerbus

THM: Speaking of touring, which other bands would be part of your “dream tour”? And which bands have you guys had an amazing experience touring with so far?

NA: The most fun we had was touring with ASESINO and Skinlab, great dudes and we had lots of fun. Dream tour would be Killswitch Engage, Trivium, Bleed from Within and Semper Acerbus.

THM: Let’s play an easy and fun game now. Which ten songs would you add to a time capsule for future generations? It can be metal or non-metal, no problem at all.

NA:
1. Fur Elise – Betoven
2. Nessun Dorma – Pavarotti
3. Crystal Mountain – Death
4. Yahweh – By Stryper
5. Lifting Shadow of a Dream – Dream Theater
6. Arise – Sepultura
7. The Element of One – Killswitch Engage
8. Rainbow in the Dark – Dio
9. Cemetery Gates – Pantera
10. Separate Ways – Journey

THM: Thanks again for your time! Feel free to send your final considerations to our readers, and hopefully we’ll see you hitting the stages of Toronto anytime soon!

NA: Thanks for this opportunity, if you haven’t checked our music and our new album, “Following Omens” go check it out! Give us a chance! Keep it metal!

Links
Semper Acerbus Facebook | Instagram | YouTube | Spotify | Linktree

Album Review – Lamb of God / Into Oblivion (2026)

Beholden to no one, and with nothing left to prove, these Groove Metal titans are unleashing upon us all their tenth studio album, as we all head into oblivion.

Beholden to no one, and with nothing left to prove, Richmond, Virginia’s own Groove Metal titans Lamb of God are back with album number ten in their undisputed career, the hard hitting Into Oblivion, following up on their critically acclaimed VII: Sturm und Drang (2015), Lamb of God (2020), and Omens (2022). Produced and mixed by longtime studio collaborator Josh Wilbur, and recorded across multiple locations tied closely to the band’s identity, the new opus by the iconic frontman D. Randall “Randy” Blythe, guitarists Mark Morton and Willie Adler, bassist John Campbell, and drummer Art Cruz finds the band embracing their position as modern metal veterans. The ten-song collection references the band’s roots, doubles down on their signature groove, and expands their approach, resulting in an album that feels both deliberate and untethered.

In the opening track Into Oblivion we already see Randy deliver his trademark acid lyrics (“I – I am the chaos / I am the voice you can’t unhear / Strife and betrayal / I am the war re-engineered / In a life far worse than death / I am the thief that steals your breath”) while the music is heavy, atmospheric and enfolding thanks to the hammering drums by Art and the always sharp riffs by Mark and Will; and it’s then pedal to the metal in the best Thrash and Death Metal style in Parasocial Christ, with Randy vociferating rabidly as usual accompanied by the metallic riffs and solos by the band’s unstoppable guitar duo. The rumbling bass by John sets the stage for another vicious attack by Lamb of God entitled Sepsis, a neck breaking aria of first-class Groove Metal, followed by The Killing Floor, a demented song perfect for igniting a maniacal circle pit, with Art crushing his drums like there’s no tomorrow. And after such a thunderous tune it’s time for the dark ballad El Vacío, where Randy delivers deep, passionate clean and harsh vocals.

St. Catherine’s Wheel offers more of their trademark (and utterly headbanging) sonority led by the visceral riffs by Mark and Will, supported by John’s menacing bass, whereas Blunt Force Blues brings to our avid ears another round of their acid words growled by Randy (“Here comes another enemy / A goddess standing on the wall / For all the men doomed to die / An alabaster beauty sweats / Paints the currents black, they must ride / Last breath decays / Do you hear?”) while Art’s drums dictate the song’s bludgeoning pace and vibe. The band continues to hammer their sonic weapons of mass destruction in Bully, also presenting elements from Southern Metal added to their core groove madness, followed by A Thousand Years, a mid-tempo aria as grim and obscure as it can be, with Randy declaiming the song’s devilish lyrics rabidly from start to finish. Lastly, they invite us for one final slam into the pit to the sound of Devise / Destroy, a venomous beast of Groove Metal where their scathing riffs and pounding drums match perfectly with Randy’s enraged roars.

“For me, the album is about having the space to breathe creatively and not feeling like we have to keep up with any trend or expectation,” said Mark Morton. “It feels nice to be untethered from any agenda beyond rallying around the notion of, ‘Let’s just make music that we think is cool,’ which is really where it all started.” Randy Blythe also explained why the band decided to name the album Into Oblivion. “Because that’s where we’re heading. In general, the album is about the ongoing and rapid breakdown of the social contract, particularly here in America. Things are acceptable now that would’ve horrified people just 20 years ago.” We’re living dark times indeed, and you can join Lamb of God in their daily fight against all that’s wrong in our rotten society by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by checking their acid videos on YouTube, by streaming their incendiary discography on Spotify, and of course by purchasing their first-class new album from their own webstore or from the special Into Oblivion website. In the end, as we’re all heading into oblivion like Randy said, at least let’s go down in style, raising our horns to one of the best metal albums of the year.

Best moments of the album: Parasocial Christ, The Killing Floor, Blunt Force Blues and Devise / Destroy.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Century Media Records/Epic Records

Track listing
1. Into Oblivion 3:34
2. Parasocial Christ 3:20
3. Sepsis 3:38
4. The Killing Floor 4:16
5. El Vacío 4:17
6. St. Catherine’s Wheel 4:05
7. Blunt Force Blues 4:11
8. Bully 4:13
9. A Thousand Years 3:53
10. Devise / Destroy 3:49

Band members
D. Randall “Randy” Blythe – vocals
Mark Morton – guitar
Willie Adler – guitar
John Campbell – bass
Art Cruz – drums

Album Review – Bras D’Honneur / Hate Speech (2026)

Behold the debut opus by this veteran duo from Ukraine, a 13-song, 35-minute torrent of primitive Black and Death Metal.

The latest creation of the duo R. (aka Roman Saenko) and V. (aka Vladislav Petrov), who are jointly infamous for bands like Drudkh, Precambrian, Blood of Kingu, and Rattenfänger, among others, Kharkiv, Ukraine-based Blackened Death Metal entity  Bras D’Honneur (an obscene gesture used to express contempt, roughly equivalent in meaning to phrases like “fuck you” or “up yours”) is unleashing upon our rotten society their debut opus, titled Hate Speech. Musically inspired by the likes of Von, Profanatica, Havohej and Belial, the new album by the aforementioned R. on vocals, guitars and bass, and V. on drums and keyboards is a 13-song, 35-minute torrent of primitive Black and Death Metal, adorned by the primeval, ruthless  artwork by Warhead Art to give the whole album an even more menacing and rebellious vibe.

R. and V. seem to be on their most devastating mode in the opening tune Trench Knife, with their devilish vociferations and blast beats sounding inhumane; and it looks like the entire album will be savage, which is the case in Scum of the Earth, where V.’s demented beats and fills match perfectly with R.’s deep guttural. Their violence only grows stronger in Regicide, with R. not only vomiting the song’s evil words, but his riffage is also caustic; followed by Main de Gloire, another ode to classic Black Metal with their primeval Death Metal twist, and they go full Death Metal in the poetically titled Eaten Alive by the Pigs, a lecture in the style led by R.’s venomous riffage. Crown of Nails offers one and a half minute of pure madness, a Black Metal extravaganza where V. shows no mercy for his drums, and in Stench of the Rotten Blood the duo continues to pave their path of absolute chaos and hatred, with V.’s raw beats kicking us hard in the head.

R.’s menacing, razor-edged guitar sets the tone in the bludgeoning tune Poisoning the Hearts with Malice, while his vociferations sound as if they’re coming from a beast that inhabits a sinister cavern, and they continue their metallic storm of Black Metal in Disemboweled, two and a half minutes of absolute obscurity and heaviness led by V.’s unstoppable drums. Goat Rapists continues the same darkened path from its predecessor, with its hybrid of demonic Black and Death Metal sounding as heavy as hell, whereas Judas Cradle also presents their classic visceral sonority, with the duo smashing their instruments like there’s no tomorrow. Bras d’Honneur, the song that carries the name of the band, couldn’t have sounded more hellish and pulverizing, a lecture in vile, unrelenting Blackened Death Metal with R. roaring like an evil creature, before all comes to an end with Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing, one minute of an instrumental devastation that would have been even more powerful with R.’s vocals.

In a nutshell, rough, rude, and unrepentantly so, Hate Speech sonically lives up to its title, stripping the primitivism of bands like Hate Forest down yet further, hammering through approximately two riffs per song, and making “blunt-force trauma” sound fanciful. Hate Speech is the record this modern world deserves, and you can purchase such a harsh and scathing album from the Primitive Reaction’s BandCamp or webstore, keeping the fires of Ukrainian Black and Death Metal burning and, therefore, inspiring R. and V. to continue their craft of darkness under their new project for the delight of everyone who knows how fucked up our world is today.

Best moments of the album: Regicide, Eaten Alive by the Pigs, Disemboweled and Bras d’Honneur.

Worst moments of the album: Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing.

Released in 2026 Primitive Reaction

Track listing
1. Trench Knife 2:55
2. Scum of the Earth 2:15
3. Regicide 3:17
4. Main de Gloire 2:31
5. Eaten Alive by the Pigs 3:04
6. Crown of Nails 1:35
7. Stench of the Rotten Blood 3:17
8. Poisoning the Hearts with Malice 4:28
9. Disemboweled 2:42
10. Goat Rapists 1:36
11. Judas Cradle 2:24
12. Bras d’Honneur 3:06
13. Sheep in Wolf’s Clothing 1:11

Band members
R. – vocals, guitars, bass
V. – drums, keyboards

Album Review – Sermon To The Lambs / Sermon To The Lambs (2026)

A new entity from the depths of the Chilean Brutal Death Metal underground has emerged, armed with the soul-shaking savagery of their self-titled debut album.

A new entity from the depths of the Death Metal underground has emerged. Formed in 2023 in Concepción, Chile by guitarist and bassist Mauro M. (The Macabre, Esophagus) and drummer Victor Araneda (Disownment, In Asymmetry, Esophagus), with longtime friend Richard Aguayo (In Asymmetry, Esophagus) joining the duo in 2025 as their official vocalist, Sermon To The Lambs focus on the roots and spirit of the golden era of Brutal Death Metal, unleashing now in 2026 the soul-shaking savagery of their self-titled debut album. Adorned in the stunning artwork of Pär Olofsson (Winds Of Plague, Unleashed, Thy Art Is Murder), the album is set to leave its indelible mark, a suppurating wound, on the global Death Metal scene, being highly recommended for fans of Deeds of Flesh, Liturgy, Brodequin, Cinerary, and Enmity.

The trio comes crushing our skulls like a rabid beast in Crowned King Of The Worms, with the primeval beats by Victor bringing that raw flavor we love in Brutal Death Metal, followed by Sermon To The Lambs, the song that carries the name of the band, an absolutely demented tune with Richard basically vomiting the song’s gory, evil words nonstop. Mauro then shows no mercy for his stringed axe in Spitting In The Church Of The Nazarene, accompanied by the inhumane beats and fills by Victor in another killer display of brutality; whereas Maximum Apostasy, the very first single released by the band, starts in an ominous manner before exploding into their trademark savagery. Needless to say, Richard keeps screaming and delivering those putrid screeches that make Brutal Death Metal so great, and to keep the momentum going we face Saints Are The Centurions Of The Aristotelian Christ, presenting two and a half minutes of absolute chaos and violence by the trio.

In Flagrum Taxillatum the band delivers a more cadenced but heavy-as-hell sonority, in special through Richard’s deep, cadaverous guttural, keeping the album at an insane level of gore and aggression, while Scourging At The Pillar is another short and sweet Brutal Death Metal atomic bomb where Victor demolishes his drums in the name of extreme music. The blasphemous God Spat And The Man Was Done is perfect for an overdose of slamming into the mosh pit while Mauro extracts his most caustic, scorching riffs of the entire album, and of course, Richard’s vocals couldn’t have sounded more infernal, before we face Clergy’s Malevolence, one final slab of absurdity and violence by the trio, with Victor stealing the show with his demented drumming. Last but not least, like twin-headed devils, those two songs are reprised as bonus tracks featuring vocalist Jeff Page of Manifestations, and as his vocals are deeper than Richard’s, those alternate versions end up adding even more meat to the album.

Magnificently unforgiving, the debut by Sermon To The Lambs is an eruption of crawling horrors from a tortured, broken earth, and you can put your damned hands on such a gory, violent album by purchasing it from Comatose Music’s BandCamp or webstore. Don’t forget to also follow such a demented entity form the Chilean metallic scene on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with all things Sermon To The Lambs, and stream their wicked creations on Spotify. Sermon To The Lambs are just starting their reign of absolute chaos and destruction with their debut album, and you better get ready because if you ever you cross their path, there will be blood.

Best moments of the album: Sermon To The Lambs, Maximum Apostasy and God Spat And The Man Was Done.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Comatose Music

Track listing
1. Crowned King Of The Worms 4:06
2. Sermon To The Lambs 3:22
3. Spitting In The Church Of The Nazarene 2:36
4. Maximum Apostasy 3:37
5. Saints Are The Centurions Of The Aristotelian Christ 2:26
6. Flagrum Taxillatum 3:09
7. Scourging At The Pillar 2:34
8. God Spat And The Man Was Done 3:22
9. Clergy’s Malevolence 4:56

Bonus tracks
10. God Spat And The Man Was Done (alternate version) 3:22
11. Clergy’s Malevolence (alternate version) 4:56

Band members
Richard Aguayo – vocals
Mauro M. – guitars, bass
Victor Araneda – drums

Guest musician
Jeff Page – vocals on “God Spat And The Man Was Done (alternate version)” and “Clergy’s Malevolence (alternate version)”