Album Review – Naraka / Born In Darkness (2025)

One of the most promising modern acts emerging from France returns with their hellish, incendiary sophomore offering.

Founded in 2019 by guitarist Jean-Philippe Porteux, French Melodic Death Metal outfit Naraka (a term that generally refers to the realm of hell or a place of torment in Indian religions) is back with their mix of Modern Metal and Death Metal with symphonic and sometimes even electro touches in their sophomore album, titled Born in Darkness. Recorded at Hybreed Studio, Serial Drummer Studio, and At The Gates Ov Hell Studio, mixed and mastered at Darth Vader Studio, produced by Logan Mader, and adorned by a devilish artwork by Andreas Bathory, the follow-up to their 2021 debut In Tenebris continues to pave the path started by the band in their inception, creating a dramatic and atmospheric experience without losing focus on their core instrumentation and, therefore, positioning the band currently formed of vocalist Théodore Rondeau, guitarist Jean-Philippe Porteux, bassist Pierre-André Krauzer, and drummer Franky Costanza as one of the most promising modern acts emerging from France’s always exciting metal scene.

The album kicks off with the cinematic intro Apocalypsis Diem, where the band invites us all to their dark and sinister world before all hell breaks loose in Born In Darkness, offering our avid ears a solid and thrilling fusion of Black, Death and Groove Metal led by the Lamb of God and Machine Head-inspired screams by Théodore. Franky then pounds his drums in great fashion in the heavy-as-hell Something Woke Up, supported by the slashing riffs by Jean-Philippe and all of the song’s wicked background sounds, whereas Jean-Philippe revs up the band’s Blackened Death Metal engine in Blazing Sun, also showing elements from Gothic Rock and Metal. With a title like Hellhound the only thing we could expect was pure doom, and we get it straight from Pierre-André’s bass and the song’s haunting background choir, followed by Tyrants, another hard hitting tune of melodeath with groove and blackened nuances, with Franky taking the lead with his fierce beats.

Then leaning towards Symphonic Black and Death Metal those French metallers fire an adrenaline-fueled beast named Sorcerer, where the harsh vocals by Théodore walk hand in hand with all keys and orchestrations; and like the soundtrack to a horror movie, the climatic interlude Deus Belli sees the band arise from the netherworld in Lost, again venturing through the realms of Gothic Metal, in special in the song’s dark, deep vocals and sluggish beats. The Reign In Red is one more devilish creation by Naraka, evolving into a Symphonic Black Metal aria spearheaded by Franky’s crushing drums, also featuring Sotiris Anunnaki V of SepticFlesh on guest vocals. Parasite is a modern and visceral display of Dark Metal that goes straight into your mind, with Jean-Philippe’s riffs crawling under your skin like a creepy centipede, followed by The Last Day On Earth, a phantasmagorical composition where all background keys add an extra dosage of heaviness to the already vile riffage by Jean-Philippe. Lastly, we face an acoustic version of Lost, not as good as the electrified version, and a bit unnecessary as the album is already grandiose without it.

Although the name Naraka has only been around for less than a decade, the band members are seasoned veterans of the French scene, bringing a powerful and sophisticated sound to the table in their new album Born In Darkness, which is by the way available from the Art Gates Records webstore as a digipak + shirt bundle, a digipak + shirt + hoodie bundle, or a digipak + shirt + hoodie + mug bundle. Don’t forget to also follow such a promising band on Facebook and on Instagram, as I’m sure their live performances are incendiary to say the least, and stream their music on any platform out there like Spotify. If you’re looking for modernity in heavy music while also deeply rooted in classic extreme sounds, Naraka will certainly fulfill your needs with Born In Darkness, keeping the fires of French music burning bright and inspiring those talented musicians to keep melting our faces with album number three in a not-so-distant future.

Best moments of the album: Something Woke Up, Hellhound and Parasite.

Worst moments of the album: Lost (Acoustic Version).

Released in 2025 Art Gates Records

Track listing
1. Apocalypsis Diem 1:41
2. Born In Darkness 5:29
3. Something Woke Up 4:38
4. Blazing Sun 5:08
5. Hellhound 3:57
6. Tyrants 4:12
7. Sorcerer 4:01
8. Deus Belli 3:32
9. Lost 4:25
10. The Reign In Red 5:18
11. Parasite 3:31
12. The Last Day On Earth 5:51
13. Lost (Acoustic Version) 3:55

Band members
Théodore Rondeau – vocals
Jean-Philippe Porteux – guitar
Pierre-André Krauzer – bass
Franky Costanza – drums

Guest musician
Sotiris Anunnaki V – vocals on “The Reign In Red”

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 – Limbes / Liernes (2024)

A languid, raw, sensitive, literate, true and sincere piece of Atmospheric Black Metal offered to us all by a multi-talented musician hailing from France.

Mastering by Jack Shirley at The Atomic Garden Recording Studios, and showcasing a stylish artworks by Dehn Sora, the obscure Liernes, by Paris, France-based Atmospheric Black Metal one-man project Limbes, is the logical continuation of the previous album Écluse, from 2021, a languid, raw, sensitive, literate, true and sincere piece of Black Metal. However, it differs from the latter by a more accessible approach than in the past. Thus, long and atmospheric tracks mingle with the usual torrents of hypersensitivity by the project’s mastermind, vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Guillaume Galaup, all embraced by the Stygian poetry by Marie “Ciguë” Husson, turning the album into a must-listen for fans of Wolves In The Throne Room, Ultha, and Paramnesia.

Pied de Pilori, or “pillory foot”, sounds absolutely atmospheric from the very first notes, with Guillaume building a dense and enfolding ambience that will puts us all in a trace, exploding halfway through it into sheer violence and obscurity, with his harsh vociferations and visceral guitars piercing our souls and minds. Les Côtes à l’Unisson, or “coasts in unison”, also begins in a serene and gentle manner, this time sounding even more atmospheric than the opening track with Guillaume focusing on more delicate sounds like the background synths without forgetting to add heaviness to the music through his beats and guitars; whereas featuring guest vocals by Russian artist Kariti, Buffet Frigide is a lecture in Atmospheric Black Metal made in France, with the sound of all instruments by Guillaume building the perfect stage for Kariti to shine with her hypnotizing vocals, alternating between pure ethereal moments and more vicious sounds where Guillaume darkly roars together with Kariti, instantly connecting with the pulverizing Aulnes & Poussières, or “alders and dust”, where once again our lone wolf hammers all his instruments in the name of dark and caustic metal music, always adding his share of insanity to it through his anguished gnarls, ending in sheer melancholy.

The music by Limbes is definitely not an easy listen for the average music fan, demanding time and focus to absorb all the elements crafted by Guillaume during each one of the lengthy songs from the album, but once it hits you, then you’ll have an amazing experience listening to the album in its entirety. Furthermore, you can get more details about Guillaume and his Limbes by visiting the project’s Facebook and Instagram, stream more of his music on Spotify, and buy the excellent Liernes from his own BandCamp page, from the Frozen Records website, or by clicking HERE. Guillaume was truly inspired when composing his new album under his Limbes project, and I highly recommend you listen to the album to the smallest detail to capture all the passion, agony, pain and darkness overflowing from each song, therefore helping place Limbes as one of the must-see names of the modern extreme music scene.

Best moments of the album: Pied de Pilori and Buffet Frigide.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 Frozen Records

Track listing
1. Pied de Pilori 11:36
2. Les Côtes à l’Unisson 6:54
3. Buffet Frigide 12:13
4. Aulnes & Poussières 10:49

Band members
Guillaume Galaup – vocals, all instruments

Guest musician
Kariti – vocals on “Buffet Frigide”

Album Review – Anthropovore / Parthénogenèse (2024)

This French two-headed Black Metal beast returns with its sophomore album, sounding utterly experimental, dissonant and austere from start to finish.

Forged in the fires of Paris, France inspired by old school titans the likes of Darkthrone and Marduk, among others, with the goal to return to the origins of a primary, anxiety-inducing, angry and hateful Black Metal, the two-headed beast known as Anthropovore is back from the underworld with their sophomore offering, beautifully titled Parth​é​nogen​è​se, the follow-up to their 2022 debut Boogeyman. The album title is French for “parthenogenesis”, or “virgin birth”, a form of reproduction in which an egg can develop into an embryo without being fertilized by a sperm, and that weird concept is translated into the most experimental, dissonant and austere music you can think of thanks to the amazing job done by the band’s duo comprised of Simon Perrin (Demande à la Poussière, Muertissima, MUD, WeedBringer) on vocals, lead and rhythm guitars, bass, drone and machine sounds, and Stéphane Prados (Muertissima) on lead guitars and harsh screams, supported by the more-than-special guest vocals by Adsagsona (aka Adèle Adsa, the talented frontwoman of French Black Metal horde Hule).

Notre père, or “our father”, starts with a narration in French before their dirty riffs and low-tuned bass fill out every single space in the air, with Simon and Stéphane making an amazing duet with their clean vocals and demonic roars, flowing in a disturbing and devilish way until the very last second. Their wicked experimentations go on in Transmigre-moi (“transmigrate to me”), another sulfurous fusion of traditional Black Metal with Atmospheric and Experimental Black Metal, sounding dissonant and furious, with the mechanized sounds generated by Simon being infernal; whereas a demented start evolves into a feast of blackened, caustic sounds in Castigo, a Portuguese/Spanish word that means “punishment”, where Simon and Stéphane deliver sheer aggressiveness through their axes while also blasting sick vociferations in the name of darkness. And the title-track Parthénogenèse offers more of their idiosyncratic, devilish sounds where the guitars and bass feel utterly demonic while the duo keeps blasting endless obscurity through their visceral growls, followed by Souffrir, or “to suffer”, another explosion of Experimental Black Metal by the duo with all background noises and sounds adding an extra touch of insanity to the overall result.

They keep hammering our cranial skulls and decimating our damned souls in Mal dedans (“bad inside”), again showcasing their characteristic harsh roars, machine-like drums, and a reverberating sense of despair; then investing in a more brutal and thunderous sound, they will smash us all in Ternir, or “to tarnish”, offering their most demonic vocals, sounding almost like the screeches of an evil goblin, while the instrumental pieces generate a darkly disturbing atmosphere. Déconstruit (“deconstructed”) keeps the album at an insane level of animosity and rage by blending elements from Industrial Metal with their core Black Metal essence, while rumbling bass lines and massive beats set the tone in the heavy-as-hell Mangez-moi, or “eat me”, the duo’s second to last spawn of evil in the album, where they once again burst their lungs screaming like demonic creatures. Finally, Anthropovore kill whoever is still alive with the violent and grim Better Off Alive, ending the album on a high note to the sound of their inhumane harsh roars, caustic riffs and mechanized background sounds.

Such dissonant, devilish album is available in full on YouTube and on Spotify, but of course you can add it to your demonic collection by purchasing it directly from the band’s own BandCamp page or from the France Black Death Grind webstore, and don’t forget to also follow the band on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube for more of their wicked music. Parth​é​nogen​è​se exhales pure evil, hatred and darkness just the way we like it in Black Metal, strengthening the band’s name in the scene and inspiring them to keep blasting sheer obscurity for many years to come, always trying new experimentations while staying true to their roots, something really hard to do nowadays but that those French metallers are learning how to master, I might say.

Best moments of the album: Transmigre-moi, Parthénogenèse and Ternir.

Worst moments of the album: Souffrir.

Released in 2024 France Black Death Grind

Track listing
1. Notre père 8:12
2. Transmigre-Moi 5:59
3. Castigo 5:50
4. Parthénogenèse 9:06
5. Souffrir 5:22
6. Mal dedans 9:25
7. Ternir 5:09
8. Déconstruit 5:35
9. Mangez-Moi 4:48
10. Better Off Alive 5:32

Band members
Simon Perrin – vocals, lead and rhythm guitars, bass, drone and machine sounds
Stéphane Prados – lead guitars, harsh screams

Guest musician
Adsagsona – additional vocals

Album Review – My Own Fear / Violence Made History (2022)

Let’s all have a lesson in violence to the sound of the awesome first full-length album by this ruthless Death and Thrash Metal band from France.

Formed in 2011 in Val d’Oise, a department in the Île-de-France region in Northern France, Death/Thrash Metal troopers My Own Fear have just unleashed upon humanity their first full-length opus, titled Violence Made History, enhancing the heaviness, rage and fury from their 2014 debut EP Rise to a whole new level. Currently formed of Nicolas Benloulou on vocals, Stéphane Neraud and Fabrice Darmon on the guitars, Gilles Sala on bass, and Sébastien Geley on drums, My Own Fear will inspire you to slam into the circle pit to the sound of their newborn spawn dealing with controversial topics like death, inner struggles and the horrors of historical events the likes of the Spanish Inquisition, being highly recommended for admirers of the vicious and intricate music blasted by renowned acts such as Death, Sepultura and The Haunted, among several others.

The atmospheric, cinematic intro Once Upon a Fall works as the calm before the storm, as the band comes crushing our senses in 6:1 – 8, a frantic thrashing feast where Sébastien sounds demonic behind his drums accompanied by the dirty and piercing riffs by Stéphane and Fabrice, being perfect for some sick headbanging. The quintet keeps delivering sheer animosity and rage through their infernal music in Dux Bellarum, with Nicolas roaring manically in the name of Thrash Metal; and deadly and sinister from the very first second, the demolishing Hell Fire Club (H.F.C.) brings to our ears the pounding beats by Sébastien while Gilles hammers his bass nonstop, resulting in an excellent option for their live concerts. Then we have Torquemada, which starts in a cryptic manner to the sound of acoustic guitars before exploding into the band’s vicious fusion of Death and Thrash Metal, or in other words, it’s another neck-breaking tune by those French metallers that also presents exciting and melodic breaks and passages.

Ghosts on the Warpath is a lot more obscure and groovier than its predecessors, with the bass by Gilles sounding thunderous in a lesson in modern-day Death Metal with Hardcore nuances, and it looks like the band will keep firing their most vicious form of Death Metal in Salem, where Nicolas is bestial on vocals, roaring the song’s lyrics from the bottom of his blackened heart (not to mention the song’s wicked guitar solos). After that, the “Era of the Rats Trilogy” begins with 1349 – Era of the Rats, Pt. 1, an instrumental interlude that sounds as if the band is getting ready for war, evolving into the ass-kicking Devoured by Pestilence – Era of the Rats, Pt. 2, blending the best elements from Death and Thrash Metal with European Hardcore where Stéphane and Fabrice are once again demented with their riffage and solos, and finally ending the album the band brings forward five minutes of Death Metal darkness entitled Empire of the Rats – Era of the Rats, Pt. 3, with Gilles and Sébastien being in perfect sync by adding endless groove to the overall result.

In a nutshell, the excellent Violence Made History, which is available in full on Spotify, definitely sets the bar high for My Own Fear regarding their upcoming releases, but I’m sure those talented French musicians will find a way to sound even heavier and more compelling in the future. Hence, go check what My Own Fear are up to on Facebook and on Instagram, and of course grab your copy of Violence Made History from Rock Metal Market, iMusician, Best Buy, Amazon, Barnes & Noble, or Record Store Day. My Own Fear are opening up our eyes to the undeniable truth that violence indeed made what we know today as History, and violence is what will keep fueling not only the future of humanity, but also the first-class music crafted by such skillful and focused band from France.

Best moments of the album: Hell Fire Club (H.F.C.), Ghosts on the Warpath and Salem.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2022 M.U.S.I.C. Records

Track listing
1. Once Upon a Fall 1:09
2. 6:1 – 8 5:41
3. Dux Bellarum 4:13
4. Hell Fire Club (H.F.C.) 4:08
5. Torquemada 4:20
6. Ghosts on the Warpath 4:04
7. Salem 5:09
8. 1349 – Era of the Rats, Pt. 1 1:36
9. Devoured by Pestilence – Era of the Rats, Pt. 2 3:51
10. Empire of the Rats – Era of the Rats, Pt. 3 5:02

Band members
Nicolas Benloulou – vocals
Stéphane Neraud – guitars, backing vocals
Fabrice Darmon – guitars
Gilles Sala – bass
Sébastien Geley – drums