Album Review – Unsouling / Outward Streams of Devotional Woe (2025)

This Minneapolis, Minnesota-based one-man project returns with his excellent sophomore opus based on loss, grief, and a longing to bring back connection via spiritual or even metaphysical reach.

After the dissolution of Feral Light, Minneapolis, Minnesota-based frontman and songwriter A.S. (aka Andy Schoengrund) wasted no time in channeling his artistic flair into a new project, the Experimental Black/Death Metal creature known as Unsouling. The project’s 2024 debut, Vampiric Spiritual Drain, laid the foundation for a new stylistic approach that is now fully realized on Outward Streams of Devotional Woe, its sophomore release. Conceived and recorded by A.S. at The Crypt, mixed by Sanford Parker at Hypercube Studios, mastered by Adam Tucker at Signaturetone Recording, and displaying an eerie artwork by Luciana Nedelea (with layout by Francesco Gemelli, known as Unexpected Specter), Outward Streams Of Devotional Woe is based on loss, grief, and a longing to bring back connection via spiritual or even metaphysical reach, and how this can bring great comfort.

The album starts with the cryptic, obscure Immaterial Entrance, where A.S. delivers minimalist riffs, bass lines and beats before morphing into an Atmospheric Black Metal beast, with its second half turning into sheer chaos and violence. Then investing in a more Doom Metal-inspired sonority it’s time for Your Momentary Passing, showcasing his harsh, anguished roars and sluggish drums, as well as a wall of experimentations. And presenting nuances of the Melodic Death Metal played by bands like Insomnium we have To Come Unbound, sounding utterly chilling and obscure until the end; whereas Grief Reconfigured is a lecture in Black Metal where A.S. puts the pedal to the metal and delivers his heaviest and most demonic side while also bringing forward pensive and visceral Blackened Doom moments. His metallic bass sets the tone in Towering Black Wave, another hybrid of Doom Metal with atmospheric and melodic passages, and it’s then time for the two-minute introspective interlude Passages, where his stylish sounds permeate the air until all comes to an end with Dissolved in Spiritus, crushing our minds and souls to A.S.’s vile gnarls and Post-Black Metal riffs, with its countless layers and tempo changes giving the whole song a hypnotizing vibe.

“The album differs from its predecessor in that the meandering exploration of Vampiric Spiritual Drain has been replaced with a more sure-footed and focused journey,” explained A.S. “The anchor of black metal with its bleed into gothic, dark wave, and death metal influences is still very much present, but it is more reigned in and pointed.” In terms of the themes covered, Unsouling remain faithful to the poetics of its debut, but, if possible, accentuate its existentialist vein, being therefore highly recommended for admirers of Sacramentum, Grave, Morgion, and Feral Light, just to name a few. You can also connect with A.S. and his Unsouling via Instagram, stream his unique music on Spotify, and above all that, grab a copy of Outward Streams of Devotional Woe from the project’s own BandCamp, from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp, or from Metal Odissey (in the US or in the EU/UK), or simply click HERE for all thing Unsouling. In the end, loss and grief are always extremely difficult to process inside our minds and hearts, and the music blasted by Unsouling in Outward Streams of Devotional Woe perfectly depicts that excruciating challenge, always supported by the dark beauty of extreme music.

Best moments of the album: Immaterial Entrance and Dissolved in Spiritus.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Immaterial Entrance 6:02
2. Your Momentary Passing 4:58
3. To Come Unbound 5:22
4. Grief Reconfigured 5:18
5. Towering Black Wave 6:23
6. Passages 2:04
7. Dissolved in Spiritus 5:35

Band members
A.S. – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Esoctrilihum / Ghostigmatah – Spiritual Rites of the Psychopomp Abxulöm (2025)

One of the most innovative names of the Avantgarde Black Metal scene worldwide returns with his tenth opus, a concept album telling the ritual stages in the long journey of dead souls towards the jaws of the eight-eyed psychopomp Abxulöm.

Often accused of having no sense of measure, French artist Asthâghul churns out a new double album that is grandiose, symphonic, psychedelic, liturgical, and delirious under his Avantgarde Black Metal alter-ego Esoctrilihum. Beautifully titled Ghostigmatah – Spiritual Rites of the Psychopomp Abxulöm, his tenth studio album is a prism that reflects every single nuance of the project’s sound, from bombastic Black and Death Metal, to Death and Doom Metal deviations, up to his recent Psych-Folk Metal explorations. Conceptually divided into four chapters, each of which telling a ritual stage in the long journey of dead souls towards the jaws of the eight-eyed psychopomp Abxulöm, who will finally deliver them to eternal nothingness, the new album by Asthâghul on vocals, guitar, bass, drums, synth, organ, theremin, harp, kantele, hammered dulcimer, and nyckelharpa, with “ultra-dimensional high vocals” by guest Esthurïelh, is a must-listen for fans of Leviathan, The Ruins Of Beverast, Inquisition, Xasthur, all adorned by a wicked artwork named “Youth Of The Beast” by Alan Brown (aka Medusawolf), with photography by Aylowenn Aëla, and visual design by Francesco Gemelli.

In the opening track Hark! The Bewitched Trumpet of the Red Harbinger Is Calling the Dead to Gather, there’s no intro nor any build up. It goes straight to your jugular with Asthâghul’s demented beats and creepy keyboards sounding fantastic from start to finish; and his fusion of Avantgarde Black Metal with the church-like sounds from his organ result in an imposing wall of sounds in Kneeling Before the Keeper of the Golden Key to the Absolute Void, followed by At the Mercy of the Flaming Spear of the Bestial Hierophant, also presenting Asthâghul’s demented vision in the form of his own blend of Black Metal. His sonic onrush continues in full force in Flesh Pierced by the Blades of Thritônh, Eyes Devoured by Vulth Suidarl, The Giant Fly, leaning towards Atmospheric Black Metal at times thanks to the dark and dense vibe boosted by his deep, desperate roars, and the way he blends the sounds of all instruments in such a cohesive manner in Hypnotic Danse Macabre of the Blind Noctivagants is outstanding, resulting in a ritualistic Black Metal celebration.

Orgiastic Sacrificial Mass to Conjur Abxulöm, Psychopomp Supreme presents even elements from Industrial Black Metal, giving the whole song an even harsher vibe, with his demonic vocals and blast beats living up to the legacy of the genre. Then it’s absolute chaos, madness and despair in Saturnal Towers of the Mighty Scarlet Moon Upon the Black Universe, bringing forward another blast of scorching riffs and phantasmagorical keys by our multi-talented Asthâghul, who then goes full Experimental Death Metal in The Cosmic Deathbringer Comes, Riding a Bloody Horse of Goshenite, with his deep guttural and screeching riffage hitting us hard in the head. In Mauled, Swallowed and Dissolved into Nothingness by the 8-Eyed Psychopomp we see our lone wolf pounding his drums with tons of anger while his vocals lines sound absolutely ritualistic. It’s a weird song, though, maybe a bit too much, but still enjoyable, flowing into the atmospheric and creepy outro Supplication of the Veiled Saint from the Secret Book of the Ghostigmatah Rites where we face one final Black Metal attack to conclude the album on a visceral mode.

A post-mortem ritual that is told in the secret grimoire of the Ghostigmatah, a sort of modern Necronomicon that constitutes another piece in Esoctrilihum’s phantasmagorical visionary world, Ghostigmatah – Spiritual Rites of the Psychopomp Abxulöm is a nightmarish, mystical dimension of death beyond time and space, inhabited by an artist who, through his music, fearlessly lets its dark light filter into our reality. And even if nothing of this massive explanation makes any sense to you, you should definitely go check all albums by the multi-talented and unstoppable Asthâghul and his Esoctrilihum on Spotify, and grab a copy of his new nightmare-fueled album from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp or from Metal Odissey as a CD (EU or US) or as an LP (EU or US). Ghostigmatah – Spiritual Rites of the Psychopomp Abxulöm might not be an album recommended for the average listener or for the lighthearted, but once you dive deep into the experimental realm ruled by Asthâghul like what he has to offer in his new album, you’ll realize you’re in front of one of the leading beasts of the Avantgarde Black Metal movement worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Hark! The Bewitched Trumpet of the Red Harbinger Is Calling the Dead to Gather, Orgiastic Sacrificial Mass to Conjur Abxulöm, Psychopomp Supreme and Saturnal Towers of the Mighty Scarlet Moon Upon the Black Universe.

Worst moments of the album: Mauled, Swallowed and Dissolved into Nothingness by the 8-Eyed Psychopomp.

Released in 2025 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Hark! The Bewitched Trumpet of the Red Harbinger Is Calling the Dead to Gather 9:47
2. Kneeling Before the Keeper of the Golden Key to the Absolute Void 9:06
3. At the Mercy of the Flaming Spear of the Bestial Hierophant 7:46
4. Flesh Pierced by the Blades of Thritônh, Eyes Devoured by Vulth Suidarl, The Giant Fly 8:39
5. Hypnotic Danse Macabre of the Blind Noctivagants 7:28
6. Orgiastic Sacrificial Mass to Conjur Abxulöm, Psychopomp Supreme 8:34
7. Saturnal Towers of the Mighty Scarlet Moon Upon the Black Universe 9:36
8. The Cosmic Deathbringer Comes, Riding a Bloody Horse of Goshenite 8:36
9. Mauled, Swallowed and Dissolved into Nothingness by the 8-Eyed Psychopomp 9:16
10. Supplication of the Veiled Saint from the Secret Book of the Ghostigmatah Rites 5:04

Band members
Asthâghul – vocals, guitar, bass, drums, synth, organ, theremin, harp, kantele, hammered dulcimer, nyckelharpa

Guest musician
Esthurïelh – additional vocals

Album Review – Hasard / Abgnose (2025)

The sophomore album by this talented French musician sees him dive deeper into nightmarish atmospheres, twisted harmonies and the interaction between orchestra and a typical metal instrumentation.

A spin-off project of Les Chants du Hasard, committed to deliver the darkest and most dissonant Black Metal in the fertile ground on which fascinating orchestral melodies with a dark, melancholic and resigned mood flourish, Paris, France-based Avantgarde Black Metal entity Hasard returns with its sophomore opus, entitled Abgnose. Mastered by Olivier Prouvost, and displaying a sinister artwork by Roy de Rat, the follow-up to the project’s 2023 album Malivore sees vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Hazard dive deeper into nightmarish atmospheres, twisted harmonies and the interaction between orchestra and a typical metal instrumentation, being therefore highly recommended for fans of Akhlys, Aoratos, Blut Aus Nord, and Wreche.

Just like in his previous album, our lone wolf blends the finesse of classical music and opera with the harshness of Avantgarde Black Metal in Oniritisme, with his Stygian vocals walking hand in hand with his haunting riffs and blast beats. Senestral continues to breathe darkness into our already blackened hearts and souls, sounding as the soundtrack to a true psychological horror movie while Hazard’s drumming reeks of classic Black Metal for our total delight; and there’s no time to breathe as Hazard’s nightmarish sounds will penetrate deep inside your rotten mind in Negascendance, a lecture in Avantgarde Black Metal with elements from Post-Black Metal and progressive nuances. Antienne Estrale, the longest of all songs, is also the most detailed, dynamic and multi-layered, not to mention it is creepy and grim as hell, growing in intensity and fire until all fades into oblivion in a lesson in  experimental and extreme music, whereas finally,  the title-track Abgnose closes the album on a high note, with Hazard not only delivering venomous riffs and sluggish beats, but his keys are also phantasmagorical.

The last remnant of the 19th century romanticism had a few words to say about his newborn spawn. “Abgnose is a testament to the greater force that governs our lives, neither a god or a devil, but only pure chance. There is no greater entity sitting in the sky or below the earth, who watches with interest our petty lives. Only pure chance and random events. We spend a short amount of time as a small point on an equally small planet lost somewhere in the universe and we die, only for our futile achievements to be forgotten as fast as we’re replaced. Just count the here and now, as there’s no afterlife. Abgnose stands for removing the idea of the divine, thus leaving only the despair of having to live and not be rewarded for our actions in this world.” Hence, you can get in touch with such a talented musician via Facebook and Instagram, stream his music on Spotify, and of course purchase Abgnose from BandCamp or from Metal Odissey as a CD (EU and US) or LP (EU or US).  Always deeper into nightmares, always further into despair. To what end? That’s a question Hazard keeps asking at every note in his excellent new album.

Best moments of the album: Senestral, Negascendance and Antienne Estrale.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Oniritisme 8:24
2. Senestral 7:02
3. Negascendance 8:34
4. Antienne Estrale 10:06
5. Abgnose 9:50

Band members
Hazard – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Odious Spirit / The Treason Of Consciousness (2024)

Terrifying and exhilarating at the same time, the debut opus by this Avantgarde Black and Death Metal entity describes an infinite cycle of creation, transformation and destruction of which we are unaware prisoners.

The brainchild of James Oskarbski, a musician from Poughkeepsie, New York, in the United States, already active in Execrable and 8 Hour Animal, the ruthless Avantgarde Black/Death Metal entity Odious Spirit plays dark, experimental heavy music with hypnotic and minimal guitars, succeeding in the miraculous aim of fusing together Voivod, Immolation and Mick Barr’s Ocrilim in long and trance-inducing songs, exactly like what can be found in the project’s debut effort The Treason of Consciousness. Written, recorded and mixed by James himself, mastered by Alan Douches at West West Side Music, wrapped in a majestic cover painting by Martín Riveros Baxter (with visual design by Francesco Gemelli), and featuring guest musicians Cullen Gallagher on bass and Daniel Torgal on drums, the album is characterized by James’ dense intertwining of guitars, capable of creating cosmic psychedelic vortices that engulf everything and which are often pushed towards heights of paroxysmal violence, terrifying and exhilarating at the same time, while the philosophical themes of the lyrics are refracted in its fractal folds, centered on concepts of space and time, repetition and decadence, thus describing an infinite cycle of creation, transformation and destruction of which we are unaware prisoners.

Like a creature oozing sheer doom and darkness, the trio begins their infernal feast of Black and Death Metal in Long Stretch of Bleeding Light, with James’ cadaverous roars walking hand in hand with the experimental, intricate kitchen by Cullen and Daniel; whereas 11 minutes of wicked experimentations, caustic riffs and venomous beats and fills are offered by such an amazing entity hailing form the United States in The Hissing Pyre, presenting a sick guitar work by James who delivers nonstop scorching riffs that will burn your soul mercilessly. In other words, it can’t get any more intricate and demented than this, flowing into the one hundred percent experimental tune Illuminations, a phantasmagorical creation by Odious Spirit that will drag you to the netherworld before Gnawing the Fabric of Time offers an overdose of cryptic, poetic lyrics gnarled by James (“Placed him there / To fight the strand / Bleeding man / Bleeding man / To fight the strand / Denied”) while the music is a hurricane of unrelenting, visceral Black and Death Metal.  Lastly, we’re treated to over eight minutes of the hammering drums by Daniel and the rumbling bass lines by Cullen in Unbending Follicle, Unending Blight, while James continues to extract darkness and rage from his axe, therefore piercing our damned minds ruthlessly.

James and his untamed beast named Odious Spirit are waiting for you on Instagram with more details about such an interesting project of the underworld, and if you’re brave enough to put your hands on one of the most caustic albums of the current scene (available in full on YouTube and on Spotify), you can grab your copy of it from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page, as well as from Metal Odissey in both the United States and Europe in CD format. The violence and heaviness found in The Treason Of Consciousness, plus of course its unique psychedelic and experimental vibe, make it a must-listen for anyone looking for a breathe of fresh air in heavy music, and I can’t wait to see what’s next for Odious Spirit as the years go by and the project continues to explore new lands and sounds exactly like what was done in its debut effort.

Best moments of the album: The Hissing Pyre and Gnawing the Fabric of Time.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Long Stretch of Bleeding Light 6:46
2. The Hissing Pyre 11:02
3. Illuminations 5:18
4. Gnawing the Fabric of Time 4:02
5. Unbending Follicle, Unending Blight 8:31

Band members
James Oskarbski – vocals, guitars

Guest musicians
Cullen Gallagher – bass
Daniel Torgal – drums

Album Review – Occulta Veritas / Irreducible Fear of the Sublime (2024)

A multi-talented Italian musician will attack your senses with his Atmospheric Black Metal debut effort, a dive into the beauty of darkness, sublimated in songs with intense melodies and riffing.

The multi-talented Daniele Vergine, the Turin, Piedmont, Italy-based guitarist for Noise Trail Immersion, is a musician who has in his strings not only the Post-Black Metal played by the band he is part of, but also the darkest and most Atmospheric Black Metal, as presented to us all in his solo project Occulta Veritas (or “the hidden truth” from Latin), debuting with the album Irreducible Fear Of The Sublime. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Daniele himself, and displaying a Stygian cover art by Vama Marga, the album is a dive into the beauty of darkness, sublimated in songs with intense melodies and riffing brought into being by Daniele on vocals, guitars and drums, alongside guest bassist Gabriele Ponziano, being highly recommended for fans of Krallice, Altar of Plagues, Yellow Eyes, and Thantifaxath, just to name a few.

Serene, grim sounds gradually evolve into a harsh, visceral Atmospheric Black Metal aria titled The Mirror Stage, where Daniele’s vocals and guitars sound truly haunting, or in other words, it’s an embracing start to the album that beautifully introduces us to Daniele’s cryptic realm, followed by The Sacred Horizons of Totality, where he keeps his ethereal, somber ambience strong, with his classic beats and fills, together with the low-tuned bass lines by Gabriele, enhancing the project’s darkness considerably. Daniele’s harsh gnarls and strident riffs will penetrate deep inside your psyche in Metonimia, exhaling modern-day Atmospheric Black Metal; whereas S(Ⱥ) is an instrumental tune that could have been shorter, but it’s still captivating and cold, with Daniele blasting minimalist sounds until the very last second. The second to last eerie creation by Daniele comes in the form of Bound to Incompleteness, with his demonic, visceral screams creating a very interesting paradox with the more melodic sounds from his guitar, whereas lastly we’re hit hard with the title-track Irreducible Fear of the Sublime, presenting elements of Post-Black Metal while still sounding obscure and vile, with Daniele once again roaring and growling nonstop, bursting his lungs with anger and despair.

Irreducible Fear Of The Sublime hides a poetic, philosophical soul, expressed both in the sumptuous cover painting and in a veiled melancholy that seems to envelop all the songs and that comes from having probed the depths of the unconscious, in the wake of the studies and theories of French psychoanalyst Jacques Lacan. Hence, if you want to feel all those emotions crafted by Daniele in his newborn beast, you can purchase a copy of the album from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page or from Metal Odissey in Europe (CD or LP) and in the United States (CD or LP), and don’t forget to also give him a shout on Instagram. Partly instinctive drive, partly projection of desires, the music of Occulta Veritas is another torch lit in the darkness of the spirit, and I’m sure you’ll have an amazing time letting the music by Daniele penetrate deep inside your soul in this stylish album of dark music.

Best moments of the album: The Mirror Stage and Irreducible Fear of the Sublime.

Worst moments of the album: S(Ⱥ).

Released in 2024 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. The Mirror Stage 7:57
2. The Sacred Horizons of Totality 4:43
3. Metonimia 3:49
4. S(Ⱥ) 4:19
5. Bound to Incompleteness 5:31
6. Irreducible Fear of the Sublime 5:47

Band members
Daniele Vergine – vocals, guitars, drums

Guest musician
Gabriele Ponziano – bass

Album Review – Spectral Lore / 11 Days EP (2023)

Embark on a musical voyage together with this Greek Atmospheric Black Metal/Ambient entity, offering us all a powerful concept album about the refugee sea route to Europe through the Mediterranean sea.

A concept album about the refugee sea route to Europe through the Mediterranean sea, 11 Days is a very different album for Athens, Greece-based Atmospheric Black Metal/Ambient entity Spectral Lore, being its first album to feature a specifically political theme. Originally released as a digital album in March of 2023 with the aim to gather funds for refugee and migrant aiding collectives, it functions not just as a musical album with a fictional narrative based on real events, but also as a statement of protest against the policies of the European Union regarding refugees and migrants. Recorded, mixed and mastered by the band’s own mastermind, vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Ayloss (of Auriferous Flame, Clarent Blade, Divine Element, Fortress of the Pearl, Mystras, and several other amazing projects) at Stellar Auditorium, displaying a captivating artwork by Christina Chrysanthopoulou, and featuring an array of special guests, the album describes a fictional journey of survival through the Mediterranean sea using supernatural and mythic elements, in an attempt to tell such a story in a way consistent with Black Metal and Ambient aesthetics, being therefore recommended for fans of Mare Cognitum, Chaos Moon, Midnight Odyssey and Blut Aus Nord, among others.

Featuring guest vocals by an unknown member of Greek Black Metal horde Yovel, Moloch is a multi-layered, harsh and unique creation by Ayloss that alternates between classic Atmospheric Black Metal and Experimental Black Metal moments, with its visceral, cryptic vociferations being beautifully complemented by hammering drums and piercing Black Metal riffs, moving like an arrow on fire in pitch black darkness until the very last second. Then we have Fortitude/Sunrise, with synths, electronics and vocals by guest Nate Collins, another phantasmagorical and ethereal aria that will mercilessly enfold your damned soul for ten minutes. In other words, it’s the utmost definition of ambient music, with all elements connecting to each other to craft an ominous atmosphere; followed by Adro Onzi, featuring guest vocals by V. and a guest guitar solo by K. (both of Greek Black Metal act Voak), guest vocals by Sadistik, and synths by Odile Aurora Strik, an explosion of old school Black Metal with modern nuances that’s simply pulverizing from start to finish. Once again leaning towards Experimental Black Metal, the song showcases an amazing job done by all musicians involved, embellishing the airwaves for impressive 13 minutes and flowing into the also dense and mesmerizing Tremor/Kalunga Line, featuring synths, electronics and vocals by guests Nate Collins and Odile Aurora Strik, again venturing through the realms of atmospheric and ambient music, sounding very delicate yet also dark and grim, therefore closing the album on a whimsical note.

“These kinds of policies with the goal of violently curtailing immigration cause enormous death and suffering, as migrants are forced to take even more difficult and dangerous routes to avoid repression. The primary intention with this album is therefore to call out the xenophobic, nationalist and anti-immigrant ideologies that are still dominant today in Europe, under the veil of fake progressivism and pseudo-humanist rhetoric,” commented Ayloss about all issues going on in Europe, and you can get to know more details and find additional links about everything happening in the region on the project’s BandCamp page, where you can obviously purchase a copy of 11 Days (also available for a full listen on YouTube), as well as from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page or from Throne Records as a CD or an LP, keeping in mind all sales from the digital version and proceeds from the physical editions will be donated to pro-refugee organizations and causes. You can also follow Ayloss and his Spectral Lore on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, and stream more of the project’s music on Spotify, joining Ayloss on a musical journey where fantasy and reality collide in a truly compelling way, again proving how the power of music can have a very positive impact on our rotten and decaying world.

Best moments of the album: Moloch and Adro Onzi.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 I, Voidhanger Records/Throne Records

Track listing
1. Moloch 11:05
2. Fortitude/Sunrise 10:08
3. Adro Onzi 13:45
4. Tremor/Kalunga Line 9:02

Band members
Ayloss – vocals, all instruments

Guest musicians
Nate Collins – synths, electronics and vocals on “Fortitude/Sunrise” and “Tremor/Kalunga Line”
Odile Aurora Strik – synths on “Adro Onzi”, synths and field recording on “Tremor/Kalunga Line”
V. – vocals on “Adro Onzi”
K. – lead guitars on “Adro Onzi”
Sadistik – vocals on “Adro Onzi”
Unknown – vocals on “Moloch”

Album Review – Forlesen / Black Terrain (2022)

This doomed entity hailing from Portland, Oregon brings forward four monolithic songs that will fully immerse the listener in a contrast of the serene and cacophonous in their new opus.

Formed in San Francisco, California at the end of 2016, but currently based in Portland, Oregon, Atmospheric Black/Doom Metal outfit Forlesen draws from Epic Doom, Black Metal, Slowcore and Dark Ambient to subvert traditional songwriting with their new full-length, entitled Black Terrain, which weaves heartbreak and hypnosis to show the band at their most vulnerable and vicious. Mixed by Jack Shirley at The Atomic Garden, mastered by Garrett Haines at Treelady Studios, and displaying a beautiful artwork by Benjamin A. Vierling, Black Terrain brings forward four monolithic songs, at times approaching twenty minutes in length, fully immersing the listener in a contrast of the serene and cacophonous, showcasing the evolution in the sound crafted by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Ascalaphus (Botanist), vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Bezaelith (Lotus Thief), guitarist Petit Albert (Lotus Thief), and drummer Maleus (Kayo Dot, Maudlin Of The Well) from their debut effort Hierophant Violent,  being therefore highly recommended for fans of Candlemass, Dead Can Dance, Low and Neurosis, among several others.

An eerie, otherworldly start gradually evolves into an atmospheric and somber Doom Metal sonority led by the sluggish beats by Maleus in Strega, while Ascalaphus, Bezaelith and Petit Albert darken the skies with their minimalist but heavy-as-hell riffs and whimsical vocalizations, flowing smoothly while also offering us all a neck-breaking rhythm. Furthermore, its beautiful guitar work will penetrate deep inside our hearts, also showcasing a perfect balance between the delicate vocals by Bezaelith and the devilish roars from her bandmates, making an instant connection with the title-track Black Terrain, where the band continues to permeate the air with their melodic and grim sounds. The whole song is effectively energized by the tribalistic drums by Maleus while Bezaelith delivers introspective, ethereal vocal lines, suddenly morphing into the Black Metal-infused aria Harrowed Earth, bringing to our avid ears a multi-layered, enfolding and caustic explosion of sounds spearheaded by the blast beast by Maleus and the wicked, dirty riffage by Ascalaphus, Bezaelith and Petit Albert. Put differently, it’s Atmospheric Black Metal at its finest, evolving to a more obscure form of Doom Metal as time passes by. Lastly, in Saturnine the lyrics will put you in a doomed trance (“Come now and let it all go… / Time is a beast devouring it’s children / Wild eyed, the ever churning tide / He does suppress the cries of nascent sovereignty / Lest golden ages be undone / Time makes beasts of all its golden children / Wild eyed, the ever churning tide / As we egress through parodies of infancy / And we await being born / Go now and let it all come…”), while the music remains serene, infuriated, lugubrious and alive all at the same time, resulting in a spot-on fusion of Ambient and Doom Metal.

The doomed beast known as Forlesen can be found on Facebook and on Instagram for news, tour dates and other details about their wicked music, and you can also stream all of their creations on Spotify. However, if you want to show your true support to the underground, you should purchase a copy of the eccentric Black Terrain from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page, from Metal Odissey as a CD or double LP, or from Apple Music, showing all the passion you nurture in your blackened heart for contemporary doom. The songs in Black Terrain might be lengthy, sluggish, somber and pensive, but that’s exactly what makes the album so compelling, consequently  inspiring the band to keep spreading their wings over this black terrain we live called earth.

Best moments of the album: Strega and Harrowed Earth.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2022 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Strega 19:10
2. Black Terrain 8:57
3. Harrowed Earth 12:29
4. Saturnine 18:07

Band members
Ascalaphus – vocals, guitars, synth, harmonium, bass
Bezaelith – vocals, bass, guitars, synth
Petit Albert – guitars, synth, Hammond B3 organ, backing vocals
Maleus – drums

Guest musician
Leila Abdul-Rauf – glockenspiel, trumpet

Album Review – Defacement / Defacement (2021)

A dissonant Death and Black Metal statement of utter violence and despair against the endless inner struggle caused by the growing lack of meaning in this thing we call life.

3.5rating

defacement-defacement-2021What started in 2019 as the side project of an underground Black Metal band called Deathcrush quickly evolved into one of the most promising acts in the realm of dissonant Death and Black Metal and certainly one that doesn’t fear to experiment, although they remain faithful to Extreme Metal’s sonic roots. I’m talking about Utrecht, Netherlands-based entity Defacement, who after their self-produced debut Deviant are back from the underworld with their self-titled sophomore opus, a statement of utter violence and despair against the endless inner struggle caused by the growing lack of meaning in this thing we call life. Recorded, mixed and mastered at Catacomben Studios, displaying a sinister cover painting by Dusty Ray, and with art direction and layout by Francesco Gemelli, the album is a work poised between horror and introspection, showcasing all the talent and obscurity by vocalist and bassist Forsaken Ahmed, guitarist Khalil Azagoth and drummer Mark Bestia.

Limbo I is a beyond eerie intro sounding as if the gates to the netherworld have been wide open, haunting our souls before Defacement come ripping like a ravaging beast in Shattered, where Mark is simply demonic behind his drums, providing Ahmed all he needs to roar and scream in great Death Metal fashion (not to mention the pulverizing riffage by Khalil). In other words, it’s a lecture in modern-day Death and Black Metal, offering us all almost ten minutes of disturbing sounds and noises, endless obscurity and absolutely no sign of hope. Then even more atmospheric and ethereal, the interlude Limbo II will warm up our senses for the Blackened Doom-infused aria Disavowed, another vile and Stygian creation by the trio with Mark dictating the song’s infernal pace while Ahmed continues to burst his lungs vociferating nonstop, always accompanied by Khalil and his razor-edged guitar lines.

The second act of the album begins with the interlude entitled Limbo III, offering more whimsical sounds while at the same time warning us all of the dissonant metal attack that’s about to come in Disenchanted, which begins in full force to the hellish blast beats by Mark. Needless to say, Khalil is once again on fire with his intricate and extremely caustic riffage, while Ahmed showcases all the dark and fury inside his heart through his putrid roars, followed by their last instrumental bridge Limbo IV, once again displaying serene and calming sounds before Defacement crush our souls one last time in Wounded, featuring guest vocals by Brendan Sloan (Convulsing). The band brings to our ears over eight minutes of sheer brutality and dementia in the form of Death and Black Metal, with the riffs by Khalil reminding me of classic names of the Norwegian scene such as Mayhem and Immortal, flowing majestically until its hammering grand finale.

defacement-2021Although the album is only going to be launched in the beginning of September, you can already pre-order your copy from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page and from Apple Music, and while you wait for it you should definitely start following Defacement on Facebook for news, tour dates and other nice-to-know information about the band, and stream more of their visceral music on Spotify. From chaotic blasting madness to melancholic slow passages and ambient interludes, Defacement’s atmospheric journey into the depths of the mind is going to leave a mark in the Extreme Metal scene, as well as an ugly scar on your soul, pointing to a promising and utterly vile path ahead of those unrelenting Dutch metallers.

Best moments of the album: Shattered and Wounded.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2021 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing 
1. Limbo I 2:06
2. Shattered 9:30
3. Limbo II 0:55
4. Disavowed 6:38
5. Limbo III 1:05
6. Disenchanted 9:51
7. Limbo IV 1:12
8. Wounded 7:55

Band members
Forsaken Ahmed – vocals, bass
Khalil Azagoth – guitars
Mark Bestia – drums

Guest musician
Brendan Sloan – vocals on “Wounded”

Album Review – Mare Cognitum / Solar Paroxysm (2021)

A Portland, Oregon-based one-man Cosmic Black Metal entity returns with his fifth full-length opus, finding a new voice for his frustrations with humankind through five aggressive, metallic songs.

From the depths of the outer rim to solid footing of green earth, Solar Paroxysm, the fifth full-lenth opus by Portland, Oregon-based one-man Cosmic Black Metal entity Mare Cognitum, finds itself moving from the impossible to the familiar, with the project’s lone wolf Jacob Buczarski occupying himself with the failures of humankind over the past epoch, finding a new voice for his frustrations through five aggressive, metallic songs. Featuring a beyond stunning artwork by Adam Burke at Nightjar Illustration, Solar Paroxysm lifts the veil and reveals the true musicianship which has fueled Mare Cognitum since its impetus a decade ago, being therefore highly recommended for fans of the Stygian creations by Spectral Lore, Dawn, Blut Aus Nord and Chaos Moon, among others.

In the beautiful opening track Αntaresian, a beyond atmospheric and enfolding start grows in intensity and darkness until exploding into visceral Black Metal where Jacob showcases all his dexterity with his fulminating beats and blazing riffs, as well as showing his deep passion for old school and modern-day extreme music, roaring with tons of anguish and despair in his blackened heart. And Jacob keeps firing unstoppable blast beats and fills, razor-edged guitar lines and rumbling bass punches, generating a massive wall of sounds that will penetrate deep inside your psyche in the 11-minute aria titled Frozen Star Divinization, a lecture in Atmospheric Black Metal infused with classic Black Metal nuances; whereas investing in a more obscure and menacing sonority by presenting elements from Blackened Doom and classic Doom Metal we have Terra Requiem, where Jacob’s riffage is absolutely mesmerizing, dragging us all into his Stygian lair forever and ever while the music flows majestically until the song’s epic finale.

The following aria, entitled Luminous Accretion, already starts in full force with Jacob hypnotizing our senses once again through his whimsical riffs and classic Black Metal drumming. Moreover, there’s not a single space left in the air, resulting in top-of-the-line Atmospheric Black Metal for lovers of the genre, or in other words, one of the most complete, detailed and therefore best extreme music songs of the past few years. And last but not least, we’re treated to Ataraxia Tunnels, sounding primeval and intense from the very first second thanks to Jacob’s thunderous drums and piercing riffs, not to mention the hints of Epic Metal added to its core musicality, and of course it’s not an Atmospheric Black Metal song if it doesn’t carry pensive, austere lyrics for our total delectation (“Visions conjure throughout / A delusion searing into memory / So vividly / Once compulsively wrought / Now imbued to confine a once-great mind / Forever”).

The sinister and obscure realms of Cosmic Black Metal ruled by Jacob and his Mare Cognitum can be further explored by following the project on Facebook and on Instagram, by streaming more of his wicked creations on Spotify and, above all that, by purchasing Solar Paroxysm from the project’s own BandCamp page, from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page, from Metal Odissey in CD and double LP formats, or from Apple Music. Now suddenly so outwardly truculent and antagonistic, Mare Cognitum finally reveals the project’s true essence with Solar Paroxysm, inviting us all to join Jacob on a one way journey into madness and sorrow, with his Cosmic and Atmospheric Black Metal being everything we need to get lost in darkness for all eternity.

Best moments of the album: Frozen Star Divinization and Luminous Accretion.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2021 I, Voidhanger Records/Extraconscious Records

Track listing
1. Αntaresian 11:16
2. Frozen Star Divinization 10:59
3. Terra Requiem 10:35
4. Luminous Accretion 10:51
5. Ataraxia Tunnels 12:31

Band members
Jacob Buczarski – vocals, all instruments

Album Review – Onirik / The Fire Cult Beyond Eternity (2020)

A unique Black Metal album that is the consequence of the descent and return from below carrying the flames and lava on its scales, giving it back to the world in posthumous vengeance.

Following up on his highly-acclaimed 2015 album Casket Dream Veneration, Lisbon, Portugal-based Black Metal one-man horde Onirik, the brainchild of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Gonius Rex, returns with yet another distinct and heavy-as-hell album entitled The Fire Cult Beyond Eternity, the fifth studio album in his solid career. Active since 2002, Onirik has been exploring Black Metal in several approaches, always faithful to its original purpose, the emission of unordinary, dissonant and raw outputs with trance-inducing atmospheres, typically very cold and bathed in magic. With the special guest participation of none other than Dirge Rep on drums (Gehenna, Enslaved, Orcustus, The Konsortium), and mixed and mastered by Semjaza of Thy Darkened Shade at Sitra Ahra Studio, who also took care of the album’s ambient elements, The Fire Cult Beyond Eternity is the consequence of the descent and return from below carrying the flames and lava on its scales, giving it back to the world in posthumous vengeance.

Prepare your senses for six minutes of a classic Norwegian Black Metal inferno in the opening tune Cult Beyond Eternity, where Gonius Rex extracts sheer malignancy from his guitar while gnarling demonically at the same time, and it’s impressive how he is capable of adding so much groove and progressiveness to his Stygian creations such as Trapped in Flesh, Blood and Dirt, piling up additional layers of awesomeness to his already scorching sound while guest Dirge Rep takes care of the violence and brutality with his blast beats. Then our avid ears are penetrated furiously by over nine minutes of a downward spiral into the pits of the underworld together with Gonius Rex entitled Assigned to the Inexorable Flames, with his bass lines sounding utterly demented, groovy and wicked, proving how talented and focused he is at what he does, with the entire song feeling as grandiose and somber as it can be from start to finish.

In Melodies of Reflections and Praise this unearthly entity offers us all a modern yet old school version of Melodic Black Metal infused with Progressive Black Metal elements where Dirge Rep continues to deliver insanity and intricacy through his beats, providing Gonius Rex all he needs to distill his Jazz-inspired bass jabs.  And venturing through the sluggish realms of Doom Metal, Onirik blast the heavy and thunderous Granted the Vision, Molded into Stone, with the bass punches by Gonius Rex allied with the slow and steady beats by Dirge Rep punching us all in the head mercilessly. After such dense extravaganza, and again blending traditional Black Metal with modern-day sounds and a demented atmosphere, we’re treated to an avalanche of darkened sounds for our vulgar delectation in Murmurs of the Aging Vessel, with both Gonius Rex and Dirge Rep being on fire with their respective sonic weapons, whereas back to a more berserk mode Onirik haunt our souls one last time with their infuriated Black Metal in Apathy of Might, and they keep hammering their instruments nonstop until the song’s grand finale.

You can show your support and admiration for Gonius Rex’s alter ego Onirik by following the project on Facebook, and of course by purchasing a copy of such incendiary album from the underground Portuguese scene from the I, Voidhanger Records’ BandCamp page or from the Metal Odissey webstore in CD or in LP format.  “I have travelled beyond the casket and returned only to illustrate the certain retribution. This time the old ways flow deep like liquefied lava, ready to break the wounds of this earth and resurface in arsonists’ bliss,” cryptically said Gonius Rex about his newborn album, and even if you have no clue what exactly he wanted to say, let me tell you that the best way to understand his eerie words is by playing The Fire Cult Beyond Eternity at top volume and enjoying one of the best releases of the Portuguese underground scene in this obscure year of 2020.

Best moments of the album: Trapped in Flesh, Blood and Dirt and Assigned to the Inexorable Flames.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2020 I, Voidhanger Records

Track listing
1. Cult Beyond Eternity 6:15
2. Trapped in Flesh, Blood and Dirt 4:35
3. Assigned to the Inexorable Flames 9:00
4. Melodies of Reflections and Praise 7:32
5. Granted the Vision, Molded into Stone 6:18
6. Murmurs of the Aging Vessel 6:47
7. Apathy of Might 5:32

Band members
Gonius Rex – vocals, guitars, bass

Guest musicians
Dirge Rep – drums
Semjaza – ambient