Album Review – Fossilization / Advent Of Wounds (2026)

Brazil’s own death and doom creature returns with its sophomore beast, a summoning of despair that drags the listener into a chasm where brutality and anguish entwine.

Emerging once again from the abyssal depths of the underground, São Paulo, Brazil-based Death/Doom Metal creature Fossilization returns with their sophomore opus entitled Advent of Wounds, a work of sheer ferocity and oppressive gloom, following up on their critically acclaimed 2023 debut Leprous Daylight. Produced by the band’s own vocalist, guitarist and bassist V. (aka Thiago “Vakka” Oliveira of Sludge/Death/Doom Metal band Jupiterian) and guitarist Z. (aka Fernando “Zozi” da Silveira of Thrash Metal band Blackning), engineered by Marcos Cerutti at Hellspass Studio, mixed and mastered by Gabriele Gramaglia at Crepuscular Sound Studio, featuring guest musician F. on drums, and displaying a cadaverous artwork by Chinese artist Guang Yang, Advent of Wounds is a relentless onslaught where its frantic and inexorable rhythms hammer with suffocating intensity, while riffs coil like sepulchral invocations in a maelstrom of death, doom, and blackened chaos highly recommended for fans of Dead Congregation, Krypts, Spectral Voice, and Antaeus.

Cremation of a Seraph already kicks off like a bulldozer, demolishing everything and everyone that dares to cross their path, with V.’s abyssal, deep guttural matching perfectly with the infernal drums by F., whereas Disentombed and Reassembled by the Ages is just as demonic and devastating as the opening tune, an overdose of Doom Metal-infused death madness where V. and Z. deliver the most scathing riffs imaginable. Scalded by His Sacred Halo, featuring guest vocalist Justin Stubbs, portrays a very poetic name for another ruthless aria of darkness by Fossilization where F. once again hammers his drums like there’s no tomorrow; followed by Terrestrial Mold, the sonic representation of total Armageddon, or a top-of-the-line Death and Doom Metal beast where V. vociferates like a creature from the netherworld. Then in Servo a Stygian start gradually morphs into a rumbling sonority not recommended for the faint at heart, while While the Light Lasts offers an even stronger Doom Metal vibe, as dark as the night, with the riffs by V. and Z. being boosted by the pounding drums by F. Lastly, Temple of Flies and Moss might be the shortest of all songs, but its incandescent violence makes it look like a true giant, ending the album on the most obscure note you can think of.

“From the start, my goal was to make an album even more brutal than Leprous Daylight, from sheer death metal brutality to the miserable melancholy of the doom-laden spirit of early Anathema, Paradise Lost, and early Katatonia. You can also hear many of black metal influences across the record, the opening riff of ‘Disentombed and Reassembled by the Ages’ is a direct nod to one of my all-time favorite bands, Antaeus,” commented V., and you can get in touch with him and his Fossilization via Facebook and Instagram, stream their obscure music on any platform such as Spotify, and of course purchase Advent of Wounds via mailorder or from BandCamp. Bleak, crushing and claustrophobic, Advent of Wounds is a summoning of despair that drags the listener into a chasm where brutality and anguish entwine. A suffocating testament to extremity that confirms Fossilization as one of the most formidable forces in contemporary Death and Doom Metal.

Best moments of the album: Cremation of a Seraph, Terrestrial Mold and Temple of Flies and Moss.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Everlasting Spew Records

Track listing
1. Cremation of a Seraph 5:11
2. Disentombed and Reassembled by the Ages 5:34
3. Scalded by His Sacred Halo 4:20
4. Terrestrial Mold 5:51
5. Servo 5:08
6. While the Light Lasts 5:52
7. Temple of Flies and Moss 3:57

Band members
V. – vocals, guitars, bass
Z. – guitars

Guest musicians
F. – drums (session)
Justin Stubbs – vocals on “Scalded By His Sacred Halo”

Album Review – Djinn-Ghül / Opulence (2023)

An uncanny duo from the US and Venezuela will attack your senses with their third full-length opus, flitting between full-on Death Metal brutality and jaw-dropping futuristic and mechanized sounds.

Less than two years following the release of their critically lauded EP Mechalith, industrialized Experimental/Brutal Death Metal/Deathcore unit Djinn-Ghül unleashes their third full-length album, entitled Opulence, building on their previous material while taking things to new levels of extremity. The international duo formed of Venezuelan vocalist Junior “Pat” Patiño (Voraraephilia) and American multi-instrumentalist Grant Nachbur (Auricular Insemination, Nephrectomy) has been evolving and perfecting their sound with each consecutive release since their inception in 2016, with their new album effectively flitting between full-on Death Metal brutality and jaw-dropping futuristic and mechanized sounds with impressive cohesion. Mixed and mastered by Pat himself, and displaying a sick acrylic painting as the album’s artwork by Chinese artist Guang Yang, Opulence showcases a dynamic slab of industrialized Death Metal with a crushing power that will debilitate as much as adrenalize you, resulting in their most chaotic yet refined material to date.

Haunting and atmospheric, the opening tune God Lymph will pierce your soul with the band’s hybrid of several extreme styles, with Grant’s crushing drums and phantasmagorical keys permeating the air until everything explodes into violence and insanity with Pat roaring like a demon, whereas the hammering bass and caustic riffs by Grant will demolish your senses in Xobek, a lecture in Blackened Deathcore with some industrial and electronic elements in the background to give it an even more venomous vibe. Their industrialized vein keeps pulsing in Ghola, with Pat’s inhumane growling complementing the infernal atmosphere crafted by Grant, followed by the title-track Opulence, featuring Jordan James of Disentomb on vocals, bringing forward the demented beats and scorching riffs by Grant while the song’s background elements will beautifully darken your soul. Then featuring guest vocalist Alex Marr, the duo’s horror-inspired sounds keep disturbing the minds of the lighthearted in the pulverizing Pseudosapien, where Grant’s bass and drums generate an avalanche of sheer heaviness until the very end.

Sara Crow lends her voice as a guest in Mother, another short and sweet blast of their Experimental Death Metal sounds infused with Deathcore and classic Death Metal nuances; however, it never really takes off, sounding more like an interlude of sorts. Their next guest vocalist is Phlegeton of Wormed, with more of their mechanized, futuristic keys being offered to us in Fruitless Grasp, before the music turns into a demonic feast of devilish screams, piercing guitars, infernal beats and rumbling bass lines. There’s still more from such talented duo to haunt your damned soul for all eternity in Garden of Jaws (It Sees Too Much), blending the most violent elements from Brutal Death Metal with their more experimental and industrialized vein, and with Pat sounding absolutely evil on vocals; flowing into the closing tune Grave Vessel, where the duo clearly sends a message of chaos and darkness through their electrified sounds and noises, not to mention Grant is once again ruthless behind his drums, ending the album on a beyond somber mode.

The vicious Opulence, which is available in full on YouTube and on Spotify, is certainly not recommended for the lighthearted, which is exactly what such ruthless American/Venezuelan duo wanted to achieve with their music. Hence, don’t forget to give Djinn-Ghül a shout on Facebook and on Instagram, to subscribe to their YouTube channel, and above all that, to purchase a copy of their newborn beast from their own BandCamp page, from the Vicious Instinct Records’ BandCamp page, from Apple Music, or from Amazon. In other words, Opulence is heavy, caustic, futuristic and melodic, all at the same time, effectively cementing Djinn-Ghül as one of the most interesting names of the modern extreme music scene.

Best moments of the album: Xobek, Pseudosapien and Garden of Jaws (It Sees Too Much).

Worst moments of the album: Mother.

Released in 2023 Vicious Instinct Records

Track listing
1. God Lymph 3:47
2. Xobek 2:13
3. Ghola 2:49
4. Opulence 3:13
5. Pseudosapien 3:21
6. Mother 2:40
7. Fruitless Grasp 4:29
8. Garden of Jaws (It Sees Too Much) 3:25
9. Grave Vessel 2:37

Band members
Junior “Pat” Patiño – vocals
Grant Nachbur – all instruments

Guest musicians
Jordan James – vocals on “Opulence”
Phlegeton – vocals on “Fruitless Grasp”
Sara Crow – vocals on “Mother”
Alex Marr – vocals on “Pseudosapien”