Album Review – Dephosphorus / Planetoktonos (2025)

Greek forward-thinking grinders return from outer space with their fifth album, a ferocious collection of nine cosmic, menacing tracks delivering a boundary-pushing sonic journey.

“Pessimism is an indulgence and despair is kind of an insult to the imagination.” – Wade Davis 

Exploring science fiction and cosmology through cosmic aesthetics and a wide range of heavy, extreme music since their inception back in 2008, even dubbing their style as “Astrogrind”, Athens, Greece-based Death/Black Metal/Grindcore outfit Dephosphorus return with their fifth album, entitled Planetoktonos (a Greek word coined by the band, roughly translating to “Planetkiller”), following up on their 2020 opus Sublimation. Recorded and mixed by George Christoforidis at Ignite Music Studio, mastered by James Plotkin, displaying an intergalactic artwork by Jon Toussas of Graphic No Jutsu, and featuring guest musician Miltos Schimatariotis on all electronics (recorded at Northside Studio), the new offering by Panos Agoros on vocals, Thanos Mantas on the guitars, e-bow and chants, Kostas Ragiadakos on bass, and John Votsis on drums delivers a boundary-pushing sonic journey, sparking the imagination and inviting listeners to explore new dimensions of thought and sound.

The caustic riffs by Thanos and the pounding drums by John will transport us to another dimension in Living in a Metastable Universe, blending the innovation of Mastodon with the heaviness and insanity by Blood Incantation; and Thanos keeps embellishing the airwaves with his wicked e-bow in Hunting for Dyson Spheres, while Panos gnarls like a creature from an uncanny world, flowing into the also demented Pale Veins, offering a well-balanced, thrilling fusion of the harsher sounds of Black and Death Metal with Sludge Metal and more modern and experimental sounds, led by the incendiary drumming by John. Then the quartet shows no mercy for our souls in After the Holocaust, hammering our cranial skulls with more of their intergalactic heavy sounds.

Just when you think they couldn’t sound more infuriated or insane, they offer our avid ears the frantic and chaotic The Triumph of Science and Reason, with Panos roaring nonstop supported by the ruthless bass by Kostas, and those Greek bastards will attack our senses with two intense minutes in The Kinetics of a Superintelligence Explosion, with Thanos delivering his most Death Metal riffs of the whole album. The title-track Planetoktonos brings forward the band’s core sonic madness where Kostas and John will make the galaxy tremble armed with their infernal kitchen, and there’s still a lot of fuel to burn in Calculating Infinity, offering more of their demented vocal lines, thunderous, rumbling bass and intricate beats. Lastly, their voyage through the realms of progressive, avantgarde and experimental heavy music ends with Eternal Bloom, where Panos delivers his trademark vociferations supported by the austere riffage by Thanos.

Those Greek forward-thinking grinders once again aim to expand their listeners’ consciousness with Planetoktonos (dedicated to Swiss musician Didier Séverin, of bands like Knut and Strommorts, who sadly passed away in 2022), fostering a vision of a sustainable future where humanity not only survives but thrives in harmony with its biosphere, and even with AI. Drawing lyrical inspiration from The Expanse novel series by James S.A. Corey and from Superintelligence: Paths Dangers Strategies by Nick Bostrom, Planetoktonos is a ferocious collection of nine cosmic, menacing tracks that pay tribute to the energy and dynamics of trailblazing acts such as Anodyne, Nasum, Playing Enemy, Breach, Knut, Leviathan and Bolt Thrower, and you can join the band in their cosmic adventure by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by streaming their excellent discography on Spotify, and by purchasing Planetoktonos from BandCamp, from 7Degrees Records, from Nerve Altar, or from Selfmadegod Records, or click HERE for all things Dephosphorus. End of transmission.

Best moments of the album: Living in a Metastable Universe, Pale Veins and The Triumph of Science and Reason.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 7Degrees Records/Nerve Altar/Selfmadegod Records

Track listing
1. Living in a Metastable Universe 3:05
2. Hunting for Dyson Spheres 4:20
3. Pale Veins 3:07
4. After the Holocaust 2:33
5. The Triumph of Science and Reason 1:51
6. The Kinetics of a Superintelligence Explosion 2:09
7. Planetoktonos 3:00
8. Calculating Infinity 3:27
9. Eternal Bloom 4:26

Band members
Panos Agoros – vocals
Thanos Mantas – guitars, e-bow, chants
Kostas Ragiadakos – bass
John Votsis – drums

Guest musician
Miltos Schimatariotis – electronics

Album Review – Primordial / How It Ends (2023)

The excellent new album by these Irish veterans sees the band delivering more of their seminal blend of Celtic and Black Metal.

Dublin, Ireland-based Black/Folk Metal veterans Primordial really do have nothing to prove. Having lasted 32 years and now returning with their tenth full-length opus, titled How It Ends, the Irish band have made it clear they are a primal force who consistently lay it all on the line. Recorded at Hellfire Studios, produced by Chris Fielding at Skyhammer Studio, mastered by James Plotkin, and displaying a classy artwork by Paul McCarroll, the follow-up to their 2018 album Exile Amongst the Ruins sees the band delivering more of their seminal blend of Celtic and Black Metal, all carefully brought into being by vocalist A.A. Nemtheanga, guitarist Ciarán MacUilliam, bassist Pól MacAmlaigh and drummer Simon O’Laoghaire, being therefore highly recommended for admirers of the genre.

The guitar by Ciarán kicks off the band’s grim feast by exhaling a melancholic sound in the title-track How It Ends, being then joined by his bandmates and exploding into a Folk Metal extravaganza led by the passionate vocals by A.A.; whereas the tribal beats by Simon set the tone in Ploughs to Rust, Swords to Dust, a powerful tune with tons of Epic Metal elements with A.A. having an amazing vocal performance while his bandmates keep the music vibrant and imposing until the very end. Then the rumbling guitar lines by Ciarán ignite the also dense and multi-layered We Shall Not Serve, another fantastic creation by the band with Simon and Pól dictate the song’s galloping pace, blending the most energetic elements from Black and Folk Metal. Traidisiúnta, which is Irish for “traditional”, is an instrumental interlude that showcases a more Folk Metal-inspired side of Primordial and flows into Pilgrimage to the World’s End, with the progressive, experimental guitars by Ciarán walking hand in hand with the poetic vocals by A.A. until the very end.

In Nothing New Under the Sun, more of their poetry in the form of lyrics are offered to us all (“So let me show you that there is nothing new under the sun / So gather your days and to the ends of the world together we run / Are we not the penitent, the willing and the righteous, beasts without nation / We are born of plague and marked by your heresy at the myth of creation”) amidst a cryptic, grim sonority, followed by an epic intro that gradually evolves into the battle hymn Call to Cernunnos, with its tribal beats and imposing riffs making it truly compelling. After that, A.A. and his henchmen will darken the skies even more in All Against All, one of the most cryptic and atmospheric of all songs thanks to the strident riffs by Ciarán; however, it goes on for too long and loses its punch after a while. A.A. continues to darkly declaim their wicked lyrics in the somber, Sludge Metal-infused aria Death Holy Death (“I heard Hallelujah, just one last time / Your tired faces, they are worn by sorrow / Out sadness is worn like a gift from God / O Death Holy Death! You cast us in grace”); and lastly, their Irish riffage sets fire to the music in Victory Has 1000 Fathers, Defeat Is an Orphan, where A.A. kicks some ass with his deep, anguished vocals supported by the thunderous kitchen by Pól and Simon in a lecture in Folk Metal.

“How It Ends is a very angry, defiant, visceral, and rebellious album, and as we worked it all began to take more shape and form itself. It may be the note we go out on but it will be a note of resistance, in musical terms. I think it’s also more metal! And more epic!” And the band complemented by saying that “it certainly sounds like Primordial, there is no doubt about that, we have our own style and this is a new chapter of the same book. If we have done anything new it’s really to work with more conviction than ever, and trust more than ever our instincts.” Hence, you can enjoy such multi-layered album in its entirety on YouTube and on Spotify, grab a copy of it from the band’s own BandCamp page or from Metal Blade Records (by clicking HERE, HERE, or HERE), and don’t forget to also check what the band is up to on Facebook and on Instagram. Primordial have been blasting our ears with their Celtic sounds for decades, and based on what they have to offer in How It Ends we can rest assured the band will keep on embellishing the airwaves with their undisputed music for a few more.

Best moments of the album: Ploughs to Rust, Swords to Dust, We Shall Not Serve and Victory Has 1000 Fathers, Defeat Is an Orphan.

Worst moments of the album: All Against All.

Released in 2023 Metal Blade Records

Track listing
1. How It Ends 7:50
2. Ploughs to Rust, Swords to Dust 7:35
3. We Shall Not Serve 7:18
4. Traidisiúnta 2:12
5. Pilgrimage to the World’s End 7:07
6. Nothing New Under the Sun 7:11
7. Call to Cernunnos 5:59
8. All Against All 8:48
9. Death Holy Death 5:40
10. Victory Has 1000 Fathers, Defeat Is an Orphan 6:14

Band members
A.A. Nemtheanga – vocals
Ciarán MacUilliam – guitar
Pól MacAmlaigh – bass
Simon O’Laoghaire – drums

Album Review – Vessel of Iniquity / Void of Infinite Horror (2019)

Get ready for total annihilation, disembodiment and the disintegration of reality and existence in the form of a horrific strain of noise-infested black and death decimation.

Ritual black and death invocation. Terror noise-metal aimed at disintegrating one’s being and entire existence through the sheer force of hell in audial form. These are some of the words that can be used to describe the visceral music found in Void of Infinite Horror, the first full-length opus by British Black/Death Metal one-man sonic extermination entity Vessel of Iniquity. Formed in 2015 in Oxfordshire, a county in South East England, in the UK, Vessel of Iniquity is the brainchild of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist A. White, a talented musician who definitely knows  how to transform austere topics such as annihilation, disembodiment and the disintegration of reality and existence into a horrific strain of noise-infested black and death decimation.

Once again crafted and home-recorded in total seclusion, mastered by James Plotkin (Plotkinworks) and featuring layout and design by M. Alagna, Void of Infinite Horror offers the listener five unrelenting tracks of extreme music, sounding claustrophobic, abominable and twisted, all enfolded by a minimalist and dark cover painting by American artist Ellen Hausner named “Untitled (Monoprint series 1A)”. If you’re a fan of the massacring industrial noise scarification by entities like Gnaw Their Tongues, Sutekh Hexen and Abruptum, as well as the grandiose and bludgeoning sonic warfare of bands like Teitanblood and Impetuous Ritual, you’ll have a blast with Void of Infinite Horror, positioning this insanely heavy and wicked one-man army of darkness as one of the most promising names in the the vast but yet unexplored land of what can be labeled as “Terror Noise Metal”.

And the opening track of the album, beautifully entitled Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent, is already the perfect depiction of that so-called Terror Noise Metal, offering our ears a disruptive, eccentric and dissident avalanche of sounds and noises by A. White, with its drums sounding like a machine gun perforating our skulls mercilessly. Babalon is even darker and more menacing, presenting low-tuned sounds and deep, obscure roars that feel more like whispers, resulting in a modern-day Blackened Doom feast tailored for fans of devilish music. Hence, this track could easily be used as part of a horror movie score due to its strength, range and potential to instill fear in our hearts.

A. White’s demented onrush of sounds and noises goes on in Void of Infinite Sorrow, blending the most Stygian elements from Black and Doom Metal in its sluggish beats, thunderous riffs and bass, and malevolent rhythm, also presenting a menacing aura that ends up boosting its impact even more. If you think A. White and his Vessel of Iniquity will have to slow down at a given point to let us breathe you’re absolutely wrong, as his hurricane of dementia only gets stronger and darker as the music flows in Mother of Abomination, being utterly insane from start to finish, before the music switches from total chaos to an atmospheric and ethereal vibe in Once More Into the Abyss, where A. White delivers to our perturbed minds an endless amount of hypnotizing and damned sounds. Furthermore, I’m not sure if this can be called Atmospheric Black Metal, Drone, Noise, none of these, or even all at once, proving how unique and vile Vessel of Iniquity’s music can be.

If I had to summarize the music found in Void of Infinite Horror in one word, that would certainly be “chaos”, and if chaotic music is exactly what you crave in underground metal you must give Vessel of Iniquity a chance and support such distinct one-man act by following him on Facebook, and obviously by purchasing your copy of the album from the Sentient Ruin Laboratories’ BandCamp, from the Xenoglossy Productions’ BandCamp (in a fancy, old school cassette format), from CD Baby or from Discogs. No one knows exactly what lies ahead for A. White and his Vessel of Iniquity, as it’s not an easy task to predict what type of madness and experimentation musicians like him might add to their compositions, but at least we can rest assured that, as long as this cryptic metal entity is alive, chaos will reign.

Best moments of the album: Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent and Babalon.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2019 Sentient Ruin Laboratories/Xenoglossy Productions

Track listing
1. Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent 3:50
2. Babalon 4:26
3. Void of Infinite Sorrow 4:59
4. Mother of Abomination 4:55
5. Once More Into the Abyss 6:07

Band members
A. White – vocals, all instruments