Album Review – Groza / Nadir (2024)

Driven by emotion, anger and sadness, this German Black Metal horde will strike you like a lightning storm to the sound of their thrilling new album.

Groza, or “Гроза” in Cyrillic, which means “lightning storm”, “horror” or “disgust” in a few Slavic languages, are an up-and-coming Black Metal band formed in 2016 in Mühldorf am Inn, Bavaria, Germany, crafting a sound driven by emotion, anger and sadness, combining searing melodies, raging blast beats and melancholy induced clean guitar passages into a melodic, dynamic blend, which is exactly what you’ll get in their new album Nadir. Recorded, edited, mixed and produced by the band’s own founder P.G., mastered by David Pilz, and with the guitars re-amped by Georg Traschwandtner, the new album by the aforementioned P.G. on lead vocals, bass, guitars, orchestration and samples, U.A. on lead guitars and backing vocals, and T.H.Z. on drums is perfect for fans of Harakiri For The Sky, Mgla, Uada, and Alcest, delivering dark and melodic music for our avid ears.

The atmospheric, haunting intro Soul : Inert sets the stage for the trio to darken our minds and souls with Asbest, a powerful Melodic Black Metal tune with progressive and experimental nuances where P.G. roars with tons of anger in his blackened heart supported by the thunderous beats by T.H.Z., not to mention how metallic their riffs sound and feel. Then we have Dysthymian Dreams, the first single of the album, offering our avid ears eight minutes of Black Metal magic led by the sharp, piercing guitars by P.G. and U.A., or in other words, it’s a brutal yet melodic and enfolding aria of darkness by Groza. Equal. Silent. Cold. keeps the atmosphere burning to the sound of P.G.’s infernal vociferations while the drums by T.H.Z. exhale old school Black Metal, resulting in one of the most ferocious and detailed songs of the album; and it’s time for a nine-minute musical journey through the most obscure corners of the mind in Deluge, reminding me of some of the most recent creations by Gaerea, with their riffs and blast beats mercilessly devouring our rotten souls. Lastly, featuring J.J. & M.S. of bands like Kard and Harakiri for the Sky, we have Daffodils, a beyond dense, multi-layered and pensive Black Metal aria with lots of elements from Post-Black Metal and Atmospheric Black Metal, where the drums by T.H.Z. sound sensational throughout the entire song and with all agony and despair flowing from the last part of the song being absolutely climatic and piercing.

The music by Groza is haunting, mesmerizing, evil and ethereal all at once, and Nadir is the perfect depiction of the band’s musical power, talent and focus. Hence, don’t forget to give such a distinct horde a shout on Facebook and on Instagram, to stream their music on Spotify, and of course to purchase a copy of the flammable Nadir from their own BandCamp page, from AOP Records, from Napalm Records, from Indiemerchstore, from MVD Entertainment, or click HERE for all digital platforms. Because Groza do not just play Black Metal – they take Black Metal to new and exciting heights.

Best moments of the album: Dysthymian Dreams and Equal. Silent. Cold.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2024 AOP Records

Track listing
1. Soul : Inert 1:21
2. Asbest 6:54
3. Dysthymian Dreams 8:10
4. Equal. Silent. Cold. 6:59
5. Deluge 9:18
6. Daffodils 9:53

Band members
P.G. – lead vocals, bass, guitars, orchestration, samples
U.A. – backing vocals, lead guitars
T.H.Z. – drums

Guest musicians
J.J. and M.S. – vocals on “Daffodils”
“Bandhouse” crew – choir on “Daffodils”

Album Review – Sathamel / Horror Vacui (2019)

A seething cauldron of fire and blood in the form of Blackened Death Metal made in the UK, feeding the primal fear that writhes in our souls.

Is there anything more terrifying to the human mind than the void? Is it not the emptiness that lies beyond our last breath that props up all our dreams of heaven? That’s what a Black/Death Metal band formed in 2012 in Leeds, a city in the northern English county of Yorkshire, under the name Sheol, but currently known as Sathamel, is going to tell us all in their brand new album entitled Horror Vacui, a concept in art that is approximately translated from Latin to “fear of empty spaces”, continuing the path of darkness from their previous releases after a two-year hiatus while creating a more cohesive sound, and with the title applied in a more literal sense in terms of the void felt while the entity that is Sathamel had halted all activity.

Mixed and mastered by Samuel Turbitt at Ritual Sound Studios, Horror Vacui is a seething cauldron of fire and blood, a declaration of war, an edict of domination and a sentence of death, all embraced by the fulminating and devilish sounds blasted by Sathamel’s brand new lineup comprised of vocalist Kruk, guitarists KVN and Cygnus, bassist Nadir and drummer Reykr, being therefore highly recommended for fans of the scorching music by Hate, Behemoth, Deicide and Marduk. Each song in Horror Vacui carries that touch of darkness from beyond the world and feeds the primal fear that writhes in our souls, powerfully representing all your fears unleashed in an unrelenting firestorm of terror.

In the opening tune Libera Me, a cinematic intro will enfold you in darkness until the music reaches a devilish level led by Kruk’s enraged roars, growing into modern-day Black Metal showcasing scorching riffs by KVN and Cygnus and the infernal blast beats by Reykr. Needless to say, this is not recommended for the lighthearted, being effectively spiced up by phantasmagorical background sounds and vocalizations. The title-track Horror Vacui is brutal and blasphemous in the vein of Behemoth, with its dense and sulfuric instrumental penetrating deep inside your skin while you can enjoy dark poetry flowing form its lyrics (“Together as one / A carrion beast and tyrant’s fist / to consume the stars with purest joy / and to feed on covenants of creation / I create a masterpiece of horror and ecstasy / My canvas – your hollow smile / The front line expands under mastro’s hands / Universe bends to painter’s will”); and it’s time for total devastation with Sathamel in Raise Flame From Ash, an explosion of Blackened Death Metal where the vocals by Kruk sound as bestial and deep as they can be, with a venomous stench reeking in the air during its two and a half minutes of darkened sounds smashing your brain mercilessly.

KVN and Cygnus, supported by the rumbling bass by Nadir, dictate the rhythm in A New Age Of Lycanthropy, a neck-breaking, malevolent tune presenting all elements we love in extreme music, including a truly obscure and evil aura, whereas in The Devil’s Hand we’re treated to another onrush of demonic words (“Alive but intimate in death / Like maggots we nest / Nest in dead flesh / Alive but dependant on death / Like red fields we blossom embracing the dead”) while the music is beyond infernal, bringing to our ears flammable riffs by the band’s guitar duo and an intricate drumming by Reykr to give the whole song an extra kick. Then Kruk growls and gnarls like a beast from the underworld in Whispers Of A Husk, where the vicious beats by Reykr will crack your skull mercilessly in a lesson in technique and obscurity in the name of Black Metal.

Blazing guitars ignite the also hellish Świt, a cult-like, headbanging hymn crafted by the band, with Nadir extracting sheer thunder from his bass while the background choir makes the whole song more epic and imposing, not to mention how Kruk’s vocals remind me of Unleashed’s own Johnny Hedlund. There’s no time to breathe as Sathamel keep haunting our souls with their fiendish Blackened Death Metal in There Where Is No Time, not as complex and vibrant as the rest of the album but still presenting the band’s characteristic riffage and harsh vocals, and you better get ready for almost eight minutes of virulent and Stygian sounds in Of Spilled Wine And Broken Glass, more rhythmic than all previous songs and full of breaks and variations, but obviously still unleashing pure evil on us, ending in a twisted and obscure way.

If your heart is as dark as the music by Sathamel, and if you do not fear being trapped for all eternity in the void, you can follow the band on Facebook, subscribe to their YouTube channel, and grab your copy of such otherworldly album, which by the way is available in full on Spotify, from their own BandCamp page or Big Cartel, as well as from Apple Music and Amazon. Sathamel’s onrush of darkness and void will leave you completely disoriented from start to finish, proving once and for all there’s nothing better than some first-class Blackened Death Metal hailing from our beloved United Kingdom to feed all of our inner demons and fears.

Best moments of the album: Horror Vacui, Raise Flame From Ash and Whispers Of A Husk.

Worst moments of the album: There Where Is No Time.

Released in 2019 Independent

Track listing
1. Libera Me 5:51
2. Horror Vacui 4:32
3. Raise Flame From Ash 2:38
4. A New Age Of Lycanthropy 4:20
5. The Devil’s Hand 3:55
6. Whispers Of A Husk 3:48
7. Świt 3:55
8. There Where Is No Time 3:53
9. Of Spilled Wine And Broken Glass 7:41

Band members
Kruk – vocal
KVN – guitar
Cygnus- guitar
Nadir – bass
Reykr – drums