Album Review – Throne / That Who Sat Upon Him, Was Death (2025)

One of the strongest bands of the current American extreme music scene is back with a demolishing new album, solidifying themselves as a force to be reckoned with.

Having captivated and crushed those they have encountered with a ferocious, relentless and intricate formula of Melodic and Blackened Death Metal all their own since their inception back in 2014, Jackson, Michigan’s own four horsemen Throne are back with their most focused effort to date, poetically titled That Who Sat Upon Him, Was Death, the follow-up to their 2021 opus Pestilent Dawn, solidifying themselves as a force to be reckoned with, emerging as true contenders in the ever growing American Death Metal scene. Recorded at Bricktop Studios, engineered and mixed by Andy Nelson, mastered by Bradley Boatright at Audiosiege, and displaying a sinister artwork by Brian Sheehan, the new album by Nathan Barnes on vocals and guitars, Tim Kenefic on the guitars, Leslie Drake on bass, and Kollin Perpignani on drums is a lesson in brutality whilst continuing their descent with a heavy blackened lean, sure to satisfy the arm-crossed Suffo-crowd, while at the same time tickling those that worship at the altar of Behemoth.

Nathan and Tim’s wicked riffs kick off the band’s infuriated metal feast in Disentombed, supported by the bestial drums by Kollin in a lesson in vicious extreme music, flowing into the just as demonic To Breathe the Unknown, with Nathan’s devilish Brutal Death Metal-like growls matching perfectly with the demented bass and drums by Leslie and Kollin. They need less than three minutes to crush us mercilessly like putrid insects in Blasphemous Perversion, followed by the also infernal tune Realm of Immolation, where all band members sound like creatures from the netherworld, in special Kollin armed with his demonic blast beats.

Once again venturing through the realms of Brutal Death Metal, it’s time for a no shenanigans, ruthless display of aggression and fury by the quartet entitled Human Frailty, led by the inhumane screeches and roars by Nathan; and the same level of insanity is blasted in the utterly demented, bludgeoning composition titled Upon Deathless Winds, with the caustic riffs by Nathan and Tim walking hand in hand with Kollin’s stone crushing drums. The band still has a lot of fuel to burn, as we can clearly notice in Behold Impurity, offering a boisterous fusion of Black and Death Metal overflowing rage and despair, whereas lastly let’s get pounded into dust by Throne to the sound of Where Angels Cower in Fear, with Nathan’s scorching roars and the thunderous beats by Kollin putting a beyond violent ending to the entire album.

After all is said and done, you’ll find yourself suffocated by the blackened sounds crafted by Throne in their newborn spawn, pointing to a bight future ahead of those American metallers without a shadow of a doubt. Hence, if you want to know more about the band, their music, tour dates and so on, don’t forget to follow them on Facebook and on Instagram, to stream their sick creations on Spotify or any other streaming service, and to purchase a copy of their sulfurous new album from BandCamp or from the Redefining Darkness Records’ webstore in the US or in the EU and UK. Because in the end, that who sat upon him was Death, to the sound of the new opus by one of the most promising bands of the current extreme music scene worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Realm of Immolation, Upon Deathless Winds and Where Angels Cower in Fear.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Redefining Darkness Records

Track listing
1. Disentombed 4:02
2. To Breathe the Unknown 3:37
3. Blasphemous Perversion 2:54
4. Realm of Immolation 3:43
5. Human Frailty 3:19
6. Upon Deathless Winds 4:22
7. Behold Impurity 4:34
8. Where Angels Cower in Fear 3:38

Band members
Nathan Barnes – vocals, rhythm guitars
Tim Kenefic – lead guitars
Leslie Drake – bass
Kollin Perpignani – drums

Album Review – Arch Enemy / Blood Dynasty (2025)

The global legends of pure fucking metal return with their twelfth studio album, capturing the essence of the band in its collection of vicious, high-energy rippers.

Legends of pure fucking metal for nearly 30 years, Melodic Death Metal outfit Arch Enemy returns to the battlefield with their twelfth studio album, entitled Blood Dynasty, the follow-up to their 2022 beast Deceivers. Recorded and mixed by Jens Bogren and mastered by Tony Lindgren at Fascination Street Studios, produced by the band’s own Michael Amott and Daniel Erlandsson, and featuring a creepy artwork by Alex Reisfar, Blood Dynasty captures the essence of Arch Enemy in its collection of vicious, high-energy rippers without sounding outdated, always looking forward, therefore showcasing all the talent and passion for heavy music by frontwoman Alissa White-Gluz, guitarists Michael Amott and Joey Concepcion, bassist Sharlee D’Angelo, and drummer Daniel Erlandsson.

An imposing, epic intro suddenly explodes into Dream Stealer, with Michael and Joey sounding venomous armed with their axes while Alissa fires some of her deepest guttural roars ever. Needless to say, I would love to see and hear more of this more violent side of Arch Enemy. Then Daniel keeps pounding his drums in Illuminate the Path, sounding modern yet loyal to the band’s Melodic Death Metal roots; followed by March of the Miscreants, another violent and visceral display of heavy music by the band led by the blistering riffs by Michael and Joey, and A Million Suns, a solid composition by the band showcasing the trademark riffs and solos by Mr. Michael Amott. And it looks like the band wanted to get back to their most aggressive vibe in the album, with Don’t Look Down being the perfect example of that.

The second part of the album starts with the sinister interlude Presage, getting us pumped for Blood Dynasty, with Alissa barking the song’s  lyrics (“Cracks in the ice below our feet / Our own worst enemy on all fronts / A strategy of self-deceit? / A hornets nest, about to be released”) amidst an overdose of classic Arch Enemy. Paper Tiger also sounds ruthless, from its in-your-face intro declaimed by Alissa (“See no, hear no / Speak no evil / We are each our own devil / And we make this world our hell”) to its galloping pace led by Sharlee and Daniel, reeking of old school Melodic Death Metal for our total delight. I personally think there was no need for a ballad like Vivre Libre in the album, and although Alissa does a decent job with her potent clean vocals, the song sounds generic and out of place; whereas The Pendulum alternates between more cadenced moments and a fast-paced rhythm with elements of the Heavy Metal by Iron Maiden (and even some nuances of Power Metal). And lastly, there’s nothing better than a true banger to end the album like Liars & Thieves, with Daniel hammering his drums frantically while we all slam into the pit like true metalheads.

“This is our 12th studio album, and the rule of metal is that you’ve got to keep trying to say the same thing, but in slightly different ways!” says Michael Amott. “There’s a degree of familiarity in our sound, which I don’t see as a problem because we’re playing the music we love. But obviously we’ve got to throw a couple of curveballs in there each time, a few new interesting things to spice it up a little bit. How do you get people talking about your record when it’s the 12th one, you know?” Well, Mr. Amott is absolutely right, as all bands need to reinvent themselves once in a while to avoid getting repetitive or dull, and let’s say Arch Enemy have more than succeeded in doing that so far, with Blood Dynasty sounding strong from start to finish. You can find more information about the band and their tour dates on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, get ready to rock to their new album on Spotify, and of course purchase it by clicking HERE, helping Arch Enemy stay atop of the world as the leaders of the Melodic Death Metal movement since their inception.

Best moments of the album: Dream Stealer, March of the Miscreants, Paper Tiger and Liars & Thieves.

Worst moments of the album: Vivre Libre.

Released in 2025 Century Media

Track listing
1. Dream Stealer 4:29
2. Illuminate the Path 4:48
3. March of the Miscreants 4:49
4. A Million Suns 3:45
5. Don’t Look Down 4:07
6. Presage 0:47
7. Blood Dynasty 3:51
8. Paper Tiger 3:56
9. Vivre Libre 4:07
10. The Pendulum 3:42
11. Liars & Thieves 4:20

Band members
Alissa White-Gluz – vocals
Michael Amott – lead guitars, backing vocals
Joey Concepcion – lead guitars, backing vocals
Sharlee D’Angelo – bass
Daniel Erlandsson – drums

Album Review – Nephylim / Circuition (2025)

This Dutch Melodic Death Metal brigade is ready to strike again with their sophomore album, exploring the concepts of “the cycle of life” and “the wheel of fate”.

Founded back in 2015 by friends Kevin van Geffen and Rens van de Ven in ‘s-Hertogenbosch, colloquially known as Den Bosch, a city and municipality in the province of North Brabant, in the Netherlands, Melodic Death Metal outfit Nephylim is ready to strike again with their sophomore opus Circuition, the long-awaited follow-up to their 2020 debut album Severance of Serenity. Produced by Joost van den Broek, Yarne Heylen and Nephylim, with guitars, bass and vocals recorded at Project Zero Studio and drums recorded at Sandlane Recording Facilities, mixed by Joost van den Broek at Sandlane Recording Facilities, mastered by Darius van Helfteren at Amsterdam Mastering, and displaying a captivating artwork by Giannis Nakos of Remedy Art Design, the new album by frontman Tijn Bosters, guitarists Kevin van Geffen and Ralph Lentink, bassist Rens van de Ven, and drummer Martijn Paauwe is a conceptual album that explores the concepts of “the cycle of life” and “the wheel of fate”, with each song being connected to a meaning or state of being such as the origin of life or birth, the consequences of old age, or everyone’s perception of the circle of life, always supported by the world famous Gothenburg Melodic Death Metal sound.

The first half of a two-part song is actually an intro, Travail Pt. I – Anima, a futuristic, whimsical composition that works as the calm before the storm that is the second half, titled Travail Pt. II – Animus, with all background elements elevating the band’s Melodic Death Metal to new heights, not to mention the guitars by Kevin and Ralph transpire melody and rage in the best Gothenburg-inspired style, connecting with Amaranth, where Martijn dictates the song’s rhythm with his classic beats, blending the best of bands like Dark Tranquillity, Insomnium and The Halo Effect. Grand Denial is another lengthy, intricate and energetic aria by Nephylim, with Tijn’s deep, enraged roars walking hand in hand with their boisterous instrumental pieces; followed by the title-track Circuition, which sounds even more melodic and epic, with the stylish riffs and solos by Kevin an Ralph embellishing the airwaves in great fashion. In Withered we face lyrics that reek of Melodic Death Metal (“Glimpse upon a tainted mind, Entangled by the heart of man / Reaching deeper and beyond, As the void smothers whole”) amidst a high-octane, metallic sonority, before all comes to an end with Inner Paradigm, presenting some welcome elements from other genres like Groove Metal and Djent, in special in the rumbling bass by Rens.

By pushing the boundaries in terms of overall production and quality, music and lyrical compositions, Circuition (which is by the way available in full on YouTube and on Spotify) is undoubtedly the band’s strongest effort to date, and will surely elevate the band to new heights in the world of heavy music. You can get to know more about those Dutch metallers on Facebook and on Instagram, stream their music on YouTube and on Spotify, and obviously support such a talented band by purchasing Circuition from BandCamp or Big Cartel, or by clicking HERE. Nephylim are surely one of the torchbearers of the Melodic Death Metal movement in their homeland, and it’s armed with albums like Circuition that they’re going places, ready to conquer new territories while blasting their undisputed music to metalheads worldwide.

Best moments of the album: Amaranth, Circuition and Withered.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Independent

Track listing
1. Travail Pt. I – Anima 2:24
2. Travail Pt. II – Animus 6:13
3. Amaranth 5:31
4. Grand Denial 6:22
5. Circuition 5:19
6. Withered 6:18
7. Inner Paradigm 6:08

Band members
Tijn Bosters – lead vocals
Kevin van Geffen – guitars, clean & backing vocals
Ralph Lentink – guitars
Rens van de Ven – bass
Martijn Paauwe – drums

Guest musicians
Kevin van Geffen & Yannick Maris – orchestrations

Album Review – Aversed / Erasure of Color (2025)

Boston, Massachusetts’ own Progressive/Melodic Death Metal beast returns with their sophomore album, presenting a glimpse of hope and beauty on a backdrop of raging, mournful extreme music.

Four years after the release of their critically acclaimed first full-length album Impermanent, Boston, Massachusetts’ own Progressive/Melodic Death Metal beast Aversed returns in full force with their sophomore opus, entitled Erasure of Color, bringing forward more of what the band itself likes to label as “Gothic Extreme Metal”. Currently formed of Sarah Hartman on vocals, Sungwoo Jeong and Alden Marchand on the guitars, Martin Epstein on bass, and Jeff Saltzman on drums, Aversed showcase endless rage and yearning in their new album, presenting a glimpse of hope and beauty on a backdrop of raging, mournful extreme music.

It’s pedal to the metal from the very first second in To Cover Up the Sky, with Sarah already proving why she was chosen to be the band’s new frontwoman in an interesting fusion of Death Metal with the sounds by bands like Jinjer and The Agonist. Then in Cross to Bear we face cryptic lyrics barked by Sarah (“Allow no joy / Because I am only me when I bereave / All my warmth pushed below the surface / Allow no joy, no exhilaration / I do not feel like me, anymore”) while Sungwoo and Alden extract sheer electricity from their axes. “In 1905, a French physician, Dr. Jacques Beaurieux, performed an experiment on prisoners condemned to die by guillotine. Immediately after his subjects were decapitated, he called out their names seeking to determine to what extent and for how long consciousness remained in their detached skulls”, commented the band, and that was the inspiration for Lucid Decapitation, again investing in a Jinjer-infused Progressive Metal sonority, with the bass by Martin sounding truly metallic; whereas in Inexorable they get back to a more vicious, enraged vibe, while also sounding melodic and embracing, albeit not as dynamic and inspired as the other songs.

The album continues on a high note with Burn, again venturing through the realms of classic Melodic Death Metal, with Jeff dictating the song’s pace with his unstoppable, hammering drums; while Solitary starts in a more introspective manner to the clean vocals by Sarah, showcasing the band’s more progressive and experimental side, and gradually evolving into a Melodic Death Metal aria before ending in a climatic and visceral vibe. Then the title-track Erasure of Color brings forward an avalanche of heaviness to the vicious roars by Sarah and the stylish, piercing guitars by Sungwoo and Alden, again sounding absolutely progressive from start to finish. And before all is said and done the band offers the whimsical interlude Yearning, prepping our souls for one final onrush of melodeath titled Departures, where the band delivers a more cadenced sonority perfect for Sarah’s clean and harsh vocals, even sounding radio-friendly at times, with all changes inside the music keeping it vibrant and fresh.

Fans of bands like Arch Enemy, At The Gates, The Agonist, Cradle of Filth, and Katatonia, among several others, will have an absolute blast listening to Erasure of Color, available for purchase from the band’s own BandCamp, or simply by clicking HERE. Aversed definitely know how to blend the harshness of Death Metal with melodic and gothic styles, and if you want to know more about the band, their plans for the future, and obviously their tour dates, you can find them on Facebook and on Instagram, subscribe to their YouTube channel, and stream their music on Spotify or any other service. Although the title of the album points to the lack of any color, let’s say the music found in the album is quite the opposite, a colorful, diverse and thrilling amalgamation of styles that will inspire the band to keep moving forward no matter what, always reinventing themselves and keeping us eager for more of their thrilling creations.

Best moments of the album: To Cover Up the Sky, Lucid Decapitation and Erasure of Color.

Worst moments of the album: Inexorable.

Released in 2025 M-Theory Audio

Track listing
1. To Cover Up the Sky 4:26
2. Cross to Bear 4:05
3. Lucid Decapitation 5:17
4. Inexorable 5:13
5. Burn 3:46
6. Solitary 5:42
7. Erasure of Color 4:19
8. Yearning 1:30
9. Departures 5:29

Band members
Sarah Hartman – vocals
Sungwoo Jeong – guitars
Alden Marchand – guitars
Martin Epstein – bass
Jeff Saltzman – drums

Album Review – Scalpture / Landkrieg (2025)

Here comes the German Death Metal tank again armed with their fourth album, revolving around the 30 Year War that devastated the German lands from 1618 until 1648. 

Here comes the German Death Metal tank Scalpture again, crushing and smashing, bulldozing all resistance into oblivion and breaking through the lines. Founded in 2009 in Bielefeld, a German city in the Ostwestfalen-Lippe Region in the north-east of North Rhine-Westphalia, the band currently formed of Thorsten Pieper on vocals, Tobias Aselmann and Felix Marbach on the guitars, Niklas Neuwöhner on bass and Moritz Nixdorf on drums delivers their fourth album, titled Landkrieg, which means “land warfare” in German, with deadly precision and an ambitious mission statement to conquer the world. Recorded, produced and mixed by Marco Brinkmann at Hellforge Studio, mastered by Lawrence Mackrory at Rorysound Studios, and displaying a stylish artwork by world renowned artist Eliran Kantor (with layout by Irrwisch Artdesign), Landkrieg brings forward ten songs of pure old school Death Metal, with each song revolving around the 30 Year War that devastated the German lands from 1618 until 1648, being therefore perfect for fans of Hail of Bullets, Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Gatecreeper, Dismember and Jungle Rot.

The serene intro The Fall works as the calm before the storm, as the band heads into the battlefield in Into Catastrophe, with Moritz bringing the heavy artillery by hammering his drums nonstop while Thorsten roars deeply and with tons of anger. Then we have Til Jeret Undergang, or “until the end”, another blast of classic 90’s Death Metal where the bass by Niklas sounds utterly heavy and metallic, turning the song into the perfect choice for some action inside the pit. Landsknecht, an expression that represents a mercenary foot soldier in late 15th-, 16th-, and 17th-century Europe, is a tormented display of Death Metal led by the crushing riffs by Tobias and Felix; followed by Wallenstein, a military leader and statesman who fought on the Catholic side during the 30 Year War, sounding considerably darker thanks to all of its elements of Doom Metal.

Den Mörka Nattens Lejon, or “lion of the dark night” from Swedish, indeed sounds like a devilish lion thanks to another bestial performance by Thorsten on vocals while Moritz speeds things up with his demolishing beats, and the hammering bass and drums by Niklas and Moritz set the tone in Of Siege and Besieged, a neck-breaking, infernal aria by the band. After that we face Schwedentrunk, a method of torture and execution in which the victim is forced to swallow large amounts of a foul liquid, such as excrement, leaning towards modern-day Melodic Death Metal while still sounding raw and evil; and it’s pedal to the metal with the infuriated Hells Choirs Chant, where their caustic riffs and blast beats match perfectly with Thorsten’s guttural roars. Finally, Bellum Se Ipsum Alet, or “war feeds itself” from Latin, puts a dark and sinister conclusion to the album, with the band’s Death and Doom vein pulsing harder than ever.

After all is said and done, it’s clear that Scalpture stayed true to their deadly roots in Landkrieg, building their music and lyrics on detailed historical research and portraying the horrors that the abyss of war has caused in some of the darkest hours of humankind. Hence, don’t forget to follow the band on Facebook and on Instagram to keep updated with all things Scalpture, to stream more of their warlike compositions on Spotify, and of course to purchase Landkrieg from BandCamp or by clicking HERE. As the band unleashes their new album upon us, that leaves us with only two choices, to run for cover or to bang our Death Metal heads hard, and based on the high quality of the music found in the album I’m sure we’ll all go for the second option.

Best moments of the album: Til Jeret Undergang, Den Mörka Nattens Lejon and Hells Choirs Chant.

Worst moments of the album: Wallenstein.

Released in 2025 Testimony Records

Track listing
1. The Fall 1:23
2. Into Catastrophe 3:46
3. Til Jeret Undergang 5:09
4. Landsknecht 4:21
5. Wallenstein 5:32
6. Den Mörka Nattens Lejon 3:22
7. Of Siege and Besieged 6:07
8. Schwedentrunk 3:28
9. Hells Choirs Chant 3:46
10. Bellum Se Ipsum Alet 5:49

Band members
Thorsten Pieper – vocals
Tobias Aselmann – guitar
Felix Marbach – guitar
Niklas Neuwöhner – bass
Moritz Nixdorf – drums

Concert Review – Swallow The Sun (The Velvet Underground, Toronto, ON, 02/21/2025)

A night of sheer doom, darkness and melancholy in the form of first-class heavy music took the skies of Toronto this Friday night.

OPENING ACTS: Snakes Of Russia, Ghost Bath and Harakiri For The Sky

A few days after the heaviest snow storm the city of Toronto has seen for quite some time, The Velvet Underground hosted the Shining Over North America Tour 2025 with the bands SNAKES OF RUSSIA, GHOST BATH, HARAKIRI FOR THE SKY and SWALLOW THE SUN, and of course Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I were there to cover such an amazing event. Well, unfortunately due to the insane traffic to get to Toronto AND also inside the city, it was impossible for several concert goers to arrive in time for the performance by United States-based Darkwave/Electronic/Ambient act SNAKES OF RUSSIA, including Keith and I. I honestly have no idea how the show was, if the crowd enjoyed it or not, as while Snakes of Russia was playing I was desperately trying to find a parking lot where most spots were not taken by huge snow banks. At least before the show I had some time to listen to their 2023 album True Surrender, available on BandCamp and on Spotify, and although it’s not my cup of tea I must admit it’s a really cool album for fans of the darkest side of electronic music.

Band members
Joseph Holiday – vocals, all instruments

When I weas finally able to get inside the venue, American Depressive/Post-Black Metal entity GHOST BATH had already started their setlist, but at least in this case I had plenty of time to enjoy their harsh and sinister performance, led by the visceral, anguished screams by vocalist and guitarist Nameless. One of the main issues with The Velvet Underground, if not their biggest issue, is the fact the stage is way too low, almost as if it doesn’t really exist, and it’s really tough to see the bands performing there unless you’re two feet from the “stage”. Add to that a few pillars in the middle of the venue, and there you have the perfect atmosphere to mainly listen to the music played without seeing anything. Furthermore, Keith couldn’t make it in time for Ghost Bath, and as my mobile pictures of the show are beyond nasty, there isn’t anything to show about them on this review. You can still enjoy their music on BandCamp and on Spotify, like their 2021 album Self Loather, and I highly recommend seeing those guys live if you enjoy such a caustic type of Black Metal.

Band members
Nameless – vocals, guitars
Caleb Cheslock – guitars
Liam Frith – guitars
Josh Jaye – bass
Alec Martin – drums

Then after all that hassle to get to Toronto, the shitty traffic, the excruciating task of finding a parking spot, and so on, I was already getting very tired and ready to go back home to relax a little, but fortunately Austria’s own Post-Black Metal masters HARAKIRI FOR THE SKY hit the stage for the most electrifying performance of the night, waking me up and inspiring me to headbang and raise my horns nonstop to their fantastic music. Playing mostly songs from their 2021 album Mӕre and their newborn masterpiece Scorched Earth, the band led by frontman J.J. and guitarist M.S. kicked some serious ass on stage, investing all of their energy into each song played, and with minimal talk in between songs. I simply loved seeing them live for the first time, and songs like With Autumn I’ll Surrender, Without You I’m Just a Sad Song, Fire, Walk With Me, and Sing for the Damage We’ve Done (all available on Spotify) sounded flawless, superb and touching, and the reaction from every single person to their classy performance was a thing of beauty, which clearly indicated it won’t take long for one of the best bands of the current metal scene worldwide to return to Toronto soon.

Setlist
Keep Me Longing
With Autumn I’ll Surrender
Fire, Walk With Me
Without You I’m Just a Sad Song
Sing for the Damage We’ve Done
Calling the Rain

Band members
J.J. – vocals
M.S. – guitars
Marrok – guitars, backing vocals
P.G. – bass
Kerim “Krimh” Lechner – drums

SWALLOW THE SUN

The name of the band says it all. After a quick break, it was time for the darkest show of the night, courtesy of Finland’s Melodic Doom/Death Metal titans SWALLOW THE SUN, and it was indeed a dark, pensive, doomed and visceral concert. Vocalist Mikko Kotamaki and his henchmen were on fire during their entire set, blending their old material with their newest albums Moonflowers (2021) and Shining (2024), with the sequence of Woven Into Sorrow, Charcoal Sky, MelancHoly, New Moon and Night Will Forgive Us sounding and feeling as heavy and obscure as possible. The encore was just as doomed, with November Dust and Swallow (Horror, Part 1), and their diehard fans were having an amazing time with their scorching riffs, pounding drums and visceral energy. It was a somewhat late show for most of us, but in the end it was a fantastic night of contemporary heavy music, and I’ll surely be there anytime Swallow The Sun are back in town with their undisputed doom.

Setlist
Velvet Chains
Innocence Was Long Forgotten
What I Have Become
Firelights
Under the Moon & Sun
Woven Into Sorrow
Charcoal Sky
New Moon
MelancHoly
Night Will Forgive Us
Plague of Butterflies: Pt. I: Losing the Sunsets

Encore:
November Dust
Swallow (Horror, Part 1)

Band members
Mikko Kotamaki – vocals
Juha Raivio – guitars, keyboards
Juho Raiha – guitars
Matti Honkonen – bass
Juuso Raatkainen – drums

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Album Review – Matalobos / Phantasmagoria: Hexed Lands (2025)

This uncanny entity will attack your senses with their dreadful fusion of Mexican folklore and Melodic Death and Doom Metal, painting a vivid picture of the darker side of Mexican mythology.

Emerging from the vibrant Mexican metal scene, Matalobos are a dreadful fusion of Mexican folklore and Melodic Death and Doom Metal that takes you on an unforgettable musical journey through the haunting legends of their hometown, Guanajuato, telling profound and evocative stories through their unique blend of extreme music. Now in 2025, the band formed of Dante Méndez on vocals, Eduardo Santamaría and Germán Nieto on the guitars, and Clemente Escalona on drums, supported by session musician Iván Moreno on bass, is unleashing upon us their third full-length effort, titled Phantasmagoria: Hexed Lands, offering an immersive dive into Mexican folklore, blending melancholic atmospheres with crushing doom elements to create a powerful and evocative sound. Recorded, produced and mixed by Rubén Sánchez at Urvn Studio in León, Mexico, with mastering by Jari Lindholm, the album beautifully captures the spectral and tragic tales embedded in Mexico’s mythological past.

As soon as you hit play, the intro Panoramica will drag you to the band’s realm of legends and darkness in This Mortal Music, starting in an imposing, atmospheric manner before Dante begins roaring like a beast supported by the brutality blasted by Clemente on drums, exhaling pure doom and setting the tone for Purgatory Blessing, offering a huge dosage of clean vocals, which are not bad but take away some of the song’s energy and punch. Back to a much darker, heavier sonority thanks to the sluggish beats by Clemente and the piercing guitars by Eduardo and Germán, we have Below the Dam, and the skies will get even darker and the ambience more pensive and grim in Hatred of Kin, overflowing despair and obscurity spearheaded by another visceral vocal performance by Dante.

The second half of the album begins with the charming yet venomous Hasta el viento tiene miedo, which is Spanish for “even the wind is afraid”, an instrumental tune that shows a more introspective side of the band; and Matalobos come crushing our damned souls again in Where Witches Gather, alternating between sheer heaviness and more melodic passages, all spiced up by the minimalist riffs by Eduardo and Germán. Then again they offer a more melancholic sound with The Alley, where the clean vocals by Dante feel a lot stronger and more penetrating, exploding into pure Doom Metal the likes of My Dying Bride and Paradise Lost, all boosted by a mysterious saxophone, bringing even more melancholy to the music. In Carmen Buried Alive the band blasts their most damned, devilish and hammering sonority of the whole album, a lecture in Doom Metal led by the sluggish, ruthless drums by Clemente, before we face House of Laments, another solid, in-your-face display of Blackened Doom Metal where the eerie vocalizations by Dante will haunt your putrid souls for all eternity.

Resonating with fans of Opeth, Novembre, and Swallow the Sun, the sound by Matalobos is defined by its haunting beauty and depth, offering listeners an unforgettable exploration of despair, mythology, and the human experience, exactly like what’s presented by those Mexican metallers in their newborn spawn. Having said that, don’t forget to give Matalobos a shout on Facebook and on Instagram, to subscribe to their YouTube channel and to stream their music on Spotify, and of course to purchase Phantasmagoria: Hexed Lands from BandCamp, from Concreto Records, or by clicking HERE. Painting a vivid picture of the darker side of Mexican mythology, Phantasmagoria: Hexed Lands is definitely the band’s strongest album to date, not only  cementing their name in the Mexican scene, but also spreading their dark, doomed wings all over the world.

Best moments of the album: This Mortal Music, Below the Dam and Carmen Buried Alive.

Worst moments of the album: Purgatory Blessing.

Released in 2025 Concreto Records

Track listing
1. Panoramica 0:32
2. This Mortal Music 5:50
3. Purgatory Blessing 6:32
4. Below the Dam 7:00
5. Hatred of Kin 7:07
6. Hasta el viento tiene miedo 3:39
7. Where Witches Gather 6:12
8. The Alley 4:12
9. Carmen Buried Alive 6:50
10. House of Laments 7:17

Band members
Dante Méndez – vocals
Eduardo Santamaría – guitars
Germán Nieto – guitars
Clemente Escalona – drums

Guest musicians
Iván Moreno – bass (session)

Concert Review – Decapitated (The Phoenix Concert Theatre, Toronto, ON, 02/13/2025)

It doesn’t matter how much snow there is in Toronto, the metalheads in the city will always be there for a night of sheer violence with bands like Decapitated and Incantation.

OPENING ACTS: Exmortus, Darkest Hour and Incantation

After the massive snow storm that hit the city of Toronto and most of the province on Ontario from Wednesday night until Thursday morning, bringing an endless amount of snow to the streets and, therefore, turning any commute into a true nightmare, I thought all roads would be clear Thursday evening when Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I headed to The Phoenix Concert Theatre for a night of sheer brutality offered by EXMORTUS, DARKEST HOUR, INCANTATION and DECAPITATED during their Nihility Across North America Tour 2025, another killer event brought to the city by Noel Peters of Inertia Entertainment. Unfortunately, my predictions about the roads being clear of snow were wrong (although I was right about traffic being light that evening due to people staying home instead of going to work that day), and Toronto was still a huge freakin’ mess when I got to the show, but in the end no one seemed to care about the gargantuan snow banks blocking every single sidewalk and some streets, as the crowd at the venue was really good for a night when the best thing to do was staying home.

Less than half an hour after the doors opened, Whittier, California’s own Technical Thrash/Death Metal beast EXMORTUS kicked off the festivities with a frantic, very technical and absolutely fun performance, igniting some of the coolest and wildest circle pits of the entire night. Spearheaded by the talented vocalist and guitarist Jadran “Conan” Gonzalez, the band played a short but powerful set including songs form their latest opus Necrophony, available by the way on Spotify, and the reaction form the fans already at the venue was superb. Those guys are simply amazing live, playing all songs to perfection, and I guess it won’t take long for Torontonians to see them again in the city, and hopefully next time they’ll be the headliners and play a full set for our total delight.

Setlist
Oathbreaker
Feast of Flesh
Storm of Strings
Warrior of the Night
Let Us Roam
Metal Is King

Band members
Jadran “Conan” Gonzalez – vocals, guitars
Chase Becker – guitars
Brice Snyder – bass
Adrian Aguilar – drums

After a very short break, Washington, D.C.-based Melodic Death Metal/Metalcore act DARKEST HOUR hit the sage at the Phoenix Concert Theatre for a very energetic show, thanks in part to the breathtaking performances by guitarists Mike Schleibaum and Nico Santora, who didn’t stop shredding their axes, headbanging, running and jumping around the stage, not even for a single second. Currently promoting their 2024 album Perpetual | Terminal, available on both BandCamp and on Spotify, the quintet was eager to get more action from the crowd, which seemed a bit tired most probably due to an entire day of shoveling and braving snow banks across the city. That doesn’t mean we didn’t get some sick mosh pits during their show, and of course every single time frontman John Henry asked people to move inside the pit, he was promptly answered with some nice action by the crowd.

Setlist
Societal Bile
The Sadist Nation
Stand and Receive Your Judgment
The Flesh & The Flowers of Death
Rapture in Exile
Doomsayer (The Beginning of the End)
Tranquil
Amor Fati
Convalescence
With a Thousand Words to Say but One
Goddess of War, Give Me Something to Die For

Band members
John Henry – vocals
Mike Schleibaum – guitars
Nico Santora – guitars
Aaron Deal – bass
Travis Orbin – drums

I guess fans were also saving some energy for the ruthless performance by Johnstown, Pennsylvania’s own Death Metal veterans INCANTATION, who after a considerable delay started playing their 1994 cult album Mortal Throne Of Nazarene in full, just like in all other stops from their current tour. And let me tell you, the live rendition of such a classic album of Death Metal with Doom Metal influences sounded utterly evil, heavy and demented onstage, with the bass by Chuck Sherwood making our heads tremble during their entire show. The iconic John McEntee sounded as infernal as usual on vocals, inspiring us all for some brutal headbanging and, therefore, reminding us all why Incantation have been a staple of the extreme music scene worldwide for so many decades. It was just my second time seeing those guys live, and hopefully not the last one, as I’m sure Incantation love Toronto as much as we love their music.

Setlist
Mortal Throne of Nazarene
Demonic Incarnate
Emaciated Holy Figure
Iconoclasm of Catholicism
Essence Ablaze
Nocturnal Dominium
The Ibex Moon
Blissful Bloodshower
Abolishment of Immaculate Serenity

Band members
John McEntee – vocals, guitars
Luke Shively – guitars
Chuck Sherwood – bass
Kyle Severn – drums

DECAPITATED

Last but not least, it was time to turn up the volume to 11 with the infuriated performance by the main band of the night, Poland’s unrelenting Technical Death/Groove Metal horde DECAPITATED, and when I say it was loud, it’s because it was LOUD. Performing their 2002 classic album Nihility in full, plus a few other songs as part of the encore, the band now fronted by vocalist Eemeli Bodde (who by the way contributed vocals for the track “Flooding Secrations”, performed by a fictional band called Impaled Rektum from the 2018 Finnish movie Heavy Trip), Decapitated crushed our damn minds, souls and bodies with endless heaviness and violence, inspiring all mosh pit lovers to have a very good time inside the hurricane formed in the middle of the floor section. My only complaint is that the show started late, after 10pm, and some fans had to leave before the end because they had to take public transportation home, or simply because they were absolutely tired. As I said, the snow storm drained a lot of our energy during the day, but of course there’s always some left when the band in question is as infernal and vibrant as Decapitated.

Setlist
Nihility
Perfect Dehumanisation (The Answer?)
Eternity Too Short
Mother War
Nihility (Anti-Human Manifesto)
Names
Spheres of Madness
Babylon’s Pride
Symmetry of Zero
Suffer the Children (Napalm Death cover)

Encore:
From the Nothingness With Love

Cancer Culture
Kill the Cult
Hello Death
Iconoclast

Band members
Eemeli Bodde – vocals
Wacław Vogg Kiełtyka – guitars
Paweł Pavlo Pasek – bass
James Stewart – drums

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Album Review – Hållbar / Nemesis (2025)

Behold this excellent album of “Contemporary Black Metal” made in Poland, reminding us all that sometimes we are our own worst enemies.

Forged in the fires of Warsaw, Poland in 2023, Melodic Black/Death Metal horde Hållbar, a Swedish word that translates to “durable” or “sustainable” in English, is ready to crush our souls with their first full-length album, simply titled Nemesis. Self-recorded at Okrutnik Studio, mixed and mastered by Filip “Heinrich” Hałucha at Heinrich House Studio, and with artwork and design by Dariusz Barabaś from Seeg Design and Bartosz Rybitwa, the debut opus by Gosia Marczak on vocals, Przemysław Janusz Gracel and Jakub Bałdyga on the guitars, Bartosz Wietnam Mitura on bass and Sebastian Kredek Cieciera on drums brings to our avid ears a crossover between Black Metal and Melodic Death Metal with Deathcore-like female screams, or in other words, a unique belnd that the band likes to call as “Contemporary Black Metal”.

The cryptic, eerie intro Ambiguous Loss will darken our minds before the band comes ripping in Mental Apraxia, with Sebastian hammering his drums manically, offering Gosia all she needs to bark and roar like a true she-demon; and the guitars by Przemysław and Jakub exhale heaviness and sound as sharp as a knife in Face to the Ground, presenting a great fusion of Melodic Death and Black Metal. The title-track Nemesis brings forward obscure lyrics barked by Gosia (“You’re the hero of your personal myth / You’re an obdurate cancer running through my veins / You’re the buffalo with predator’s teeth / Nemesis! Oh! / Show me everything it is worth to die for / Nemesis! / Show me everything you just want to die for / Let them free!”), whereas Bartosz and Sebastian make the earth tremble with their metallic kitchen in the venomous Love/Hate Language.

After such a hurricane of blackened sounds, we face a more introspective, serene start in Fears, with Gosia gnarling deeply before all explodes into a headbanging extravaganza led by the massive drums by Sebastian, resulting in maybe the most Black Metal of all songs. The band continues to pave their darkened path in Voodoo Doll, another excellent option for some vigorous headbanging with the riffs by Przemysław and Jakub transpiring sulfur; and there’s no time to breathe as their caustic fusion of Death and Black Metal keeps penetrating deep inside our souls in Aposiopesis, while Gosia blasts an overdose of harsh roars in Tormentor, supported by the thunderous sounds crafted by her bandmates. Puppet String, the second to last song of the album, again ventures through darker lands, sounding perfect for some mosh pit action, whereas lastly we have Possibilities, a solid tune that puts a visceral yet melodic ending to the album.

“Nemesis is a tale of unprocessed experiences and emotions that, difficult and aggravating at first, eventually teach important lessons – stories of mental illness, codependency, perfectionism, patterns of unreflective behavior and loneliness. Nemesis is about each of us, because we are sometimes our own worst enemies,” commented Gosia about the band’s debut offering, and you can join the band in that never-ending fight against our inner demons by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their music on Spotify, and by grabbing a copy of Nemesis from BandCamp or from DistroKid. We’re definitely our worst enemies in life, which is why we have high quality bands like Hållbar among us, to give us strength through their music to continue moving forward no matter what.

Best moments of the album: Face to the Ground, Fears and Aposiopesis.

Worst moments of the album: Tormentor.

Released in 2025 Independent

Track listing
1. Ambiguous Loss 0:41
2. Mental Apraxia 3:54
3. Face to the Ground 3:19
4. Nemesis 3:10
5. Love/Hate Language 3:47
6. Fears 3:33
7. Voodoo Doll 4:45
8. Aposiopesis 3:29
9. Tormentor 3:24
10. Puppet String 4:05
11. Possibilities 3:51

Band members
Gosia Marczak – vocals
Przemysław Janusz Gracel – guitar
Jakub Bałdyga – guitar
Bartosz Wietnam Mitura – bass
Sebastian Kredek Cieciera – drums

Album Review – The Halo Effect / March Of The Unheard (2025)

Let’s join this Swedish melodeath juggernaut in their march of the unheard to the sound of their incendiary sophomore album.

Gothenburg, Sweden’s own Melodic Death Metal outfit The Halo Effect may have begun as five old friends just making music for fun, but they’re now one of the most beloved new bands in Heavy Metal. Now in 2025 fans of bands like Dark Tranquility, Insomnium and Soilwork have a lot to celebrate with March Of The Unheard, a triumphant successor brimming with everything that made their 2022 debut Days of the Lost an instant breakthrough, showcasing all the talent and passion for heavy music by frontman Mikael Stanne (Dark Tranquillity, Grand Cadaver, Cemetery Skyline), guitarists Jesper Strömblad (Ceremonial Oath, Cyhra, Dimension Zero) and Niclas Engelin (We Sell The Dead, In Flames), bassist Peter Iwers (Fleetburner, In Flames), and drummer Daniel Svensson (In Flames, Diabolique).

Their Swedish melodeath vein pulses harder than ever in the opener Conspire To Deceive, with Jesper and Niclas slashing their axes in the best Scandinavian style, followed by Detonate, which will work majestically if played live, a pedal-to-the-metal creation by the band where Mikael’s roars and Daniel’s beats match flawlessly; and there’s no sign of slowing down at all, as the quintet continues to distill their Melodic Death Metal attack in great fashion in Our Channel To The Darkness. Then investing in a more cadenced, traditional sound, it’s time for Cruel Perception, led by the classic drums by Daniel, followed by What We Become, one of those songs perfect for some sick headbanging thanks to the pounding drums by Daniel, supported by the metallic bass lines by Peter.

After that, we face the epic, imposing interlude This Curse Of Silence, working as an intro to the title-track March Of The Unheard, offering our avid years an overdose of first-class Melodic Death Metal with nuances of classic Heavy and Power Metal. Needless to say, Mikael is once again bestial on vocals, which is also the case in Forever Astray, another great option for banging our heads while the band’s guitar duo continues to deliver sheer electricity form their sonic weapons. A grim start then evolves into another massive feast of hammering drums and sharp riffs in Between Directions, albeit not as powerful as the other songs; whereas in A Death That Becomes Us the band gets back to a more ferocious yet very melodic sonority, with Mikael leading his horde in another strong candidate for their live performances. There’s more classic Swedish metal music for the masses with Mikael roaring to the riffage by Jesper and Niclas in The Burning Point, before the album ends with the stunning Coda, an atmospheric and epic outro that puts a climatic conclusion to the entire record.

After all is said and done, March Of The Unheard isn’t just another opus of Gothenburg melodeath; it announces that The Halo Effect still have fresh ideas for the genre, 30 years after their members helped catapult it to international acclaim. Now united under one banner, they are gunning for global success once again, and you can know more about the band and enjoy their classy music by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, by subscribing to their YouTube channel, by streaming their music on Spotify, and of course by purchasing their new album by clicking HERE, joining The Halo Effect on their exciting and metallic march of the unheard.

Best moments of the album: Detonate, What We Become, March Of The Unheard and A Death That Becomes Us.

Worst moments of the album: Cruel Perception and Between Directions.

Released in 2025 Nuclear Blast

Track listing
1. Conspire To Deceive 3:57
2. Detonate 3:58
3. Our Channel To The Darkness 3:29
4. Cruel Perception 4:04
5. What We Become 3:47
6. This Curse Of Silence 2:01
7. March Of The Unheard 2:59
8. Forever Astray 3:41
9. Between Directions 4:29
10. A Death That Becomes Us 4:07
11. The Burning Point 3:48
12. Coda 3:54

Band members
Mikael Stanne – vocals
Jesper Strömblad – guitars
Niclas Engelin – guitars
Peter Iwers – bass
Daniel Svensson – drums