Album Review – Lucifer / Lucifer V (2024)

Sweden’s own Heavy and Doom Metal coven will drag you to their Stygian lair to the sound of their breathtaking fifth full-length offering.

Three years after the release of their critically acclaimed album Lucifer IV, Stockholm, Sweden’s own Heavy/Doom Metal/Rock coven Lucifer returns from the depths of the underworld with a new and breathtaking offering, simply titled Lucifer V, blasting our ears with their characteristic doomed sounds in the name of darkness and evil. Highly recommended for fans of Ghost, Black Sabbath, Blue Öyster Cult, Witch Mountain, Coven, Kadavar and Fleetwood Mac, among others, the new album by the talented witch Johanna Platow Andersson on vocals, Linus Björklund and Martin Nordin on the guitars, Harald Göthblad on bass and Nicke Andersson on drums will put you in a fantastic trance with its sharp and enfolding fusion of Heavy and Doom Metal with Rock N’ Roll, proving why the band has become a reference in the genre worldwide.

The Black Sabbath-inspired riffs by Linus and Martin ignite the thrilling opening tune Fallen Angel, showcasing the band’s trademark groove and darkness, with Johanna stealing the spotlight already with her mesmerizing vocals; whereas a Doom Metal start gradually morphs into the rockin’ extravaganza At the Mortuary, where once again Nicke showcases all his talent behind his drums dictating the song’s charming pace in great fashion. Then investing in a more direct Rock N’ Roll sound, get ready to dance in the dark together with Lucifer in Riding Reaper, with the riffs by the band’s guitar duo exhaling electricity and feeling, and the cabaret-inspired sound of the piano sets the tone for Johanna to deliver her passionate, devilish vocals in Slow Dance in a Crypt, a beautiful ballad that should sound amazing if played live, not to mention the song’s fiery guitar solos. Right after that we have A Coffin Has No Silver Lining, a true Rock N’ Roll anthem played to perfection by Johanna and the boys, bringing to our ears an addictive chorus and the striking riffs and solos by Linus and Martin.

It’s then time for another ass-kicking creation by Lucifer titled Maculate Heart, starting in an introspective way before exploding into a feast of Heavy Metal and Hard Rock led by the hammering drums by Nicke, followed by The Dead Don’t Speak, bringing forward four minutes of the band’s classic sonority with hints of Blues Rock added to their core essence, in special to the awesome guitar solo by Linus. Let’s now hit the road with Lucifer to the sound of Strange Sister, with Johanna having another soaring, sensational vocal performance supported by the rumbling bass by Harald and the classy beats by Nicke; followed by the straightforward tune Nothing Left to Lose but My Life, which despite being a solid song and having its dark charm it’s below the rest of the album in terms of energy and creativity. And lastly, there’s still time for two alternate versions of At the Mortuary (Halloween edit) and Maculate Heart (radio edit) as bonus tracks, and both are just as incendiary as the original ones.

Johanna and her henchmen are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with more of their music, news, and their tour dates (and you should never miss a Lucifer concert as it’s simply brilliant, like the one I had the pleasure to witness in Toronto in November), and don’t forget to also subscribe to their official YouTube channel and stream all of their stylish compositions on Spotify. And above all that, go grab a copy of the incendiary Lucifer V by clicking HERE or HERE, adding to your grim album collection one of the coolest albums of another dark and sinister year ahead of us.

Best moments of the album: Fallen Angel, Slow Dance in a Crypt, A Coffin Has No Silver Lining and Maculate Heart.

Worst moments of the album: Nothing Left to Lose but My Life.

Released in 2024 Nuclear Blast

Track listing
1. Fallen Angel 3:15
2. At the Mortuary 6:07
3. Riding Reaper 4:19
4. Slow Dance in a Crypt 4:28
5. A Coffin Has No Silver Lining 4:25
6. Maculate Heart 4:09
7. The Dead Don’t Speak 3:58
8. Strange Sister 4:20
9. Nothing Left to Lose but My Life 4:40

Bonus tracks
10. At the Mortuary (Halloween edit) 4:56
11. Maculate Heart (radio edit) 3:37

Band members
Johanna Platow Andersson – vocals
Linus Björklund – lead guitars
Martin Nordin – rhythm guitars
Harald Göthblad – bass
Nicke Andersson – drums

Album Review – Sovereign / Altered Realities (2024)

This Norway-based Technical Death and Thrash Metal unit will attack our senses with their first full-length offering, a monstrous masterwork of old school extreme music ecstasy.

Formed in Oslo, Norway in 2018, the ruthless yet very technical unit Sovereign is ready to unleash their lethal blend of evil Death and Thrash Metal in their first full-length album, titled Altered Realities, the follow-up to their 2020 debut EP Neurotic. Three years in the making, “Altered Realities is a product of an ever-evolving journey we have taken as a band, from our start in 2018 and culminating in the album’s recording in early 2022,” reflects lead guitarist Tommy Jacobsen, joined in the band by former Nocturnal Breed band-mate Vidar Fineidet also on the guitar alongside drummer Cato Syversrud, and vocalist and bassist Simen “Gravskjender” Grong. “We strive to push ourselves, both in terms of speed and technicality, whilst still keeping a groove and dynamic. Our approach to death/thrash is an interplay between fast-paced aggression and a slower, more groove-oriented feel. The lyrical themes of the album mirror events and unrest that happened during the time of writing and is in itself a journey,” complemented Tommy about the band’s monstrous masterwork of old school extreme music ecstasy, being recommended for fans of Nekromantheon, Sepultura, Pestilence, Dark Angel, Demolition Hammer, and many others.

Atmospheric noises grow in intensity until an avalanche of violence and progressiveness hits us hard in Altered Reality, led by the harsh gnarls by Simen while Cato delivers a fusion of Death, Thrash and Doom Metal through his obscure beats and fills; and Tommy and Vidar dictate the pace with their flammable riffage in Futile Dreams, supported by the always rumbling kitchen by Simen and Cato, being therefore highly recommended for fans of Immolation, flowing into the disruptive, massive Nebular Waves, with its caustic riffs slashing our ears mercilessly while Simen continues to roar in the darkest and most demented way possible. And Counter Tech is another breathtaking hybrid of Death and Thrash Metal exhaling aggression and intricacy where Cato pounds our cranial skulls nonstop with his damned beats.

There’s no time to breathe as the quartet will bring hell on earth with the frantic, insane and demonic The Enigma of Intelligence, a six-minute lecture in both old school and modern-day Thrash Metal perfect for some action inside the circle pit, whereas their second to last onrush of thrashing sounds comes in the form of Synthetic Life, blasting our putrid minds once again to the infernal riffs and striking solos by the band’s guitar duo and the always hammering drums by Cato. Lastly, get ready for ten minutes of top-of-the-line Thrash and Death Metal in Absence of Unity, starting in a rhythmic, groovy manner spearheaded by Cato’s classic beats, offering us all an amalgamation of blackened sounds, cryptic passages and the ruthless growls by Simen, getting darker and darker as the music progresses, and with its climatic ending putting the perfect conclusion to the album as a whole.

In summary, if you love the violence of Death and Thrash Metal, but at the same time you nurture a deep passion for the more technical and intricate side of music, you’ll have an absolute blast listening to Altered Realities, which is available for purchase from the Dark Descent Records’ BandCamp page or webstore as a CD (in the US and Europe), an LP (in the US and Europe) and a pro tape (also in the US and in Europe). In addition, don’t forget to start following the band on Facebook and on Instagram for news, tour dates and so on, and to stream all of their wicked creations on Spotify or any other streaming service. Sovereign are among us to fill all empty spaces in the air with their technical aggression, and I’m sure once you start listening to their new offering you’ll instantly become addicted to their pulverizing music.

Best moments of the album: Futile Dreams, The Enigma of Intelligence and Absence of Unity.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 Dark Descent Records

Track listing
1. Altered Reality 7:01
2. Futile Dreams 4:29
3. Nebular Waves 3:46
4. Counter Tech 5:40
5. The Enigma of Intelligence 6:05
6. Synthetic Life 4:17
7. Absence of Unity 10:16

Band members
Simen “Gravskjender” Grong – vocals, bass
Tommy Jacobsen – lead & rhythm guitars
Vidar Fineidet – rhythm guitars
Cato Syversrud – drums

Album Review – Fathomless Ritual / Hymns For The Lesser Gods (2024)

Behold this one-man project from Canada and his striking debut opus, offering us all a technical and brutal form of Death Metal for sacrifices and caverns fully dedicated to the prehistoric gods.

With manic glee, Newmarket, Ontario, Canada-based Technical/Brutal Death/Doom Metal creature Fathomless Ritual recreates the maddening, unhinged kind of Death Metal created by the likes of Demilich, Chthe’ilist, Dead and Dripping, and Mortiferum, among others, and give its own ugly, grime-ridden twist to it, which is exactly what you’re going to get in the project’s debut opus Hymns For The Lesser Gods. Displaying a stunning artwork and gouache paintings by renowned Brazilian artist Marcio Blasphemator, Hymns For The Lesser Gods offers a darker, murkier, cavernous sound, being labeled as “Death Metal for sacrifices and caverns”, but all the same has a denser quality and a sense of modern urgency about it which livens up the proceedings, with the project’s sole member Brendan Dean (or simply B. Dean), of bands like Gutvoid, Fumes and Pukewraith, making a conscientious effort to make the sound more extreme and relevant in his own way without attempting to dethrone the gods.

Pure insanity and heaviness flow from all instruments from the very first second in Hecatomb for an Unending Madness, where Brendan’s deep, inhumane gnarls add an extra touch of obscurity to the music, also showcasing infernal, demented riffs not recommended for the lighthearted; and our lone wolf keeps hammering all of his instruments in Exiled to the Lower Catacombs, resulting in a Neanderthalic, grim Death Metal attack with the bass sounds reverberating deep inside our heads. Those drums keep pounding our cranial skulls in Gorge of the Nameless, not to mention the acid electricity exhaling from Brendan’s riffs and bass, feeling like he’s dragging us deeper and deeper into his Stygian lair. Then get ready for six minutes of demented groove in the form of Grafted to the Chambers of Mirth, where Brendan follows his own “Cavern Death Metal” formula in great fashion, blasting his stringed axes mercilessly while also barking like a demonic entity.

There’s no limit to the level of insanity and darkness blasted by Brendan and his Fathomless Ritual, resulting in another onrush of brutal, dense and headbanging sounds titled Wielding the Bone Wand, while our ears keep being invaded by his devilish roars. And Brendan shows no sign of slowing down; quite the contrary, he keeps slashing his stringed axe like a beast in Cosmic Reflections from the Basin of Blood, another solid creation venturing through the realms of Experimental Death Metal. It’s then pedal to the metal as Brenda’s Death Metal attack will leave you absolutely disoriented in Gelatinous Being of Countless Forms, where the song’s demented but very intricate drums walk hand in hand with his devilish gnarls and rumbling bass punches, and Gifts for Aranaktu is one final onrush of demonic, ruthless metal sounds that will hit us hard in the face. Furthermore, it’s truly impressive how Brendan managed to keep his guitar and bass work so vibrant throughout the entire album without sounding repetitive or stale.

Be prepared to sacrifice yourself and win the favour of the forgotten ones with Hymns For The Lesser Gods, an album that should delight any fan of underground Death Metal, and that you can purchase from Fathomless Ritual’s own BandCamp page, as well as from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ webstore as an 8-panel digipak in the US or in Europe, and as a very special CD + shirt combo also in Europe. Don’t forget to also give Brendan and his Fathomless Ritual a shout on Facebook and on Instagram, because not only he’s embellishing our lives with an album chock-full of riffs and jangly hooks with escalating song structures culminating in cranial implosions, but it’s also a fierce and pulverizing tribute to the prehistoric gods, all embraced by that murky, twisted and engrossing form of Death Metal we all love so much.

Best moments of the album: Exiled to the Lower Catacombs, Grafted to the Chambers of Mirth and Gelatinous Being of Countless Forms.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. Hecatomb for an Unending Madness 2:32
2. Exiled to the Lower Catacombs 4:55
3. Gorge of the Nameless 4:15
4. Grafted to the Chambers of Mirth 6:11
5. Wielding the Bone Wand 4:45
6. Cosmic Reflections from the Basin of Blood 4:01
7. Gelatinous Being of Countless Forms 4:58
8. Gifts for Aranaktu 6:54

Band members
Brendan Dean – vocals, guitars, bass, drum programming

Album Review – Engulf / The Dying Planet Weeps (2024)

A one-man studio Death Metal act drawing influence from all dark corners of the extreme music realm returns with his massive and savage debut full-length album.

A one-man studio Death Metal act drawing influence from all dark corners of the extreme music realm, New Jersey, United States-based entity Engulf is back with its catchy riffs, gnarly vocals and brutish yet dark vibes in the project’s massive and savage debut full-length album, titled The Dying Planet Weeps. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Chris Kelly, mastered for vinyl by Carlo Altobelli at Toxic Basement Studio, displaying an otherwordly artwork by Pär Olofsson (with additional artwork by Chris Kiesling of Misanthropic-Art, and logo by Steve Crow of Malevolent Icons), and featuring an array of very special guest musicians, the album is the perfect follow-up to the three story-driven EP’s released between 2017 and 2019, showcasing all the talent and passion for heavy music by the project’s mastermind, vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Hal Microutsicos.

Eerie, cryptic sounds permeate the air in the opening tune Withered Suns Collapse until all explodes into a Technical Death Metal attack by our lone wolf, where he not only extracts sheer violence from his riffage, but his guttural roars also bring endless insanity to the song. Then featuring guest vocals by Kevin Muller (of Alluvial), Bellows from the Aether offers more of Hal’s groovy and dissonant Death Metal, supported by the rumbling bass by session musician Giacomo Gastaldi (of Darkend); and Hal keeps hammering his instruments in The Nefarious Hive, featuring guest vocals by the one and only Sven de Caluwé (of Aborted), who delivers his deep, inhumane growls as expected, making a devilish vocal duo with Hal. After such inspiring metal attack, Ominous Grandeur brings elements from Doom and Black Metal to Engulf’s already demonic sonority, resulting in over five minutes of insanity and heaviness where the bass by Giacomo sounds absolutely rumbling until the very end.

The second half of the album will hit you hard in the head with its even heavier and more venomous sounds, starting with Lunar Scourge, a brutal and evil attack of Death Metal by Hal with its blast beats and sick riffage inviting us all to join Engulf in pitch black darkness, whereas Plagued Oblivion, featuring a guest guitar solo by Pat Bonvin (of Near Death Condition), reminds me of some of the wicked creations by Death Metal veterans Unleashed, also presenting some sick elements from Black Metal in its riffs. Then featuring guest vocals by Enrico “H.” Di Lorenzo (of Hideous Divinity) and a guest guitar solo by Chris Kelly, Earthbore is a six-minute journey through the realms of cryptic and savage Death Metal, starting in a serene manner before morphing into a Dissonant Death Metal extravaganza led by the wicked riffs by Hal, flowing into the title-track The Dying Planet Weeps, an extended instrumental outro that follows the same pattern of the previous song, but that takes away a bit of the album’s energy due to its length.

The multi-talented Hal Microutsicos and his demented beast Engulf are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with more nice-to-know details about the entire project, and you can also stream his wicked creations on Spotify and on several other streaming services. Furthermore, in order to show Engulf your utmost support, you can purchase a copy of The Dying Planet Weeps by clicking HERE (physical version) or HERE (digital version), inspiring Hal to keep crafting first-class Death Metal for years to come. The Dying Planet Weeps will surely please most fans of all types of Death Metal due to its versatility and dynamism, once again proving how important one-man or one-woman bands are to the continuity of the underground scene.

Best moments of the album: Bellows from the Aether, The Nefarious Hive and Earthbore.

Worst moments of the album: The Dying Planet Weeps.

Released in 2024 Everlasting Spew Records

Track listing
1. Withered Suns Collapse 5:51
2. Bellows from the Aether 3:31
3. The Nefarious Hive 3:38
4. Ominous Grandeur 5:19
5. Lunar Scourge 4:28
6. Plagued Oblivion 4:45
7. Earthbore 6:11
8. The Dying Planet Weeps 2:19

Band members
Hal Microutsicos – vocals, all instruments, drum programming

Guest musicians
Giacomo Gastaldi – bass (session)
Kevin Muller – vocals on “Bellows from the Aether”
Sven de Caluwé – vocals on “The Nefarious Hive”
Pat Bonvin – guitar solo on “Plagued Oblivion”
Enrico “H.” Di Lorenzo – vocals on “Earthbore”
Chris Kelly – guitar solo on “Earthbore”

The Year In Review – Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2023

“Whatever your age may be, when you go to a heavy metal gig, you’re a teenager again.” – Rob Halford

I believe that quote from the Metal God himself perfectly represents the year of 2023 for most of us metalheads, including of course myself and my buddy Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi as we’ve been to countless metal gigs this year (and you can see detailed reviews with amazing professional photos for each one of them HERE), keeping our inner fires burning during such difficult times for the entire world. A never-ending economic crisis that’s dragging tons and tons of people to poverty everywhere, the Russo-Ukrainian War that persists for almost two years now, the extremely sad and inhumane Gaza–Israel conflict, all environmental disasters that in the end are all mankind’s fault, and so on. On the heavy music side, we witnessed the final concert ever by KISS, the end of great bands like The Agonist and Betraying the Martyrs, and the deaths of Sebastian Marino (former guitarist of Overkill and Anvil), Michael “Majk Moti” Kupper (former guitarist of Running Wild), Jon Kennedy (former bassist of Cradle of Filth and former vocalist of Hecate Enthroned), Hiroshi “Heath” Morie (bassist of X Japan), Charlie Dominici (former vocalist of Dream Theater), and several other talented musicians.

Despite all those losses, it was a very good year for heavy music, as bands kept fighting for rock and metal no matter what, putting on fantastic albums and memorable tours for us fans, with some already voicing their dissatisfaction against Live Nation and Ticketmaster for their sky-rocketing ticket prices, shady fees, and an obscure ticket reselling “mafia” running in the background that inflates those prices even more. In 2024 we’ll surely (and hopefully) see more of this insurgence against their ticket monopoly, and while we wait for that let’s enjoy The Headbanging Moose’s Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2023, excluding EP’s, best of’s and live albums, offering our avid ears the perfect soundtrack to every single moment in our lives, even if that moment is the apocalypse.

1. UADA – Crepuscule Natura (REVIEW)
One of the rising stars of the current Melodic Black Metal scene returns with their majestic fourth album, unleashing upon us five sonic vessels.
Best song of the album: Retraversing the Void

2. Cattle Decapitation – Terrasite (REVIEW)
Fear the devourer of earth in the form of the brand new and absolutely majestic album by California’s own Deathgrind masters.
Best song of the album: We Eat Our Young

3. Overkill – Scorched (REVIEW)
One of the pillars of old school Thrash Metal will scorch the earth to the sound of their breathtaking new album.
Best song of the album: The Surgeon

4. Hellripper – Warlocks Grim & Withered Hags (REVIEW)
Behold this infernal storm of Blackened Thrash Metal by a one-man army deeply rooted in his Scottish origins.
Best song of the album: Goat Vomit Nightmare

5. Viscera – Carcinogenesis (REVIEW)
UK’s own Technical Death Metal/Deathcore monster returns with their striking sophomore album.
Best song of the album: Sungazer

6. Cannibal Corpse – Chaos Horrific (REVIEW)
The mighty Corpse is back with another pulverizing album of old school, undisputed Death Metal, blasting gore, blood and violence.
Best song of the album: Chaos Horrific

7. Primal Fear – Code Red (REVIEW)
German Power Metal masters are back with their thirteenth opus, a hard-hitting metal lesson and living proof of the healing power of music.
Best song of the album: Play a Song

8. Werewolves – My Enemies Look and Sound like Me (REVIEW)
The most savage Blackened Death Metal band from Australia returns to the battlefield in full force with an even more demented offering.
Best song of the album: I Hate Therefore I Am

9. Vomitory – All Heads Are Gonna Roll (REVIEW)
All heads are gonna roll to the sound of the infuriated new album by one of the most important bands in the history of Death Metal.
Best song of the album: Raped, Strangled, Sodomized, Dead

10. Marduk – Memento Mori (REVIEW)
One of the pillars of Swedish Black Metal is back with a devilish new album, reminding us that we all must die.
Best song of the album: Blood of the Funeral

And here we have the runner-ups, completing the top 20 for the year:

11. Angelus Apatrida – Aftermath (REVIEW)
12. Immortal – War Against All (REVIEW)
13. Blackbraid – Blackbraid II (REVIEW)
14. 4ARM – Pathway to Oblivion (REVIEW)
15. When Plagues Collide – An Unbiblical Paradigm (REVIEW)
16. Hrothgar – Rise of Ragnarök (REVIEW)
17. Mystic Prophecy – Hellriot  (REVIEW)
18. Tsjuder – Helvegr (REVIEW)
19. Hyperia – The Serpent’s Cycle (REVIEW)
20. Sarcoptes – Prayers to Oblivion (REVIEW)

In addition to all that, let’s bang our heads with our Top 10 EP’s of 2023 to prove once and for all that not all great albums of the year have to be so long. The EP’s from this list are simply awesome, showcasing the band’s talent and their ability to sound epic even if the music lasts for only a few minutes.

1. Imperial Demonic – Beneath the Crimson Eclipse (REVIEW)
2. Spectral Lore – 11 Days (REVIEW)
3. Admire the Grim – Rogue Five (REVIEW)
4. Saint Vermin – Together as None (REVIEW)
5. Lost Brethren – Dimensional Rift (REVIEW)
6. Cryptosis – The Silent Call (REVIEW)
7. Nemesism – Nemesism (REVIEW)
8. Decompose To Ashes – In The Eternal Silence (REVIEW)
9. Dysease – Era of Decay (REVIEW)
10. Throat Locust – Dragged Through Glass (REVIEW)

Do you agree with our list? What are your top 10 albums of 2023? Also, don’t forget to tune in every Tuesday at 10pm BRT on Rádio Coringão to enjoy the best of classic and underground metal with Jorge Diaz and his Timão Metal, and every Thursday at 8pm UTC+2 on Midnight Madness Metal e-Radio for the best of underground metal with The Headbanging Moose Show! And if you lost some of our latest special editions of The Headbanging Moose Show, including our Top 20 Underground Albums of 2023 – Parts I and II, go to our Mixcloud page and there you have hours and hours of the best of the independent scene, sounds good?

Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year! See you in 2024!

And before I go, I need to talk once again about Savage Lands, a nonprofit featuring members of Megadeth, Sepultura, Obituary and other legends of metal to support forests in Costa Rica, who released an amazing single titled The Last Howl back in November. The Last Howl is a howling tribute to the howler monkey, which are endangered in Costa Rica. The song features Savage Lands co-founders Sylvain Demercastel and Dirk Verbeuren (Megadeth), as well as support from John Tardy (Obituary), Andreas Kisser (Sepultura), Poun (Black Bomb A) and Etienne Treton (Black Bomb A). 100% of the song royalties will help fund nature sanctuaries, establish green zones and other land preservation projects in Costa Rica. Having said that, why don’t you go and make a nice donation to the cause, and learn more about Savage Lands on their official website? I’m sure Sylvain and Dirk, plus everyone else involved in this magnificent project, will love to receive that Christmas gift from you!

Album Review – Insepultus / Deadly Gleams of Blood, Steel and Fire (2023)

One of the most important names of the Romanian Black Metal scene returns after almost 20 years with a thrilling journey into the horrors of war as seen through the eyes of a young soldier in the frontline.

A thrilling journey into the horrors of war as seen through the eyes of a young soldier in the frontline, the demonic and pulverizing Deadly Gleams of Blood, Steel and Fire marks the glorious return of Romanian Black Metal band Insepultus, initially active between 1998 and 2004. Mixed and mastered by Mihai Dinca at Taine Multimedia Studio, and produced by Mihai “Coro” Caraveteanu at Axa Valaha Productions, the new album by Robert “Sepultus” Pieptan on vocals and guitars, Schtephan on bass, and Esmegor on drums shows no glory or grandeur, just death, destruction, pain, wounds and guts, trepidation and distress, or in other words, a Black Metal symphony of death in seven acts for fans of Dark Funeral, Dissection, Emperor, Varathron and Rotting Christ that will bring sheer horror to your mind and soul.

The massive beats by Esmegor will pound your cranial skull mercilessly in the opening tune The Last Battle I, generating a menacing and somber ambience perfect for the band’s Black Metal assault titled The Last Battle II, where Sepultus roars and vociferates in the name of war and Satan accompanied by his own demonic guitar riffs, while Schtephan and Esmegor will make the earth tremble with their kitchen from hell in a lecture in extreme music. Then we have the also multi-layered and Stygian aria The Wreckage of The Earth, showcasing lyrics taken and adapted from Richard Aldington’s poem originally called Bombardment (“Four days the earth was rent and torn / By bursting steel, The houses fell about us; / Three nights we dared not sleep, / Sweating, and listening for the imminent crash, / Which meant our death.”), while the music exhales pure darkness and evil.

The World’s Heart is another hammering creation by those three Black Metal marauders, with Sepultus dictating the pace with his devilish riffs while a siren will pierce your soul in the background, sounding like a march to the abyss until the very last second. Then we’re treated to Hell Upon Earth, a sinister and melancholic interlude where a soldier is writing a letter to his beloved ones to inform about his dark and pitiful fate, flowing into the also destructive The Old Lie, offering our putrid ears another blast of Black Metal venom by the trio, with Sepultus once again sounding infernal on vocals supported by the sluggish, visceral Doom Metal-infused drums by Esmegor. Last but not least, their Black Metal war ends with the also obscure The Trumpet Sound, with Sepultus haunting our damned souls with his screams and razor-edged riffage while Schtephan and Esmegor continue to crush our skeletons with their respective heavier-than-hell bass and thunderous drums.

One of the most obscure hordes to ever arise from Romania is finally back in action after almost 20 years in absolute darkness, and if you want to show Insepultus your support and succumb to their devilish music you can follow them on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with all things surrounding such important entity of the Romanian metal scene. And above all that, go grab your copy of the excellent Deadly Gleams of Blood, Steel and Fire from the Loud Rage Music’s BandCamp page or webstore, getting ready for a dark war alongside Insepultus. It’s absolute horror in the form of fierce, technical, expressive and imperative Black Metal from the land of Wallachia, and I bet you’ll get addicted to their war-inspired haunting sounds for all eternity.

Best moments of the album: The Last Battle II, The Wreckage of The Earth and The Trumpet Sound.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Loud Rage Music

Track listing
1. The Last Battle I 3:03
2. The Last Battle II 4:02
3. The Wreckage of The Earth 4:31
4. The World’s Heart 4:30
5. Hell Upon Earth 2:57
6. The Old Lie 4:41
7. The Trumpet Sound 4:24

Band members
Robert “Sepultus” Pieptan – vocals, guitars
Schtephan – bass, backing vocals
Esmegor – drums

Album Review – Fellahin Fall / Urbana EP (2023)

A rising Alternative/Gothic Metal band from New York is back with a striking new EP, pushing their “urban doom” sound further while also telling the tale of an atomized man’s yearned escape from the metropolis.

A rising Alternative/Gothic Metal band with Industrial Metal elements formed in 2019 in Brooklyn, New York City, in the United States, Fellahin Fall have just unleashed a four-track EP titled Urbana, following up on their critically praised 2020 debut album Tar a-Kan. Mixed and mastered by Kevin Antreassian at Backroom Studios, Urbana sees the band formed of Nodar on vocals and keyboards, Pat Reilly and Raphael Pinsker on the guitars, Mark Morrill on bass, and Eugene Bell on drums pushing their “urban doom” sound further while also telling the tale of an atomized man’s yearned escape from the metropolis, being recommended for fans of Type O Negative, Woods of Ypres, Paradise Lost, and Fires in the Distance, among others.

The opening track Bury Me sounds very melodic, atmospheric and introspective, with the bass by Mark reverberating in the background while Nodar darkly declaims the song’s lyrics in the name of Gothic Metal, flowing into the also alternative and groovy The Parting, where the keys by Nodar and the minimalist, piercing guitars by Pat and Raphael will take you on a mesmerizing musical journey, sounding and feeling ready to be played on any rock radio station worldwide. Grey Morning brings to our ears another blast of their gentle but obscure fusion of Alternative Rock and Metal with Gothic and Doom Metal nuances, where once again Nodar steals the spotlight with his deep vocals and whimsical keys while Eugene dictates the song’s pace with his sluggish, classy beats. And last but not least, the band continues their walk through the darkest paths of alternative music in their cover version for Everything I Touch Touch Turns to Gold (Then to Coal), by Woods of Ypres (see the original one HERE, from their 2009 album IV: The Green Album), presenting their trademark somber vocals, pensive and enfolding atmosphere, and delicate riffs and beats, ending the EP on an ethereal vibe.

The stylish and atmospheric Urbana, which is available for a full listen on Spotify, definitely showcases a band that is taking their music to a whole new level, and you can let the guys from Fellahin Fall how much you enjoy their music by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, and by purchasing a copy of Urbana from their BandCamp page (or click HERE for all things Fellahin Fall). Will our anti-hero escape from the metropolis, or will he be forever trapped in that urban nightmare? Well, simply listen to the entertaining Urbana, and Fellahin Fall will promptly answer that question to you.

Best moments of the album: Bury Me and Grey Morning.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Independent

Track listing
1. Bury Me 4:39
2. The Parting 5:30
3. Grey Morning 4:39
4. Everything I Touch Touch Turns to Gold (Then to Coal) (Woods of Ypres cover) 4:12

Band members
Nodar – vocals, keyboards
Pat Reilly – lead guitars
Raphael Pinsker – rhythm guitars
Mark Morrill – bass
Eugene Bell – drums

Album Review – Adventum Diaboli / Mørke (2023)

A lone wolf from the Hellenic Black Metal scene returns with his tenth studio album, bringing sheer darkness to our damned hearts through the album’s impressive 52 minutes of music.

Many try to find solace in religion, but they offer no real answers. There is no ultimate meaning to existence, no grand design, no benevolent god watching over us. In the end, all we can do is accept our fate. We can find solace in the fact that we will eventually be swallowed by the great void and become one with the universe. Until then, we must live our lives with the knowledge that everything we do is ultimately meaningless. That’s the essence of what you’ll find in M​ø​rke (Norwegian for “darkness”), the impressive tenth studio album in ten years of existence by Volos, Greece-based Black Metal one-man army Adventum Diaboli, which means “The Arrival of Satan” in Latin. Recorded, mixed and mastered at Cosmic Lucifer Studios, and displaying a sinister artwork By Dimitris Kostopoulos, M​ø​rke is a classic and solid depiction of old school Black Metal by vocalist and instrumentalist Leviathan (aka Giorgos K.), once again proving why the extreme scene in Greece has been among the most fruitful and exciting ones for the past few decades.

A Doom Metal-infused intro titled The Death Of Light will darken your thoughts before Leviathan unleashes hell on earth in Demons Of My Youth, roaring and screaming in the name of evil while his guitars exhale an obscure lament that lives up to the legacy of classic Black Metal. In Eerie Existential Angst we’re treated to darkly poetic lyrics declaimed by Leviathan (“Mundane people passing by / Painted in blood / I see the sky / From horizon’s gloom / The impending doom”) while he delivers sinister yet mesmerizing riffs from his axe; and keeping the album at a high level of sulfur and darkness, Leviathan continues to crush his drums while also slashing his guitar strings in Reborn From Hellfire, generating a menacing ambience that continues in Air Of Despair, where a delicate yet grim intro evolves into another mid-tempo Black Metal feast offering our avid ears raw, melodic and caustic sounds until the very end. And Γαία Απόκοσμη offers more of Leviathan’s darkened, atmospheric sounds, with his anguished gnarls being fully inspired by contemporary Atmospheric Black Metal.

Featuring synths by guest musician Pan, which bring a touch of finesse to the overall result, De Nihil Philosophia is another melodic and enfolding Black Metal aria by Leviathan and his Adventum Diaboli, and get ready for more of Leviathan’s cryptic words in The Unholy Mysteries Of The Night (“Deep into the night’s dark / Of wisdom there’s not a spark / Secrets of life and death combined / A path not for the weak of mind”), while he generates at the same time a beyond Stygian ambience with his riffs and drums. Leviathan continues to masterfully show his love for all things darkness and evil in Soulless By Dawn, where his riffs sound haunting and austere, piercing our damned minds mercilessly; whereas the second to last blast of Black Metal by our lone wolf comes in the form of the melodic and melancholic The Grand Scheme Of Things, flowing into the ethereal outro The Absence of Meaning, putting a whimsical ending to the album.

The sinister and atmospheric M​ø​rke, which is available for a full and detailed listen on YouTube and on Spotify, definitely represents all the passion for the darkest side of music by Leviathan, and if you also want to show him how much you enjoy his music you can purchase the album from the project’s own BandCamp page or from Apple Music, and don’t forget to also start following Adventum Diaboli on Facebook and to subscribe to its YouTube channel for more Greek Black Metal madness by one of the most hardworking, devilish lone wolves of the extreme scene in his homeland. Let Leviathan and his Adventum Diaboli bring sheer darkness to your hearts to the sound of his newborn opus, helping him proudly carry the flag of Hellenic Black Metal all across our decaying world.

Best moments of the album: Eerie Existential Angst, De Nihil Philosophia and The Unholy Mysteries Of The Night.

Worst moments of the album: Reborn From Hellfire.

Released in 2023 Hellenic Metal World

Track listing
1. The Death Of Light (Intro) 2:09
2. Demons Of My Youth 5:10
3. Eerie Existential Angst 5:33
4. Reborn From Hellfire 4:25
5. Air Of Despair 5:31
6. Γαία Απόκοσμη 7:11
7. De Nihil Philosophia 4:23
8. The Unholy Mysteries Of The Night 4:41
9. Soulless By Dawn 4:36
10. The Grand Scheme Of Things 5:21
11. The Absence of Meaning 3:29

Band members
Leviathan – vocals, all instruments

Guest musician
Pan – drum programming on ”Reborn From Hellfire”, lead synth melody on ”De Nihil Philosophia”

Album Review – Aeonian Sorrow / Katara (2023)

A stunning album of sorrow, grief and melancholy made in Finland and Greece, dedicated to the loving memory of the grandparents of the band’s own vocalist and keyboardist Gogo Melone.

A project of Melodic Gothic and Doom Metal yet funeral and spiritual music that describes the eternal sorrow and misery above the earth, human nature and instincts under the ownership of grief and pain, Finland/Greece-based outfit Aeonian Sorrow has just unleashed upon us their sophomore full-length opus, entitled Katara. Produced, mixed and mastered by Saku Moilanen at Deep Noise Studios, and displaying a stylish and epic artwork by the band’s own vocalist, keyboardist and renowned illustrator Gogo Melone, the album was inspired by the Katara pass, a mountain pass in the Pindus mountains in northern Greece. According to the legend, Katara got its name from a despot who around 1800 set out from Ioannina to go to Trikala, but the bad weather in the area made it so difficult for him that he died on the way, and he cursed the mountain. There are more stories written about this pass; however, Katara is also dedicated to the loving memory of Gogo’s grandparents Georgia and Michail, with the album music being beautifully crafted by Gogo alongside Joel Notkonen on vocals, Taneli Jämsä and Jukka Jauhiainen on the guitars, Achilleas Papagrigoriou on drums, and guest Oskar Englund on bass.

Anemos sounds doomed, grim and pensive from the very first second, with the delicate keys by Gogo bringing a touch of finesse to the music while Achilleas dictates the song’s pace with his sluggish beats, resulting in a powerful Melodic Doom Metal aria that will darken your mind in a stunning way. The band continues their obscure, melancholic path in Elumia, where the bass by Oskar sounds menacing while Gogo embellishes the airwaves with her charming vocals, in paradox with the harsh roars by Joel; and featuring guest vocalist Alejandro Lotero of Exgenesis (and former vocalist for Aeonian Sorrow), Ashes and Death showcases another solid job done by Taneli and Jukka with their Doom Metal-infused riffs and solos. Her Torment is a massive, bold creation by the band where Achilleas crushes our souls with his heavy-as-hell drums, perfect for some slow, intense headbanging in total darkness, followed by the title-track Katara, where once again we’re treated to a gloomy, ethereal feast of Melodic Gothic and Doom Metal spearheaded by the stunning vocals by Gogo, keeping the album as melancholic and emotional as it can be. They managed to get even more doomed and somber in Forbidden Cry, with the guitars by Taneli and Jukka reverberating in great fashion accompanied by Gogo’s passionate vocal performance; whereas lastly, serene, lugubrious piano notes set the tone in Ikuinen Suru (or “eternal sorrow” from Finnish), presenting their trademark slow and steady beats, deep, touching vocal lines, and crying guitars.

“On a personal level, I’ve been through enough difficult changes in my life that it almost made it impossible to keep myself motivated to complete this album. I said several times that I don’t want to do this and I almost didn’t. What kept me going was the reason I started this band and the promise I gave to the grandmother I lost back in 2020 and said that ‘Katara’ album will be recorded in her memory and her husband’s memory too. It will be done for all the years I spent driving to those scary ‘Katara’ roads to go see them. It will be done for each song I wrote inside their empty house when they were gone, and I left to watch the walls and nothing more. On a music level, I think the band has also been through enough and faced the financial critical moments to where we had to take choices, a bit unusual for us, and find ways to make things happen without losing ourselves and our quality. The path to success is full of heavy stones and very lonely so we do what we can and continue writing music from our hearts,” commented Gogo about the album. Hence, you can feel in detail all the sorrow, grief and melancholy from Katara by streaming the album in full on YouTube and on Spotify, by following the band on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, and obviously by purchasing Katara from their own BandCamp page or webstore, from Apple Music or from Amazon, joining Gogo and the boys on their doomed path through the Pindus mountains.

Best moments of the album: Anemos and Katara.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Independent

Track listing
1. Anemos 8:35
2. Elumia 7:07
3. Ashes and Death 6:55
4. Her Torment 7:39
5. Katara 9:22
6. Forbidden Cry 6:21
7. Ikuinen Suru 7:13

Band members
Joel Notkonen – vocals
Gogo Melone – vocals, keyboards
Taneli Jämsä – guitars
Jukka Jauhiainen – guitars
Achilleas Papagrigoriou – drums

Guest musicians
Oskar Englund – bass (session)
Alejandro Lotero – harsh vocals on “Ashes and Death”

Concert Review – Lucifer & Coven (Lee’s Palace, Toronto, ON, 11/24/2023)

How to warm up a chilly night in Toronto? Simply bring to the city a huge dosage of darkness, witchcraft, doom and the occult, courtesy of the iconic rock legends Coven and Lucifer.

OPENING ACT: Early Moods

If you were searching for a place to get warm this Friday in Toronto, which was a chilly one (although not too cold compared to other parts of the country), then Lee’s Palace was the place to be, offering you a high dosage of darkness, witchcraft, doom and the occult, courtesy of EARLY MOODS, COVEN and LUCIFER during their The Satanic Panic Tour 2023, brought to the city by the always amazing Noel Peters of Inertia Entertainment. My buddy Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I were there to celebrate all three bands, all delivering memorable performances to the crowd, resulting in a very entertaining night that put a huge smile on the faces of all attendees who have succumbed to the darkest side of music a long time ago.

The first band to hit the stage, precisely at 8pm, was Los Angeles, California-based Doom Metal newcomers EARLY MOODS, and I must say I was truly impressed by the high quality of the music crafted by those guys. Spearheaded by frontman Alberto Alcaraz, owner of a very powerful voice by the way, the band played a short but awesome setlist comprised of five songs from their 2022 self-titled debut album (available on their own BandCamp page as well as on Spotify), inspiring all concert goers to follow the band with some nice, nonstop headbanging. Of course, as a guy coming from the always warm Los Angeles, Alberto had to mention the fact the band was definitely not used to the cold weather in Toronto on Friday, but of course we all made sure the temperature inside Lee’s Palace was warm enough for such talented doomers, and if you want to know more about them simply click HERE and enjoy their first-class Doom Metal.

Setlist
Return to Salem’s Gate
Live to Suffer
The Last Hour
A Sinner’s Past
Damnation

Band members
Alberto Alcaraz – vocals
Eddie Andrade – guitars
Oscar Hernandez – guitars
Elix Feliciano – bass
Chris Flores – drums

COVEN

After a quick break, and with the floor section of Lee’s Palace getting a lot busier with several fans wanting to be as close to the stage as possible, it was time for Chicago, Illinois’s own Satanic/Occult Rock institution COVEN to darken the skies and deliver a stunning show for all fans eager for the mesmerizing vocals by the band’s iconic frontwoman Esther “Jinx” Dawson, who kicked off the band’s black mass by leaving a coffin with a cryptic mask, a very nice touch to their show. Blending songs from their 1969 cult debut Witchcraft Destroys Minds & Reaps Souls with songs form their 1974 classic Blood On The Snow and their latest effort Jinx, released in 2013, it was a wild and fun journey back in time alongside Jinx and her henchmen Alex Kercheval on keyboards, Chris Wild on the guitars, Zayne Hutchison on bass, and Colin Oakley on drums, all undoubtedly born several years (or decades) after Jinx had already started rocking the world with her witchcraft-infused rock music.

As the great frontwoman and person that she is, Jinx made sure she properly introduced each member of the band to show everyone she’s not a solo artist, and that introduction to the boys was actually quite entertaining when she said for example that she met bassist Zayne Hutchison at a graveyard and simply “offered him a gig”. That’s how anyone should treat their band members, I must say. Back to the music, it was crystal clear that songs like Black Sabbath, the closing tune Blood on the Snow, and in special the fan-favorite Wicked Woman, were the most anticipated of their fantastic setlist, inspiring all fans to dance, headbang and raise their horns until the very last second. Jinx and her Coven are a brilliant act that’s worth every single penny to witness live, and hopefully we’ll see more of the trailblazers of Occult Rock sooner than later here in Toronto.

Setlist
Prelude / Satanic Mass
Out of Luck
Black Sabbath
Coven in Charing Cross
Wicked Woman
Black Swan
The Crematory
Epitaph
For Unlawful Carnal Knowledge
Blood on the Snow

Band members
Esther “Jinx” Dawson – vocals
Alex Kercheval – guitars
Chris Wild – guitars
Zayne Hutchison – bass
Colin Oakley – drums

LUCIFER

It was already part 10pm when the main attraction of the night, Stockholm, Sweden-based Heavy/Doom Metal/Rock masters LUCIFER, delivered one of the coolest and most melodic performances the city of Toronto has seen in the past few years. From the very first notes of Ghosts to the last seconds of Reaper on Your Heels, the band formed of frontwoman Johanna Platow Andersson (aka Johanna Claudia Sadonis or Johanna Sadonis), guitarists Linus Björklund, Martin Nordin, and bassist Harald Göthblad, plus guest drummer Chad Walls of bands like Dislimb, The Living Fields and Postulated (as their drummer Nicke Andersson was apparently busy with his other band The Hellacopters in Europe), kicked some serious ass, playing all of their songs to perfection and, consequently, fully captivating the minds and the hearts of all fans at the venue.

My favorite songs from their relatively short setlist were by far Crucifix (I Burn for You) and Bring Me His Head, both from their 2021 highly acclaimed album Lucifer IV, plus their newest single A Coffin Has No Silver Lining, from their upcoming 2024 album Lucifer V (to be released in January), showing that we can expect another beast of an album by those Swedish rockers next year. Hence, you can enjoy all songs from their beautiful setlist on Spotify, and click HERE for all things Lucifer. Last but not least, just like what happens with almost all non-Canadian bands that come to Canada, the wonderful Johanna (and let me say it was nearly impossible NOT to focus on her during the entire show, because she’s simply perfect) told a quick story about when the band was crossing the border form the US to Canada. Not only Johanna said that she was still in her pajamas when the tour manager woke the entire band up right when they were about to cross the border, but she also said that the immigration officer at the border asked them the name of the band. She made a very funny face and said “Ahn… Lucifer…”, proving that’s not an easy name for a band to carry due to all bullshit most religious figures impose on our society. Well, in the end the band made it to Canada, kicked our asses in Toronto, and hopefully when Lucifer V is released we’ll experience another night of blasphemy, doom, witchcraft and the enchanting music by Lucifer in the city.

Setlist
The Funeral Pyre
Ghosts
Midnight Phantom
Wild Hearses
Crucifix (I Burn for You)
Leather Demon
A Coffin Has No Silver Lining
Mausoleum
Bring Me His Head

Encore:
California Son
Reaper on Your Heels

Band members
Johanna Platow Andersson – vocals
Linus Björklund – lead guitars
Martin Nordin – rhythm guitars
Harald Göthblad – bass
Nicke Andersson – drums

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