Album Review – Gutslit / Carnal (2023)

India’s own Brutal Death Metal and Grindcore warriors are back with their incendiary third full-length album, a masterful exploration of the intricate struggles of the human psyche.

In their over 15-year journey, Mumbai-based Brutal Death Metal/Grindcore masters Gutslit have transcended their status as a mere household name in the Indian metal scene to a global force to be reckoned with, showcasing their technical prowess and brutal riffs on two critically acclaimed full-length albums, Skewered in the Sewer, released in 2013, and Amputheatre, from 2017. Now in 2023, the band formed of vocalist Aditya Barve, guitarist Prateek Rajagopal, bassist Gurdip Singh Narang and drummer Aaron Pinto unleash hell once again with their third full-length opus, titled Carnal, showcasing the band’s evolution in sound, smoldering and surging with violent energy. Mixed and mastered by Mark Lewis at Audio Hammer Studios, produced by the band’s own Prateek Rajagopal, and displaying a stylish artwork by Kidsquidy (aka the band’s own Aaron Pinto), the album offers our avid ears eight crushing compositions which together represent a captivating exploration of the many facades that we all wear and the numerous personas that we all adopt to navigate the challenges of life.

As soon as you hit play, brutality and rage flow from all instruments in the pulverizing opening track Son of Sam, with Aditya roaring like a beast supported by the Death Metal blast beats by Aaron. The album couldn’t have started in a more demolishing way, I might say, and things get even heavier in Matriarch, another infernal Death Metal attack by those talented musicians with Gurdip’s rumbling bass bringing sheer groove to the music while Prateek will pierce your skin deep with his sick riffage. Then we have the heavy-as-hell Bind Torture Kill, featuring guest vocalist Julien Truchan of Benighted, and his pig-like screeches add an even higher level of insanity to the overall result, resulting in a lecture in Brutal Death Metal and Grindcore where the guitar by Prateek sounds utterly caustic. There’s no time to breath as the quartet will kick us hard in the head in The Killing Joke, bringing forward their trademark aggressiveness spearheaded by the deep, inhumane growls by Aditya.

The second half of the album begins with the infuriated Insidious, with the band’s stringed duo sounding incendiary during the song’s intense 41 seconds, followed by Body Snatcher, a much darker, more introspective creation by Gutslit, hammering our heads with their wicked bass lines and incendiary riffs, not to mention another flawless performance by Aaron on drums. In Altar of Putridity we face lyrics that are as acid as their music (“I walk past the lines of grim depression / A fantasy to behold / A morbid compassion to withhold / Sliver of remorse, flowing through my veins / Easing up to that moment / One step closer to creating”), although the song is not as exciting as the rest of the album; whereas closing the album on a high, melodic and visceral note we have Primeval, presenting an amazing job by all band members, in special Aaron with his demented drums, being therefore perfect for slamming into the circle pit like a true metalmaniac while Aditya continues to scream nonstop before all fades out to a sinister outro.

“Carnal is a masterful exploration of the intricate struggles of the human psyche. With a keen eye for detail and a remarkable understanding of the complexity of the human mind, we delve deep into the age-old conflict between good and evil. The tracks on this album depict the various phases of the human experience, from the deepest pits of despair to the highest peaks of euphoria,” commented the band about their flammable new album, which is by the way available in full on YouTube and on Spotify, and you can also purchase a copy of it from the band’s official site (India and worldwide) or from their BandCamp page (worldwide), or simply click HERE for all things Gutslit. In addition, don’t forget to also show your support to the band by following them on Facebook and on Instagram, and by subscribing to their YouTube channel. Let the violence of Carnal flow through your mind, and may Gutslit keep destroying our senses with their music by releasing amazing albums like their new one until the very end.

Best moments of the album: Matriarch, Bind Torture Kill and Primeval.

Worst moments of the album: Altar of Putridity.

Released in 2023 Independent

Track listing
1. Son of Sam 4:04
2. Matriarch 3:31
3. Bind Torture Kill 3:23
4. The Killing Joke 3:05
5. Insidious 0:41
6. Body Snatcher 4:54
7. Altar of Putridity 4:13
8. Primeval 6:05

Band members
Aditya Barve – vocals
Prateek Rajagopal – guitars
Gurdip Singh Narang – bass
Aaron Pinto – drums

Guest musician
Julien Truchan – vocals on “Bind Torture Kill”

Album Review – SystemHouse33 / Regression (2016)

Regression might be a return to a former or less developed state, but the new album by this talented Indian act is undoubtedly the evolution of Thrash and Groove Metal.

Rating3

systemhouse33_regressionI guess the first time I realized how crazy for heavy music people in India are was when I watched Iron Maiden’s Flight 666 documentary for the first time some good years ago. Watching around 30,000 people in Mumbai, India being completely smashed and screaming like lunatics to my favorite Iron Maiden song of all time, the unique “Aces High”, showed me there’s a lot more in the Land of Prayers than that hardly watchable Bollywood shebang. And it’s exactly from the city of Mumbai that come the demented thrash metallers SystemHouse33, who are not only releasing an amazing new album entitled Regression, but are also more than ready to conquer the entire world with their high-quality metal music.

Unleashing a rip-roaring fusion of the traditional Thrash Metal by Sepultura with elements from Groove and Death Metal (and even Melodic Death Metal), and having released four albums already in their career, this talented band has been reaching many important milestones since their inception in 2003. Always against all the odds, SystemHouse33 was the first metal band to ever emerge from the small Indian town of Nagpur, quickly spreading their Heavy Metal over several rock festivals and music events around India, including Campus Rock Idols, Metal Meltdown and Wacken Metal Battle. And before the release of the new album, those Indian metallers toured with American Death Metal icons Six Feet Under around Germany and Austria in December 2015 on their annual Xmas in Hell tour, being the band’s first ever foreign tour and becoming the first Indian metal band to tour with a legendary Heavy Metal headliner.

SystemHouse33 founding member and vocalist Samron Jude elaborates on the concept behind the new album, “Regression is the paradox of progress; it is the disintegrating world we live in. We are doing more, but feeling worse.” And let me tell you there couldn’t be better words to describe the aggressiveness and the feeling of insurgency found in every single song of the album, because right after the ominous intro Catharsis, which feels as if the band is rising from the ashes of a fallen world, we have the title-track Regression, starting their Indian onslaught the best way possible. Featuring huge doses of savagery amidst a polished and groovy rhythm, this amazing tune showcases guitarist/drummer Atish Thomas providing his “business card” in the form of some serious riffage, and you can easily sense how much he loves Groove Metal by his drumming style.

systemhouse33Indian brawler Samron Jude’s insane growls lead the powerful tune Lift This Plague, a solid composition perfect for banging your head nonstop where all band members are on fire, with highlights to its acid lyrics (“Pretentious flowing blood / Ignorance reaps resentment / Downward spiraling sky / Slumber of the sluggard”). Following that massacre we have the even better Namesake, one of the best tunes of the album (if not the sickest one), emanating endless electricity from all instruments. How not to get thrilled by those riffs and beats? Besides, it reminds me of the latest installments by many excellent Eastern European Groove Metal bands such as Ektomorf and Omega Diatribe. And a song named Death Chamber couldn’t sound any less visceral and obscure in a flawless display of what can be called Progressive Groove Metal, from its headbanging riffs to more progressive passages.

There’s not a single second to rest with the rhythmic and violent Detestable Idolatry, where you can feel the metallic bass chords by Leon Quadros striking you mercilessly while its contentious lyrics add a welcome touch of rebelliousness to its sonority (“Blood-filled ignorance in your soul / Self-righteous sacrifice of innocence / Slaying the name of a higher power / Shameful indulgence”). Pagan Breed is another progressive and experimental tune that never “forgets” the band’s core violence, with Samron firing anger through his harsh growls and the rest of the band doing a superb job in maintaining the ferocity of the song at a high level. Lastly, closing the album we have another berserk chant named Malicious Mind, yet again offering a potent fusion of progressiveness and old school Thrash and Death Metal. It sounds like if the band is demanding the listener to jump up and down with them, with Atish and Leon being in perfect sync with their guitar and bass lines, respectively.

I was about to give Regression a 3.5, but it honestly deserves a 4.0 for the band’s tenacity and passion for Heavy Metal in a country where almost everything seems to go against that type of music. And if you share the same passion for heavy music as the high-skilled metallers from SystemHouse33, go visit their Facebook page, YouTube channel and SoundCloud page, and grab your copy of Regression at their BandCamp page, at their official website, on iTunes, on CD Baby and many other locations. Although the word “regression” means a return to a former or less developed state, SystemHouse33 are making sure they change that concept to an evolved and exciting state of Thrash Metal with their flaming new album for our total delight.

Best moments of the album: Regression, Namesake and Pagan Breed.

Worst moments of the album: None. This album kicks fuckin’ ass.

Released in 2016 Independent

Track listing
1. Catharsis 1:35
2. Regression 4:42
3. Lift This Plague 3:04
4. Namesake 3:49
5. Death Chamber 4:07
6. Detestable Idolatry 5:09
7. Pagan Breed 3:14
8. Malicious Mind 3:56

Band members
Samron Jude – vocals
Leon Quadros – bass
Atish Thomas – guitars, drums

Additional musician
Jack Thomas – guitars (live)