Album Review – Devastrosity / Eviscerating Desolation (2025)

Get ready for an unstoppable Brutal Death Metal assault of skull crushing impact in the form of nine tracks of complete carnage made in Indonesia.

From Kediri in East Java, Indonesia, comes a new venture into audio violence from a trio of musicians with a wealth of experience in the fertile Indonesian Death Metal scene. Carrying in its name a fusion of the words “devastate” and “monstrosity,” the unrelenting Brutal Death Metal brigade  Devastrosity is back with the follow-up to their 2024 demo Human Depravation, their brutish debut album Eviscerating Desolation. Recorded at Calamity Streak Recording (vocals), Resonance Beast Studio (guitars and bass), and Volcanic Studio (drums), mixed and mastered at Texas SickLab Studio, and showcasing a gory, demented artwork by Rudi Gorgingsuicide, the debut full-length attack by Ardian on vocals, Roby on guitar and bass, and Billy on drums is an unstoppable assault of skull crushing impact, with its nine tracks of complete carnage presenting a slab of Brutal Death Metal at its disease ridden, corpse consuming, flesh-rending best.

Their wicked, gory sounds arise from the pits of hell in Human Depravation, with Billy taking the lead with his beyond demented drumming in a bestial display of Brutal Death Metal, and a title like Morbid Desires deserves sheer brutality flowing from all instruments, with the gruesome vocals by Ardian adding even more violence to their core sound. The trio continues to spread gore and violence in The Dealer of Death, with Roby doing an amazing job with his stringed axes, offering an overdose of brutality; and it’s pedal to the metal in the bludgeoning Sadistic Purge of Society Manifest, with Billy kicking us hard in the head with his nonstop, demented drumming. Then a phantasmagorical start quickly morphs into another slab of bestiality entitled Hellish Consumption, offering more of their hard hitting riffs and beats.

Ardian keeps roaring and vomiting cadaverous words in Devastate Atrocity, supported by the demented sounds blasted by his bandmates in the name of putrid extreme music, and the trio shows no sign of slowing down or anything like that, selling their souls to Brutal Death Metal and blasting our faces with Decay Collapse, again spearheaded by Billy’s infernal drums, followed by Parasitic Epidemic, bringing forward over three minutes of unrelenting sounds where Ardian’s deep guttural matches flawlessly with the demonic riffs by Roby, elevating the album’s insanity to a whole new level. And last but not least, let’s slam into the pit to their Indonesian madness with Cadaveric Feast, with Ardian and Billy sounding like demented, inhumane creatures.

Ready to unleash the blood storm of Eviscerating Desolation, Devastrosity are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, tour dates and so on, and you can also find their sick, depraved music on Spotify and purchase their infernal debut album from Comatose Music’s BandCamp or webstore (or click HERE for all things Devastrosity). Eviscerating Desolation possesses an unnerving clarity to its sound, but be warned that such a visceral album is not for the curious, casual listener. This is no shenanigans, furious Brutal Death Metal highly recommended for fans of Brodequin, Putridity, Disgorge, and Devangelic, among others, absolutely and demonically intense to the last drop of blood.

Best moments of the album: Human Depravation, Sadistic Purge of Society Manifest and Parasitic Epidemic.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Comatose Music

Track listing
1. Human Depravation 2:59
2. Morbid Desires 3:09
3. The Dealer of Death 3:11
4. Sadistic Purge of Society Manifest 3:21
5. Hellish Consumption 3:29
6. Devastate Atrocity 2:50
7. Decay Collapse 3:40
8. Parasitic Epidemic 3:41
9. Cadaveric Feast 4:12

Band members
Ardian – vocals
Roby – guitar, bass
Billy – drums

Album Review – Deteriorot / Awakening (2025)

Standing shoulder to shoulder with early Death Metal legends, this old school American horde returns with their pulverizing fourth studio album.

Formed from the ashes of Mortuary in 1989 in New Jersey, the legendary American Death Metal brigade known as Deteriorot returns with their highly anticipated fourth studio offering, titled Awakening. Standing shoulder to shoulder with early Death Metal legends the likes of Immolation, Incantation, and Mortician, carving their place in underground history with a sound that merges the suffocating atmosphere of early Finnish and UK Death Metal with the brutality of the Swedish scene and the raw, uncompromising intensity of their New Jersey roots, the band formed of Paul Zavaleta on vocals and guitars, Arthur Reid also on the guitars, Travis Meredith on bass, and James Goetz on drums is on absolute fire throughout their entire new album, a worthy follow-up to their 2023 beast The Rebirth.

The dark and sinister intro Awakening, led by the Stygian bass by Travis, warms us up for The Flame, a primeval, gruesome display of Death Metal by the band with Paul vomiting the song’s words like a rabid beast; and the crushing, pounding drums by James walk hand in hand with the scathing riffs by Paul and Arthur in In Battle to Survive, a headbanging monster that will please all fans of the genre. The band’s ruthless guitar duo continues to spread darkness and hatred through their axes in Horrors in an Everlasting Nightmare, sounding as evil as it can be, whereas their hammering sounds will keep smashing our cranial skulls in A Ghost in the Mirror, with Paul once again vociferating rabidly for our total delight, with the final inhumane solo by Paul adding even more electricity to the song. And Deliver Us from Fiction is simply perfect for slamming into the pit in a demented way, sounding fast, heavy and absolutely aggressive. Needless to say, it will work majestically live.

Then a beyond phantasmagorical start gradually evolves into a visceral display of prehistorical Death Metal entitled Haunting Images from a Past Life, with James hammering his drums mercilessly, and the band then demolishes our senses with sheer savagery in the form of Programmed by Fear, alternating between Blackened Doom moments and classic, no shenanigans Death Metal. There’s no sign of peace or love in the album, and of course Winter Moon sounds as brutal as it is obscure, showcasing another excellent axe attack by Paul and Arthur. It’s also impressive how they managed to add so much doom to their core Death Metal like in In Silence, with James taking the lead with his grim beats, followed by The Spirit, the shortest of all songs and also the most violent, pulverizing everything and everyone that crosses their path, with Paul’s roars sending shivers down our spines before all comes to an end with the cadaverous outro To Sleep.

Deteriorot are definitely not fooling around when it comes to craft old school, visceral Death Metal, and the quality of the music found in Awakening is proof of their passion for the extreme and unrelenting hard work. Hence, you can find those American marauders on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with their demolishing live performances, stream their demented creations on Spotify or any other streaming platform, and grab a copy of their wicked new album from the Xtreem Music’s BandCamp. After their “rebirth” and their “awakening” in recent years, it’s time for Deteriorot to rise back to the top of the classic American Death Metal mountain, staying strong and ruthless just the way we like it, and leaving us eager for more of their music in the near future.

Best moments of the album: In Battle to Survive, Deliver Us from Fiction and The Spirit.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Xtreem Music

Track listing
1. Awakening 1:24
2. The Flame 4:11
3. In Battle to Survive 3:35
4. Horrors in an Everlasting Nightmare 3:46
5. A Ghost in the Mirror 3:33
6. Deliver Us from Fiction 3:57
7. Haunting Images from a Past Life 2:32
8. Programmed by Fear 3:52
9. Winter Moon 3:25
10. In Silence 4:04
11. The Spirit 1:55
12. To Sleep 0:33

Band members
Paul Zavaleta – vocals, guitars
Arthur Reid – rhythm guitars
Travis Meredith – bass
James Goetz – drums

Album Review – Thaumaturgy / Pestilential Hymns (2025)

This cryptic American beast returns from the underworld with its sophomore opus, offering more of its vicious blend of dark, doom-laden, chasmic, and cavernous Death Metal.

Spawned in the American Midwest by an enigmatic musician that goes under the alias KT, driven by the urge to play a vicious blend of dark, doom-laden, chasmic, and cavernous Death Metal, taking influence from a wide range of outsider music, Kansas, United States-based Blackened Death/Doom Metal outfit Thaumaturgy continues to push the boundaries beyond the genre’s forerunners in order to invoke contemplation upon the super-mundane realms that their name implies in their new offering titled Pestilential Hymns, following up on his 2023 vile debut  Tenebrous Oblations. Now a power-trio after the addition of TG and DS to their ranks, the band has morphed into an entity whose new musical offering is crammed with furious, ripping riffs, contrasted by crushing, echoing doom passages, as well as a surprising element of dark melody, all embraced by the suitably ancient cover artwork by Daniel Hermosilla of Nox Fragor Art.

Devilish, visceral riffs ignite the band’s black mass in Neuroticism Triumphant, with KT’s harsh vociferations adding sheer insanity to their already demented sound, blasting our minds and faces mercilessly. The Oncologist’s Hymn carries a weird name for a song, but as the music is what really matters we face an avalanche of primeval Death Metal by the trio, followed by The Shadow Approaches, bringing forward elements from the most hellish form of Doom Metal while still being deeply rooted in Death Metal. Needless to say, KT yet again sounds inhumane on vocals. And Plague Ritual sounds absolutely dissonant, evil and unrelenting from start to finish, with its cryptic, vile vocals, riffs and drums penetrating deep inside our minds while also showcasing haunting background keys and melodies.

Then the guttural by KT gets even deeper and more bestial in Awaken Ares, supported by an overdose of harsh riffage, rumbling bass lines and nonstop beats and fills, or in other words, it’s an ode to the vilest form of Death Metal. It’s pedal to the metal in the sonic attack entitled Entropic Hegemony, with its riffs reeking of Black Metal, therefore adding even more obscurity to the band’s core sound; whereas a melodic yet evil guitar kicks off the Doom Metal-infused interlude An Ignominious End, a bit too long for my taste, warming us up for Forced March, ending the album majestically, a destructive force of Death Metal spearheaded by KT’s grim vocal lines while the music remain as heavy and obscure as possible before all fades into oblivion.

To qualify Thaumaturgy as “blackened” would not be unfair, but Pestilential Hymns as a (w)hole wholly feels like a Death Metal record, just one on the fringes of unorthodoxy and angularity, unbound but never belabored. Still, despite this forward-thinking approach, the band retains a sense of the ancient, of elder days in the underground when diabolism truly began to bloom in Death Metal, and you can join such an uncanny creature form the abyss in its quest for extreme music on Instagram, stream the band’s scorching, visceral creations on Spotify, and of course put your putrid hands on Pestilential Hymns from the band’s own BandCamp, as well as from Memento Mori. Pestilential Hymns brings to our avid ears first-class music to mangle our minds, and you better be warned that once you begin your descent into the underworld together with those evil creatures, there’s no turning back.

Best moments of the album: Neuroticism Triumphant, Plague Ritual and Forced March.

Worst moments of the album: An Ignominious End.

Released in 2025 Memento Mori

Track listing
1. Neuroticism Triumphant 5:20
2. The Oncologist’s Hymn 5:52
3. The Shadow Approaches 5:32
4. Plague Ritual 6:34
5. Awaken Ares 6:26
6. Entropic Hegemony 6:05
7. An Ignominious End 2:28
8. Forced March 7:23

Band members
KT – vocals, guitars, bass
TG – guitars
DS – drums

Album Review – Tribal Gaze / Inveighing Brilliance (2025)

Arising from the scorched earth of Texas, this ruthless Death Metal creature conjures visions of primal wrath and nihilistic clarity in their vicious new album.

Arising from the scorched earth of Texas, the ruthless Death Metal creature known as Tribal Gaze returns with Inveighing Brilliance, a Death Metal monolith shaped by ancient violence and unforgiving truth. Comprised of McKenna Holland on vocals, Quintin Stauts and Ian Kilmer on the guitars, Zachary Denton on bass, and Cesar De Los Santos on drums, the band conjures visions of primal wrath and nihilistic clarity in their new album, a sound rooted in the rawness of old school Death Metal but sharpened with modern intent. With digital artwork by Dom Pabon of Final Resting Place that evokes sci-fi decay and meditations of ancient ruin, Inveighing Brilliance is a meditation on the illusion of beauty in nature and existence, and how it pertains to both Mother Nature, and our wretched, human society. Even in moments of light, brutality lurks, eggs are stolen from nests, flesh is torn for survival, and the album dissects this duality, revealing the suffering embedded in every living moment.

The opening track Smiling From Their Chariots is a two-minute massacre by the band where Cesar crushes his drums nonstop, offering McKenna everything he needs to gnarl like a rabid creature from the abyss, followed by Beyond Recognition, another demented composition that sounds absurdly heavy thanks to the phenomenal riffage by Quintin and Ian in a lecture in primeval Death Metal. They keep inviting us all to join them in their gruesome pit to the sound of Emptying the Nest, where Zachary and Cesar deliver a true metallic kitchen, and there’s no time for shenanigans or any type of filler in the album, as Guarding the Illusion showcases pure, old school Death Metal led by the venomous riffs by Quintin and Ian, whereas you can feel the rage and despair flowing from the  vocals by guest Ross Hansen of Ingrown in To the Spoils of Faith, while the Tribal Gaze crew blasts their instruments nonstop.

Ruling in a Land with No God offers our putrid ears another slab of absolute violence and heaviness led by their undisputed Death Metal riffs, followed by the inhumane The Irreversible Sequence, and I have no idea how they managed to craft such a primeval sound so perfectly, while McKenna roars and barks rabidly for our total delectation. Then after the experimental, weird interlude Inveighing Brilliance we’re treated to Draped in Piercing Radiance, led by the hammering drums by Cesar in the best Brutal Death Metal style, speeding things up while maintaining that gory sound we love so much in Death Metal. And last but not least, get ready for over six minutes of chaos, hatred and unfiltered Death Metal in the form of Lord of Blasphemy, with McKenna’s deep guttural walking hand in hand with the sick riffage by Quintin and Ian, presenting a killer drum solo by Cesar as its grand finale.

From their name, inspired by unseen forces watching from deep forests, to the crushing weight of their riffs, Tribal Gaze channel something ancient, unknown, and violently present, and with Inveighing Brilliance they’ve done just that, stripped away illusion, stared into the abyss, and made it echo, being therefore perfect for fans of 200 Stab Wounds, Frozen Soul, Creeping Death, Vomit Forth, Fuming Mouth, and Undeath, among others. Those unrelenting Texan death dealers are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, tour dates and more of their music, and don’t forget to also stream their brutal sounds on Spotify and, above all that, to put your damned hands on Inveighing Brilliance by purchasing it from HERE. There’s something lurking in the shadows of the deepest forests, and once you face the music found in Inveighing Brilliance, there’s no turning back from its eternal embrace.

Best moments of the album: Beyond Recognition, To the Spoils of Faith and Lord of Blasphemy.

Worst moments of the album: Inveighing Brilliance.

Released in 2025 Nuclear Blast Records

Track listing
1. Smiling From Their Chariots 2:01
2. Beyond Recognition 3:43
3. Emptying the Nest 3:49
4. Guarding the Illusion 3:26
5. To the Spoils of Faith 3:02
6. Ruling in a Land with No God 1:50
7. The Irreversible Sequence 1:46
8. Inveighing Brilliance 1:31
9. Draped in Piercing Radiance 3:19
10. Lord of Blasphemy 6:43

Band members
McKenna Holland – vocals
Quintin Stauts – guitars
Ian Kilmer – guitars
Zachary Denton – bass
Cesar De Los Santos – drums

Guest musician
Ross Hansen – vocals on “To the Spoils of Faith”

Album Review – Perishing / Malicious Acropolis Unveiled (2025)

This Costa Rican entity will attack with their debut opus, an extension of their style of playing slow, torturous, dread-filled Death and Doom Metal where every note carries weight, and with it, deathly implications.

Formed in 2023 in San José, Costa Rica, boasting members of Astriferous, Mortual, Candarian, Bloodsoaked Necrovoid, and Necroferum, and following a sensational demo titled Lutum in 2024, Death/Doom Metal creature Perishing is back with their much awaited debut full-length offering, beautifully titled Malicious Acropolis Unveiled. Mixed by Andrew Oswald, mastered by Dan Lowndes at Resonance Sound Studio, and showcasing a vile, grim artwork by the phenomenal Belial NecroArts (Undersave, Hierarchies), the debut opus by J. Antonio Salas on vocals, Justin Sánchez on the guitars, José Pablo Phillips on bass, and JM Arrea on drums is a must-have for admirers of Disembowelment, Rippikoulu, Mortiferum, Winter, Thergothon, and Inverloch, offering us all an extension of their style of playing slow, torturous, dread-filled Death and Doom Metal where every note carries weight, and with it, deathly implications.

The pounding drums of apocalyptic doom by JM ignite the devilish Autolysis (I. Imago Fluidus Macula), accompanied by the otherworldly bass by José Pablo, whereas Autolysis (II. Fatum Cursed by Nature) sounds even more sluggish and grim than the opening tune, evolving into a demonic beast led by the deep gnarls by J. Antonio. The Stygian riffs by Justin walk hand in hand with the low-tuned, venomous bass by José Pablo in Castle of the Leached Body, a lecture in Blackened Doom made in Costa Rica, and another cryptic start will haunt our damned souls in Las Ruinas del Palacio, before all explodes into a doomed wall of sounds guided by JM’s visceral drums. Osedax (Devoured by the Cavernous Worm) is a lecture in Death and Doom Metal by the quarter, with J. Antonio’s hideous roars being boosted by the demonic guitars by Justin; whereas their coup-de-grace comes in the form of Acropolis of Malignancy, sounding and feeling as infernal, heavy and disturbing as it can be, with the whole band delivering pure, unfiltered doom until the end.

Maintaining a suitably organic sound and being selective with their tunes to create the best impression, Perishing have created an album that fans of this kind of punishing, slow blend of death and doom music will find impossible to resist. You can get in touch with those ruthless Costa Rican metallers via Instagram, and I’m sure if you’re planning a visit to their homeland you might be able to see them live, stream their heavy-as-hell chants on Spotify, and add a copy of their newborn beast to your devilish collection by purchasing it from BandCamp or from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main store, US store or EU store. The Costa Rican extreme scene has never been stronger and more prolific, and it’s with albums like Malicious Acropolis Unveiled that we can rest assured those blackened, evil sounds will keep reverberating across the entire world for man years to come.

Best moments of the album: Castle of the Leached Body and Osedax (Devoured by the Cavernous Worm).

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. Autolysis (I. Imago Fluidus Macula) 5:24
2. Autolysis (II. Fatum Cursed by Nature) 6:18
3. Castle of the Leached Body 8:58
4. Las Ruinas del Palacio 7:27
5. Osedax (Devoured by the Cavernous Worm) 9:21
6. Acropolis of Malignancy 7:35

Band members
J. Antonio Salas – vocals
Justin Sánchez – guitars
José Pablo Phillips – bass
JM Arrea – drums

Album Review – Impermanence / Anicca (2025)

This five-headed Technical Death and Black Metal beast from Poland will attack armed with their debut offering, portraying the fragility and transience of human life.

Forged in the fires of Kraków, Poland by the end of 2023, the Technical Death and Black Metal beast known as Impermanence is unleashing hell with the release of their debut offering, entitled Anicca. Recorded at Studio Poziom -1, mixed and mastered at Dahaka Productions, and displaying a beyond Stygian yet captivating artwork by Alicja Michalec, the debut opus by Mateusz Bednarz on vocals, Wojciech Wróbel and Paweł Hernik on the guitars, Bartłomiej Fitas on bass, and Konrad Pieczara on drums portrays the fragility and transience of human life, all embraced by the band’s unrelenting blend of extreme music, being therefore highly recommended for fans of renowned acts from the Extreme Metal scene the likes of Behemoth, Belphegor, Nile, and God Dethroned, just to name a few.

The album’s phantasmagorical, eerie Intro will embrace us in pitch black darkness before the band rips our hearts out with Sorrodise, with both Wojciech and Paweł delivering a wild fusion of Black and Death Metal through their flammable riffs accompanied by the rumbling bass by Bartłomiej. In other words, the album couldn’t have started in a more compelling way. From Mirage to Lust brings elements from the current Scandinavian Melodic Death and Black Metal scene, with Mateusz taking the lead with his devilish screams, and the band then goes absolutely mental in the Melodic Black Metal beast entitled Apocalypse, with Konrad bringing forward sheer heaviness with his classic beats and fills, inviting us all to slam into the pits of the netherworld.

There’s no sign of the band slowing down at all; quite the contrary, this five-headed creature of extreme music will pulverize us all with Spiritual War, where the guitars by Wojciech and Paweł exhale madness and sulfur; whereas their metallic sounds continue to darken the skies in Fugitive, with tons of intricacy flowing from their riffs, bass and drums, all enfolded by Mateusz’s venomous roars. As expected, there’s no such thing as “sounding mellow” or “happy music” to those guys, and they invest in their most Behemoth-inspired sonority in Ascension Through Defiance, with their riffage cutting our skin deep while Konrad pounds his drums nonstop in the name of Polish Blackened Death Metal for our absolute delight. And lastly, we face the hard-hitting Crumbling, deviating a bit form their core Black and Death Metal, but still sounding tight and heavy as usual.

“Anicca is a hymn to the fragility that marks our existence. The album’s name is derived from Buddhist terminology and signifies impermanence. The lyrical layer explores themes of transience and the search for purpose in the world around us. Songs begins and ends with the ticking of a clock, clearly marking both the start and the conclusion of the story being told. Each track presents a different narrative, offering a unique perspective on the somber aspects of human nature. This concept extends beyond the lyrics, shaping the band’s overall artistic identity,” commented the band about their amazing newborn baby, and you can get in touch with them and know more about their music, tour dates and plans for the future on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their caustic music on YouTube and on Spotify, and grab a copy of the excellent Anicca from their own BandCamp, from the Satanath Records’ BandCamp or webstore, or simply by clicking HERE. In the end, we are all fragile beings, we are not permanent, and the music found in Anicca perfectly reminds us of how hard it is to face such a harsh truth.

Best moments of the album: Sorrodise, Apocalypse and Ascension Through Defiance.

Worst moments of the album: Crumbling.

Released in 2025 Satanath Records

Track listing
1. Intro 1:24
2. Sorrodise 4:20
3. From Mirage to Lust 5:16
4. Apocalypse 3:23
5. Spiritual War 4:12
6. Fugitive 6:06
7. Ascension Through Defiance 5:03
8. Crumbling 5:56

Band members
Mateusz Bednarz – vocals
Wojciech Wróbel – guitars
Paweł Hernik – guitars
Bartłomiej Fitas – bass
Konrad Pieczara – drums

Album Review – An Abstract Illusion / The Sleeping City (2025)

This incredible Swedish Progressive Death and Black Metal entity returns with their heaviest and most atmospheric work to date, exploring the depths of the human psyche and suffering.

Once again utilizing the band’s unique blend of Progressive Death and Black Metal with arpeggiating synths, wistful drones and vast soundscapes, harkening back to the era of 80’s sci-fi soundtracks, the magnificent The Sleeping City is the third full-length opus by Swedish Progressive/Atmospheric Death/Black Metal beast An Abstract Illusion, the follow-up to their critically acclaimed 2022 sophomore album Woe. Produced by Karl Westerlund alongside An Abstract Illusion themselves, recorded at Blackharbour Studios, with drums produced and recorded by Jakob Herrmann at Top Floor Studios and pre-production and additional recording by Emil P. Lundh at Urberg Studios, mixed and mastered by Robin Leijon, and displaying a classy artwork by Alex Eckman-Lawn, the new album by Christian Berglönn on lead vocals, Karl Westerlund on the guitars and bass, Robert Stenvall on keyboards and vocals, and Isak Nilsson on drums and backing vocals, not to mention an array of very special guest musicians, is undoubtedly their most atmospheric and heavy work to date, exploring the depths of the human psyche and suffering.

Featuring vocals by Lukas Backeström, Blackmurmur is absolutely atmospheric, enfolding, futuristic and luxurious from the very first second, uniting the complexity of Progressive Death Metal with the mystery of Melodic Black Metal, and with the guitars by Karl and the keys by Robert sounding absolutely fantastic. They keep delivering sheer awesomeness in No Dreams Beyond Empty Horizons, with the complex yet visceral drumming by Isak adding an extra touch of heaviness to their music, followed by Like a Geyser Ever Erupting, featuring the cello by Jonathan Miranda-Figueroa and the violin by Dawn Ye, carrying a stunning song title for a lecture in modern-day extreme music where once again Isak sounds inhumane behind his drums.

Frost Flower once again features vocals by Lukas Backeström, cello by Jonathan Miranda-Figueroa, and violin by Flavia Fontana, all clashing with the visceral riffs by Karl and the whimsical keys by Robert; whereas Emmett is another long, complex and extremely detailed song, starting in a serene, enfolding manner, almost melancholic, before we face an avalanche of Progressive Death Metal led by Christian’s enraged roars, also showcasing ethereal passages intertwined with absolute violence. Then we face Silverfields, with narration by Elsa Svensson, working almost like an atmospheric interlude, therefore soothing our souls for the monumental title-track The Sleeping City, bringing forward endless breaks and variations without forgetting their core heaviness, as if Dream Theater went Death Metal, with Karl once again doing a superb job with both his guitar and bass boosted by the cello by Jonathan Miranda-Figueroa and the violin by Dawn Ye, before all fades into a climatic, Stygian finale.

“When we compose an album we don’t want it to just be a collection of random songs, we want a holistic theme coursing through the album’s veins. When writing The Sleeping City we wanted to explore what the soundtrack to a dystopian sci-fi film, such as Blade Runner or Terminator, would sound like if it were written by a death metal band. For The Sleeping City, we took inspiration from acts such as Depeche Mode, My Bloody Valentine, Kite, Ólafur Arnalds and Boards of Canada, pushing us to expand and refine our sound palette. Going from the long-song format of Woe, it was a fun challenge to once again write self-contained songs with a clear beginning and end,” commented the band about their newborn masterpiece. You can find those extremely talented guys on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their breathtaking creations on Spotify, and of course purchase their new album from BandCamp or from the Willowtip Records webstore (as a CD or an LP), or simply click HERE for all things An Abstract Illusion. A decrepit yet monumental landmark, the sleeping city awaits ahead. Will you enter?

Best moments of the album: Blackmurmur, Like a Geyser Ever Erupting, Emmett and The Sleeping City.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Willowtip Records

Track listing
1. Blackmurmur 11:00
2. No Dreams Beyond Empty Horizons 6:56
3. Like a Geyser Ever Erupting 7:58
4. Frost Flower 8:14
5. Emmett 11:19
6. Silverfields 3:46
7. The Sleeping City 10:07

Band members
Christian Berglönn – lead vocals
Karl Westerlund – guitars, bass
Robert Stenvall – keyboards, vocals
Isak Nilsson – drums, backing vocals

Guest musicians
Lukas Backeström – lead vocals on “Blackmurmur” and “Frost Flower”, choir vocals on “No Dreams Beyond Empty Horizons” and “Like a Geyser Ever Erupting”
Jonathan Miranda-Figueroa – cello on “Like a Geyser Ever Erupting”, “Frost Flower” and “The Sleeping City”
Dawn Ye – violin on “Like a Geyser Ever Erupting” and “The Sleeping City”
Flavia Fontana – violin on “Frost Flower”
Elsa Svensson – narration on “Silverfields”

Album Review – Sothoris / Domus Omnium Mortuorum (2025)

Enter the house of all the dead to the sound of the scorching newborn spawn by this ruthless Blackened Death Metal horde from Poland.

Forged in the fires of Miłosław, Poland in 2016, the ruthless Blakened Death Metal horde Sothoris arises from their Stygian lair once again to darken the skies to the sound of their newborn spawn, entitled Domus Omnium Mortuorum, or “house of all the dead” in English, following up on their 2022 sophomore album Wpiekłowstąpienie. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Krzysztof Kostencki at Tetra Wave Studio, with artwork by Bartosz Szczepaniak and Maksymilian Krasoń, and band photo session by Maciej “Wuja” Chomik, the new album by vocalist Raven, guitarists Hex and Setrial, bassist Lord Ghash, and drummer Hrist sees the band offer their trademark mixture of Black Metal ferocity and Death Metal power while its lyrical layer showcases a study of human wickedness, being therefore a must-listen for fans of extreme music with a deep and dark meaning.

A wicked intro gradually morphs into a scathing beast named Wieczornica (“evening party”), spearheaded by the hellish riffs by Hex and Setrial, whereas Szkarłat (“scarlet”) offers a more visceral display of Blackened Death Metal, with Raven gnarling rabidly like a demonic entity while the rumbling bass and blast beats by Lord Ghash and Hrist sound utterly demolishing. Then with an incandescent name like Lawa (“lava”) the music had to be absolutely scorching, which is exactly what we get, with the venomous roars by Raven crushing our putrid souls mercilessly, whereas Hrist then hammers his drums in the Behemoth-fueled Byłem Faustem (“I was Faust”), which will surely make their world renowned countrymen proud.

Dzieci Diabła (“the devil’s children”) is another thunderous display of extreme music by Sothoris, with the band’s guitar duo firing pure malignancy through their unstoppable, vile axes, and the band takes no prisoners in their quest for Black and Death Metal in Pro Memoria, or “for the sake of memory” from Latin, led by the inhumane drumming by Hrist. Needless to say, it should sound brilliant if played live. Then presenting elements of progressive music added to their core essence we have Dym (“smoke”), where Hex and Setrial once again steal the show with their heavy-as-hell riffage, and last but not least, we’re treated to one final metallic cult by Sothoris titled Piętno (“stigma”), where the bass lines by Lord Ghash will hammer your cranial skull mercilessly.

“This album uses a certain artistic game. We go back in time to the 19th century. The starting point for this idea, the inspiration is the monument of Karl Robert Lachmann, the only son of a German, aristocratic family, who died in the Franco-Prussian War (1870-1871), vandalized by cemetery robbers, located in the mausoleum in Jałowiec,” commented frontman Raven, and if you have what it takes to enter the band’s house of the all dead, you can find those Stygian beings on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their sulfurous music on Spotify, and purchase Domus Omnium Mortuorum from BandCamp or from the Fetzner Death Records webstore as a CD or a cassette. But you better be warned, once you enter such a vile and cryptic house, your life (and death) will never be the same.

Best moments of the album: Szkarłat, Byłem Faustem and Pro Memoria.

Worst moments of the album: Dym.

Released in 2025 Fetzner Death Records/ADG Records

Track listing
1. Wieczornica 5:31
2. Szkarłat 5:43
3. Lawa 6:39
4. Byłem Faustem 6:03
5. Dzieci Diabła 4:53
6. Pro Memoria 4:52
7. Dym 4:57
8. Piętno 5:25

Band members
Raven – vocals
Hex – lead guitars
Setrial – rhythm guitars
Lord Ghash – bass
Hrist – drums

Album Review – Ofermod / Drakosophia (2025)

This uncanny Swedish Blackened Death Metal creature returns with its fifth studio offering, a vessel for Theistic Satanism and left-hand-path esotericism in sonic form.

Lepaca Nox Draconis! Ho Drakon Ho Megas!

Steered by guitarist Belfagor (aka Mika Hakola) since 1996, having sewn influence and infamy in equal measure, the uncanny Swedish Blackened Death Metal creature Ofermod, whose name was taken from a 1953 Tolkien essay, used to describe a state of mind characterized by excessive pride, is unleashing upon humanity its highly anticipated new opus, titled Drakosophia. Recorded and produced by Swedish bassist Devo Andersson (Overflash, Marduk) at Endarker Studio, and displaying a sinister artwork by John Albin Hampus Ekberg of Mark of Cain Tattoo, the follow-up to their 2021 album Mysterium Iniquitatis offers an overdose of “Qliphotic Black Metal Magick”, a genuine Orthodox Black Metal album representing a vessel for Theistic Satanism and left-hand-path esotericism in sonic form, all carefully brought into being by Belfagor on the guitars alongside North American vocalist Adeptus, Austrian session drummer Florian Musil (Agrypnie, The Negative Bias, Theotoxin), and the aforementioned Devo Andersson on bass.

It’s a pulverizing feast of scathing Black Metal in the opening tune Aicha Kandisha, with the gnarling vocals by Adeptus transpiring evil accompanied by the ruthless drumming by Florian, whereas Devo and Florian deliver a beyond demonic kitchen in Vineyards of Gomorrah while the Stygian riffage by Belfagor summons all creatures of darkness. Then the title-track Drakosophia brings to our devilish ears a cryptic atmosphere boosted by the song’s background choirs while Adeptus continues to gnarl like a true demon, and Florian hammers his drums mercilessly while Belfagor delivers pure Black Metal from his axe in Malat Atat. After that we face the unique Zazas Zazas Nasatanada Zazas, where the music is as insane and complex as its name, and that’s simply majestic, resulting in one of their best creations to date led by the venomous gnarls by Adeptus.

Belialistic Gra’al Codex is another song with a very distinct name, where once again we see Belfagor and his horde crushing our damned souls with their infernal wall of sounds, with Florian kicking some serious ass behind his drums, followed by Nox Draconis, the most straightforward, in-your-face Black Metal song of all, with Belfagor extracting sheer malignancy from his guitar and, therefore, living up to the legacy of the style while also sounding fresh. Sinister Acolyte is just an average Black Metal tune by Ofermod, still very enjoyable but not as much as the other songs, while the last song of the album, titled The Painful Movers, is a demolishing beast blasted by the band, with the riffs and bass by Belfagor and Devo complementing each other in great fashion.

Invoked right from the beginning, Drakosophia is both classic Ofermod and a continual unfolding of their unique characteristic sound, dynamically sinister and vigorously menacing. You can find more information about Ofermod and their new opus on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their sulfurous creations on Spotify, and of course grab a copy of the album from the Regain Records’ BandCamp or from the Shadow Records’ webstore. Open your third eye and let Lucifer crush all cosmic illusions of time and space, and become born anew in the LVX of Phosphorus to the sound of Drakosophia; embrace this sonic Left Hand Path sorcery and mysticism, or stay far away from the sinister audial art of Ofermod.

Best moments of the album: Vineyards of Gomorrah, Zazas Zazas Nasatanada Zazas and Nox Draconis.

Worst moments of the album: Sinister Acolyte.

Released in 2025 Shadow Records/Regain Records

Track listing
1. Aicha Kandisha 4:03
2. Vineyards of Gomorrah 6:53
3. Drakosophia 3:56
4. Malat Atat 5:54
5. Zazas Zazas Nasatanada Zazas 4:30
6. Belialistic Gra’al Codex 5:14
7. Nox Draconis 5:04
8. Sinister Acolyte 4:51
9. The Painful Movers 4:26

Band members
Adeptus – lead vocals
Belfagor – guitars

Guest musicians
Devo Andersson – bass (session)
Florian Musil – drums (session)
Thomas Eriksson & Lars Broddesson – choir vocals

Concert Review – Crypta (The Garrison, Toronto, ON, 10/08/2025)

On a cooler night in Toronto, metalheads from all over the city had an absolute blast with one of the must-see Death Metal beasts from the worldwide extreme music scene.

OPENING ACTS: Pretty Face and Death Club

This Wednesday was by far the coolest day from the past three or four months in Toronto, but that didn’t stop the metalheads from different parts of the city to head to The Garrison for a sold out show with PRETTY FACE, DEATH CLUB and CRYPTA during their In the Other Side Tour 2025, another killer event organized by the unstoppable Noel Peters of Inertia Entertainment. As the first band was only going to hit the stage at 8pm, I decided to take my time at home, had proper dinner, relaxed a little, and therefore avoided the chaotic madness of QEW during rush hour. Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi got to the venue a little earlier to get ready to take some amazing shots of all bands, which by the way are all led by super talented ladies who make heavy music way better, heavier, and more fun. The merch selection was also great for all bands, including some kick-ass guitar picks from Crypta, and everything with good quality and for a reasonable price. Not only that, the variety of beer and other drinks at The Garrison is way bigger and cheaper than at bigger venues like Budweiser Stage. Supporting the underground definitely has its advantages, with the main one being the much lighter impact on your pocket for an even higher amount of adrenaline and energy onstage.

On a side note, before and after the bands kicked some serious ass onstage, I had the pleasure of chatting with the organizers of the Icelandic festival named Satán, who were on vacation in the city, enjoying a few concerts like Judas Priest/Alice Cooper last week, and Crypta this Wednesday. Gísli Sigmundsson, an Icelandic metal legend who fronts the old school Death Metal band Sororicide, and Kristján Guðmundsson, drummer for the ruthless Blackened Death Metal horde Nexion, were having an amazing time at The Garrison, and of course I enjoyed a lot talking to them about heavy music and both the Canadian and the Icelandic underground scenes. I told Kristján that Nexion must come to Toronto for a show, to which he replied “do people enjoy that type of blasphemic music here?” Well, I guess I don’t even need to say what I answered to him, right? And if you have the time and money available for a trip next summer, the Satán festival is happening between June 4 and 6, 2026. Who knows, maybe I can visit Iceland for a share of their own blasphemy then.

Labeled as a queer-fem metal band hailing from Brampton, Ontario, expressing experiences and struggles growing up as teenage fem-presenting people through their music, PRETTY FACE kicked off the party with their fusion of Hardcore with elements of Death and Doom Metal, and the reaction of the fans at The Garrison was excellent. Although they only have one song officially released, the 2024 single The Gore Road, available on Spotify, those girls sounded excellent onstage and showed endless energy during their short but effective set. I have zero idea of which songs they played, or who the band members are as there’s nothing online about that (and I’m sorry, but I forgot to ask them in person after their show), but those girls have a bright future ahead of them. As long as they release an EP or a full-length album in the coming months to keep their momentum going, of course.

The second opening band of the night was another local band, Hamilton, Ontario-based modern Sludge Metal/Deathcore act DEATH CLUB, who released their debut Betrayal back in 2024, available on both BandCamp and Spotify. Formed of Dana Bowman on vocals and guitar, Adam Baldwin on bass and backing vocals, and Chelsea Todd on drums, plus another unknown musician who’s probably just their tour guitarist (and again, sorry for not asking him his name), the band kept the heaviness flowing inside The Garrison, which was already packed by the time they hit the stage. You can get more details about the band by clicking HERE, and if they ever play a concert at your city or town, I highly recommend you go watch them live because their music is great, and their stage presence is just as awesome.

CRYPTA

There was some uncertainty in the air if the indomitable Brazilian Death Metal beast CRYPTA was actually going to play this Wednesday night in Toronto as the iconic Fernanda Lima and another one of her bandmates got stuck at the Canadian border when trying to cross it from the United States, forcing them to fly from a city near Buffalo into YYZ and going straight to the venue for the show. Fortunately, those girls are absolute badass, and nothing would stop them from delivering their slab of Death Metal to one of their most loyal fanbase worldwide. The band was on absolute fire from the very first seconds of one of my favorite Crypta songs, The Other Side of Anger, and their setlist blending their two album Echoes of the Soul (2021) and Shades of Sorrow (2023), both available on BandCamp and on Spotify, brought sheer chaos and anarchy to The Garrison to the point Keith didn’t even dare to try to get a spot in front of the stage for his photos. Yes, it was wild.

Fernanda was insane on stage as usual, the mesmerizing Tainá Bergamaschi kept shredding her axe in great fashion, headbanging like a maniac, and making what was supposed to be an “angry” face during the heaviest parts of their songs (although she looks way to nice and cool to really look angry), Luana Dametto showed no mercy for our necks and bodies, crushing her drums nonstop for our total delight (therefore igniting some demented mosh pits), and their new touring guitarist Victoria Villarreal, from bands like Chaos Rising and Syrebris, proved why she was chosen by the band to support them on this tour, also kicking some serious ass with her flammable riffs and solos. I just think the overall sound volume was a bit low, but nothing that could make their performance less demolishing.

Some of the songs were phenomenal live, including Kali, The Outsider, Stronghold, Starvation, and of course From the Ashes, and when you have that high quality material in your hands like the girls from Crypta do, you can rest assured you’re in for a treat when they take the stage of your city by storm like this Wednesday night in Toronto. Not only that, Fernanda might be one of the sweetest musicians from the current scene worldwide, as even after going through all that hassle to make it to Toronto for the show she didn’t leave the stage after their concert was done, taking photos, signing albums and shirts, and chatting with each and every fan that stayed at The Garrison way past 11pm to meet one of the most talented women in heavy music. Toronto loves you, girls! And we’re ready for another round of your ruthless Death Metal anytime you decide to return to our metallic city.

Setlist
The Aftermath
The Other Side of Anger
Kali
Lift the Blindfold
The Outsider
Possessed
Lullaby for the Forsaken
Stronghold
The Limbo
Trial of Traitors
Under the Black Wings
Starvation
Dark Clouds
Lord of Ruins
From the Ashes
The Closure

Band members
Fernanda Lira – vocals, bass
Tainá Bergamaschi – guitars
Victoria Villarreal – guitars
Luana Dametto – drums

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