Album Review – Dissociated / No Connections EP (2025)

This talented Spanish Metalcore act is ready to take their message of liberation and solidarity to  audiences all around the world armed with their striking debut EP.

Forged inside the creative mind of vocalist Kevin Soto during the years of 2019 and 2020 in Palma de Mallorca, Spain, with a deep desire to break free from the traditional bounds of classic Metalcore, the up-and-coming unit Dissociated is ready to take their message of liberation and solidarity to  audiences all around the world armed with their debut EP entitled No Connections, proving that even in the darkest moments, music can be a powerful act of release and transformation. Currently formed of the aforementioned Kevin Soto on lead vocals alongside guitarist Raúl Muñoz, bassist Toni P. Sánchez and drummer Lucas, the band delivers a powerful mix of emotional intensity and technical precision in their debut EP, leaving us eager for more of their music in a not-so-distant future.

The opening track Self-Destructive Chains sounds very introspective and modern from the very first second, exploding into a demented fusion of Metalcore and Deathcore with Djent and dissonant elements while Kevin showcasing his evil creature-like gnarls; and their Progressive Metalcore vein pulses even harder in No Connections, with Toni’s metallic bass hammering our cranial skulls mercilessly. Endless Waves offers another overdose of insanity in the form of modern, visceral Metalcore by the band, where the riffs by Raúl sound at the same time caustic and very melodic, also presenting those downtempo, punishing breaks for our total delight. Then the desperate screeches by Kevin will haunt your damned souls in Timeless Remorse, bringing forward an avalanche of violence amidst an ethereal, grim atmosphere, resulting in the most detailed and dynamic of all songs. Lastly, more of the dissonant yet harmonious riffs by Raúl permeate the air in Lost in Traces, with the entire band sounding tight and sharp until the very end.

You can find more information about this very promising Spanish band on Instagram, and of course show them your support and bang your heads to their sick creations by purchasing their striking EP from Art Gates Records as an “Endless Waves” shirt + fitted cap + CD comboa “No Connections” hoodie + “Chains” shirt + CD combo, or as a “No Connections” shirt + tote bag + CD combo, or simply click HERE for all things Dissociated. The next step for those Spanish rockers is undoubtedly releasing their first full-length album, and if it’s just half as good as No Connections, we can rest assured the world of Metalcore will be in very good hands in the coming years.

Best moments of the album: No Connections and Timeless Remorse.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Art Gates Records

Track listing
Self-Destructive Chains 3:15
No Connections 3:59
Endless Waves 4:16
Timeless Remorse 4:26
Lost in Traces 4:27

Band members
Kevin Soto – lead vocals
Raúl Muñoz – guitars
Toni P. Sánchez – bass, vocals
Lucas – drums

Album Review – Sun Of The Dying / The Earth Is Silent (2019)

A driving force of Doom Metal from Spain is ready to show us all how solitude, grief and serene landscapes can be translated into first-class extreme music.

There’s nothing like a good dosage of Death and Doom Metal to make any Friday the 13th even darker and more enjoyable, don’t you agree? And that’s exactly what Madrid, Spain-based six-piece horde Sun Of The Dying is offering us all with their sophomore full-length opus The Earth Is Silent, the follow-up to their 2017 debut album The Roar of the Furious Sea. Formed in the year of 2013 as a side project between former vocalist Lavin Uruksoth (from CrystalMoors) and guitarist Daniel Fernández Casuso (from Apocynthion), Sun Of The Dying is highly recommended for fans of My Dying Bride, Paradise Lost, Katatonia and Anathema, among others, blending their 90’s-rooted doom music with a more modern sound taken from bands like Shape of Despair, Ahab and Swallow the Sun, with the 45 minutes of extreme music found in The Earth Is Silent being a must-listen for admirers of such distinct style.

And the band now comprised of the aforementioned Daniel together with lead singer Eduardo Guilló, guitarist Roberto Rayo, bassist José Yuste, keyboardist David Muñoz and drummer Diego Weser really stepped up their game in their new album, featuring a minimalist and straightforward cover picture by Spanish photographer Miguel Urbaneja (Dissociated), and recorded, mixed and mastered at The Empty Hall Studio in Madrid. From grim, atmospheric passages to heavier-than-hell moments, The Earth Is Silent is a powerful statement that Sun Of The Dying are not just an average band, but a driving force of Doom Metal from the Spanish underground scene that’s ready to penetrate deep inside your soul and show you how solitude, grief and serene landscapes can be translated into first-class extreme music.

The sound of the waves give a raw touch to the somber intro The Earth Is Silent, darkening the skies for the Stygian anthem A Dying Light, which begins in a lugubrious way to the keys by David while Eduardo delivers a huge dosage of melancholy through his deep, clean vocals. In addition, Diego smashes his drums slowly and steadily in great Doom Metal fashion, with Eduardo’s cavernous roars bringing darkness to their crushing musicality. Speeding things up a bit and enhancing their background epicness and obscurity, the band offers us all A Cold Unnamed Fear, where the stringed trio Daniel, Roberto and José sound almost full Black Metal with their incendiary riffs in another brutal display of extreme music, with a delicate touch coming from David’s keys; and they continue their voyage through desolate and cold lands in Orion, where the sound of the guitars by Daniel and Roberto will mesmerize your mind throughout the song’s over eight minutes of solitude and ethereal passages, while Diego keeps the rhythm as sluggish and nocturnal as possible.

Showcasing lyrics that exhale hopelessness darkly vociferated by Eduardo (“When the morning came / There was no hope / There was no joy / When the morning came / The sun was white / Behind the clouds”), When the Morning Came brings forward an interesting paradox between the rumbling bass punches and whimsical keys generated by José and Davi, respectively, with the song’s last part being a brilliant ode to silence and nature; followed by Monolith, offering our ears an imposing an ominous background while at the same time leaning towards Blackened Doom, or in other words, a spine-chilling creation by the band filling every single space in the air with its phantasmagorical keys, flammable guitars and endless heaviness, not to mention its bitterly cold words declaimed by Eduardo (“Another day of calm and cold in this ship / waiting for a sign of mercy of our god / Meanwhile the ice bright like a silver knife / Behind the mist I suppose I see something dark / A cyclopean stone with many lights like stars”). And finally, the piano notes by David kick off the closing tune, entitled White Skies And Grey Lands, before Eduardo’s smooth vocals bring serenity to the music, with all instruments uniting in a climatic and thrilling sound exhibiting the strength of Doom Metal spiced up by the beauty of classical music.

If you’re a longtime fan of the grim and somber fusion of Doom and Death Metal played by bands like Sun Of The Dying, go show your support to those talented Spanish metallers by following them on Facebook, by listening to The Earth Is Silent in full on YouTube and on Spotify and, above all that, by purchasing your copy of the album from their BandCamp page, from Indiemerchstore.com (in CD or vinyl format), or simply click HERE for each and every location where you can find this excellent opus of extreme music. In a nutshell, Sun Of The Dying are not among us to bring happiness nor hope. Quite the contrary, the music found in The Earth Is Silent is the perfect representation of the harsh future that awaits us all in our decaying world, and of course that could only be done through the Stygian and cryptic sounds of our beloved Doom Metal.

Best moments of the album: A Cold Unnamed Fear, When the Morning Came and Monolith.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2019 AOP Records

Track listing
1. The Earth Is Silent (Intro) 1:39
2. A Dying Light 8:23
3. A Cold Unnamed Fear 5:41
4. Orion 8:09
5. When the Morning Came 5:21
6. Monolith 8:47
7. White Skies And Grey Lands 7:22

Band members
Eduardo Guilló – vocals
Daniel Fernández Casuso – guitars
Roberto Rayo – guitars
José Yuste – bass
David Muñoz – keyboards, backing vocals
Diego Weser – drums