Album Review – Necronomicon Ex Mortis / Zombie Blood Nightmare EP (2026)

This zombified Death Metal horde returns from the dead with a cadaverous new EP, boasting a sound as sharp and punishing as its subject matter, showcasing a band at their most chaotic and gleefully grotesque, but also their most ambitious.

Formed in 2023 in Chicago, Illinois, horror-death fiends Necronomicon Ex Mortis return with their most ferocious and unhinged release to date, the six-track EP aptly titled Zombie Blood Nightmare. Produced, recorded, and mixed by Charlie Waymire at Ultimate Studios, mastered by Ernesto Homeyer, and embraced by the sick artwork by Genoicide Artwork, the new EP by John Sawicki on vocals, Michael Nystrom Bala and Manuel Barbara on the guitars, Yusuf Rashid on bass, and Joey Ferretti on drums boasts a sound as sharp and punishing as its subject matter, showcasing a band at their most chaotic and gleefully grotesque, but also their most ambitious, a whirlwind of 90’s Death Metal stomp, 80’s shred obsession, and tongue-in-cheek B-movie gore that cements their identity as both serious riff-worshippers and gleeful purveyors of horror camp.

The EP kicks off in the best Death Metal style with Left To Die, with Michael and Manuel dictating the pace with their frantic, slashing riffage, resulting in a very good excuse for slamming into the pit like a putrid, decaying corpse. And let’s break our necks headbanging to No More Room In Hell, where the band brings forward their darkest mode, almost sounding Blackened Death Metal, in special the evil vociferations by John (not to mention the song’s hellish solos). Chopped Up And Burned carries a Cannibal Corpse-inspired title that lives up to the legacy of venomous Death Metal, spearheaded by Joey’s ruthless drumming while also presenting melodic yet piercing solos; whereas an imposing start gradually morphs into a mid-tempo, devilish feast of Death Metal in Lumbering Blood Sucking Freaks, accelerating its pace as time passes by for our total delight. Hungry For Brains is by far the most “zombified” of all songs, paying homage to all zombie movies we love so much, with John’s raspy gnarls walking hand in hand with their visceral riffage, and there’s no better way to conclude an album of Death Metal than with extreme aggression and savagery like in Démoni, where Yusuf and Joey make the earth tremble with their undisputed kitchen.

With Zombie Blood Nightmare, the band delivers not just another step forward, but a gory leap through the gateway to hell. It’s a record that pays homage to their Death Metal forebears while shamelessly indulging in horror schlock and fretboard excess. It may open new doors, or as the band prefers to put it, “new gateways to hell.” Hence, you can join the band’s army of the dead by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their zombified creations on Spotify, and of course by grabbing a copy of their newborn baby from BandCamp or by clicking HERE. It’s time for the dead to rise once again to the sound of the visceral Death Metal by Necronomicon Ex Mortis, because as the mighty Cannibal Corpse say, there’s no other way – you have to kill or become.

Best moments of the album: Chopped Up And Burned and Hungry For Brains.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Independent

Track listing
1. Left To Die 4:38
2. No More Room In Hell 5:18
3. Chopped Up And Burned 6:59
4. Lumbering Blood Sucking Freaks 3:41
5. Hungry For Brains 4:41
6. Démoni 3:15

Band members
John Sawicki – vocals
Michael Nystrom Bala – guitars
Manuel Barbara – guitars, orchestration
Yusuf Rashid – bass
Joey Ferretti – drums

Album Review – Dysentery / Dejection Chrysalis (2025)

Ten years since their last full-length opus, this American Brutal Death Metal brigade has finally re-emerged into the light, carrying with them a new album of heaviness beyond comprehension.

“The imprisoning cocoon tears beneath my new found claws and I emerge, a beast reborn, from my shattered dejection chrysalis…”

Ten years since their last full-length opus Fragments, Waltham, Massachusetts-based Brutal Death Metal brigade Dysentery has finally re-emerged into the light, carrying with them a new album of heaviness beyond comprehension entitled Dejection Chrysalis, providing us avid metalheads with spine-splitting slams and deep grooves like scars in the surface of the Earth. Mixed and mastered by Randy LeBoeuf at Graphic Nature Audio, engineered by Jared Weed and Joey Ferretti, produced by Peter Spinazola and Joey Ferretti, and displaying a sinister artwork by Hidris, the demented new album by frontman Scott Savaria, guitarist Peter Spinazola, bassist John Cook, and drummer Eric Taranto is a bludgeoning onrush of musical extremity, a must-listen for fans of Putrid Pile, Internal Bleeding, Guttural Secrete, and Pyrexia.

Peter wastes no time and kicks off their depraved party with his cutting riffs in Transference, prepping us all for Enslavement for the Obedient, Agony for the Wayward, accompanied by the ruthless beats by Eric while Scott vomits the song’s vile words in great fashion. Their slamming party goes on in Indignation Unravels, with the metallic bass by John and the pounding drums by Eric making the earth tremble; followed by Exhausted Bliss of Self Loathing, featuring guest vocals by Josh Welshman of Defeated Sanity, where Eric sounds like a machine gun on drums in the best Aborted style. Scott then shows no mercy for our souls with his inhumane guttural in A Bestial Omen, another excellent display of Brutal Death Metal infused with gore and hatred.

Guest vocalist Jared Weed (of bands like Burial, Concrete and Futility) then makes an insane duet with Scott in Shackled by Idolatry while Peter hammers his stringed weapon in the name of extreme music, and they keep blasting their ruthless blend of Brutal Death Metal, therefore inspiring us to slam nonstop, in Transposed Benevolence. More of their share of brutality comes in the form of Fratricidium, featuring guest vocals by JT Knight (of Episiotomectomy and Invoke Thy Wrath), sounding vicious and evil from the very first second, with Peter and John bludgeoning their axes nonstop. Obsidian Womb is simply neck-breaking and heavy-as-hell, with Eric once again showing his passion for sheer violence behind his drums; whereas ending the album we face one final explosion of absolute madness and aggression entitled Ascend This Harrowing Dream, with its slamming moments sounding utterly demented.

Dynamic beyond all expectations, Dejection Chrysalis is sonically formidable and absolutely devastating from start to finish, leaving us completely disoriented after all is said and done, while at the same time eager for more of the music by those American death dealers. Having said that, what are you waiting for to start following Dysentery on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with everything surrounding such an infernal beast of Death Metal, including their ruthless live performances, to stream their sick creations on Spotify, and above all that, to purchase their rabid new album from Comatose Music’s BandCamp or webstore, as well as from other locations like Amazon and Waterloo Records? Because Dejection Chrysalis is how you deliver brutal, slam Death Metal, and make it meaningful and beyond devastating. Period.

Best moments of the album: Enslavement for the Obedient, Agony for the Wayward, Exhausted Bliss of Self Loathing and Fratricidium.

Worst moments of the album: Transposed Benevolence.

Released in 2025 Comatose Music

Track listing
1. Transference 1:58
2. Enslavement for the Obedient, Agony for the Wayward 3:08
3. Indignation Unravels 2:22
4. Exhausted Bliss of Self Loathing 2:50
5. A Bestial Omen 2:02
6. Shackled by Idolatry 2:29
7. Transposed Benevolence 4:13
8. Fratricidium 2:52
9. Obsidian Womb 2:38
10. Ascend This Harrowing Dream 4:24

Band members
Scott Savaria – vocals
Peter Spinazola – guitar
John Cook – bass
Eric Taranto – drums

Guest musicians
Josh Welshman – vocals on “Exhausted Bliss Of Self Loathing”
Jared Weed – vocals on “Shackled By Idolatry”
JT Knight – vocals on “Fratricidium”