Album Review – Enthroned / Ashspawn (2025)

One of the most ruthless beasts of Occult Black Metal returns with their twelfth opus, emerging as both an autopsy and a resurrection, a descent into spiritual death followed by the sublimation of rebirth.

With the release of their twelfth full-length album, entitled Ashspawn, the iconic beast Enthroned marks a new chapter in their three-decade reign of ritualistic and occult Black Metal. Conceived across six years of deliberate creation, the album emerges as both an autopsy and a resurrection, a descent into spiritual death followed by the sublimation of rebirth. Recorded at Ophiussa Studio, produced by the band’s own drummer Menthor, mixed by Stefano Santi at SPVN Studio, mastered by Phil Bashford at The Hive Rooms, displaying a beyond devilish artwork by Jose Gabriel Alegria Sambogal, and written in close collaboration with Gilles de Laval (an occult author known for his works on ceremonial magic and grimoires, such as Sacerdotium Umbrae Mortis and Black Magic Evocation of the Shem ha Mephorash), the new opus by Nornagest on vocals and samplers, T. Kaos on the guitars and bass, and Menthor on drums and percussion channels arcane praxis, metaphysical calculus, and esoteric mapping into a work that is as much ritual invocation as it is music. In other words, it is the culmination of Enthroned’s uncompromising vision, a weapon of transformation forged in fire and darkness.

The gates of the underworld are wide open, and Enthroned are ready to arise from the burning fires of hell and consume our souls in Crawling Temples, with the demented vociferations by Nornagest exhaling pure Black Metal magic. Menthor continues to hammer his drums with endless fury and hatred in Basilisk Triumphant, offering an overdose of the band’s trademark fusion of violence and darkness; whereas T. Kaos fires sheer aggressiveness and sulfur from his axe in Stillborn Litany, another ruthless, old school Black Metal extravaganza that lives up to the band’s own legacy, followed by the title-track Ashspawn, a lecture in classic Black Metal with the inhumane roars by Nornagest walking hand in hand with the infernal drums by Menthor.

T. Kaos will cut our skin deep with his scathing riffage in Raviasamin, while the song’s ritualistic, occult background elements give it an even more Stygian vibe and feel in the name of absolute obscurity. Then the scathing guitar lines by T. Kaos continue to reverberate in the netherworld in Sightless, as evil and visceral as Black Metal can be; and a vile, gruesome scream by Nornagest sets the tone in the just as malignant Chysalid, flowing like a devilish entity running in the dark until its somber ending. That grim atmosphere continues in Ashen Advocacy, presenting almost eight minutes of the blackest of Black Metal by bringing forward the most bludgeoning elements from Doom Metal to spice things up considerably. And last but not least, get ready to be dragged to pitch-black darkness to the sound of Assertion, with the despair and wrath flowing from Nornagest’s roaring sending shivers down our spines.

A true giant of European Occult Black Metal alongside Marduk, Dark Funeral, Gorgoroth and 1349, among others, Enthroned offer their most ambitious and personal statement to date with Ashspawn, embodying a total unity of vision where ferocious blast beats, oppressive mid-tempos, and progressive structures collapse into one another. You can feel the fire blasted by such an infernal horde by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their caustic black masses on Spotify, and of course, by purchasing Ashspawn from BandCamp or by clicking HERE.  In the end, Ashspawn is the testimony of the band’s obscure alignment, a ritual weapon that rejects nostalgia and compromise. It is a resurrection of spirit through suffering, and a reaffirmation of Enthroned’s place among Black Metal’s most visionary entities.

Best moments of the album: Basilisk Triumphant, Ashspawn, Raviasamin and Ashen Advocacy.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Season of Mist

Track listing
1. Crawling Temples 5:35
2. Basilisk Triumphant 5:53
3. Stillborn Litany 6:48
4. Ashspawn 4:40
5. Raviasamin 4:26
6. Sightless 3:39
7. Chysalid 4:32
8. Ashen Advocacy 7:58
9. Assertion 6:44

Band members
Nornagest – vocals, samplers
T. Kaos – guitars, bass
Menthor – drums, percussion

Album Review – Goat Torment / Sermons to Death (2015)

A consecration of extreme music and the occult, not in the name of the Father, nor of the Son, nor of the Holy Spirit.

GT_sermons_to_death_HDForged in the fires of hell in the accursed year of 2008, with the intention to create music as a weapon of mass destruction and to annihilate everything which our so-called society stands for, Belgian Occult Black/Death Metal beasts Goat Torment are back and ready to haunt our souls with their brand new full-length album, the rapturous Sermons to Death. In other words, get ready to have your body and soul crushed by 40 minutes of the most deviant form of extreme music you can think of.

After the release of their debut album Dominande Tenebrae in 2013, and after touring with wicked names such as Enthroned and Black Crucifixion, including their first ever live appearance on American soil at Maryland Deathfest in 2014, this Ghent-based horde is following the steps of their fellow countrymen Enthroned in regards to the savagery stemming from their music and the profanity advocated through their lyrics. All that blasphemy might be an issue for people who are not really into Black Metal, but it’s indeed a dark delectation for diehard connoisseur of the genre.

When a Black Metal intro starts as dark as Opening the Gates, going on for over three minutes, you know there will be blood and torment through the rest of the album, which is confirmed as soon as the blackened storm entitled Bones Aligned comes ripping. The music is so intense and legitimate it doesn’t sound that only two musicians are generating it, with highlights to Kwel, the mastermind behind Goat Torment, for vociferating his vocal lines in a flammable way, and to the tempo changes that end up making the whole song even more memorable. Rising Dominion mixes the hardcore attitude from Slayer to the vileness of Black Metal, with the resonant bass lines and blast beats turning up the heat in this sonic devastation, while Hierarchy of Negligence, the first of their two epic songs, offers seven minutes of a Black, Death and Doom Metal extravaganza boosted by an astounding level of malignancy. Drummer Torturer (Mor Dagor, ex-Bethlehem, ex-Belphegor) lives up to his name and “tortures” the listener with his furious beats, supporting Kwel and his dark and blasphemous riffs and words.

goat tormentWhile some people hate short instrumental tracks like Within the Realm of Darkness, I think they’re essential for telling a good story in a Black Metal album, preparing the listener to what’s next, which in the case of Sermons to Death is the morbid Defloration of the Holy Cunt, one of the “cutest” names I’ve ever seen in my life for a song. You can imagine how nasty and grotesque this anthem is, full of growls, sick riffs and unstoppable drumming that will dilacerate your mortal soul. Do I need to say I loved it? Anyway, Death is Crowned makes it hard to believe Goat Torment are almost a one-man army so complex it is: Kwel is extremely talented, and just like most European musicians he can easily add tons of melody to extreme music, it doesn’t matter if it’s old school Black Metal or if it’s a blend of Blackened Doom and Thrash Metal like what happens in this song.

Showing absolutely no mercy for our souls, The Domineering Profane emanates despair through Kwel’s demonic vocals, perfect for some hellish headbanging, before their second epic song, Of Fire and Brimstone, closes this excellent album. This ode to hell starts as visceral as possible, and as the name of the song suggests, fire and sulphur impregnate the atmosphere, with highlights to the anger Kwel shows during its entirety, making your blood boil until the ominous last part of this sick tune drags us down to hell together with Kwel and Torturer. Or maybe you want to take another listen to the whole album, and another one after that, before joining them in the underworld?

Either way, whenever you’re ready to join the dark side with Goat Torment, simply visit their Facebook page, YouTube channel or SoundCloud page. And don’t forget to buy your copy of Sermons to Death at the Amor Fati Productions webshop or at their BandCamp page, an album that can be considered a consecration of Extreme Metal, not in the name of the Father, nor of the Son, nor of the Holy Spirit.

Best moments of the album: Bones Aligned, Hierarchy of Negligence and Defloration of the Holy Cunt.

Worst moments of the album: The Domineering Profane.

Released in 2015 Amor Fati Productions

Track listing
1. Opening the Gates 3:41
2. Bones Aligned 3:21
3. Rising Dominion 5:46
4. Hierarchy of Negligence 6:49
5. Within the Realm of Darkness 1:28
6. Defloration of the Holy Cunt 2:11
7. Death is Crowned 4:27
8. The Domineering Profane 3:58
9. Of Fire and Brimstone 7:12

Band members
Kwel – vocals, guitars, bass
Torturer – drums