The Year In Review – Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2024

“Fans still compare me to Bruce Dickinson. I have people coming up to me and saying, Don’t you know that could’ve been you? And I tell them, That was me! I just didn’t want it..” – Paul Di’Anno

It’s hard to put into words the loss of our beloved Paul Andrews (17 May 1958 – 21 October 2024), better known by his stage name Paul Di’Anno, one of the most iconic musicians in the history of heavy music, helping Iron Maiden be what they’re today by giving that edgier vibe to the albums Iron Maiden and Killers, therefore influencing all future generations of musicians not only in Heavy Metal, but also in Punk Rock and Rock N’ Roll. He was a legend and will be sorely missed by anyone who loves good music. There’s not much we can do at The Headbanging Moose to honor his life and work, but we’ll keep celebrating heavy music in his name for as long as we can. I wish he could have played one final show in Toronto so Keith Ibbitson of Metal Paparazzi and I could have registered such a unique moment in the city, but unfortunately time is not always in our favor. Anyway, it might be a very sad year to the metal community worldwide with an irreplaceable loss like that, but heavy music lives on, and that’s why here we have once again The Headbanging Moose’s Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2024, excluding EP’s, best of’s and live albums, to keep the spirit alive and keep raising our horns to countless metal musicians like our great Paul Di’Anno.

1. Judas Priest – Invincible Shield (REVIEW)
Nothing can stand in the way of the Metal Gods as they raise the invincible shield of Heavy Metal.
Best song of the album: The Serpent and the King

2. Werewolves – Die For Us (REVIEW)
Australia’s most savage beast is back with their fifth studio opus, a lecture in Death Metal perfect for beating anyone back to life.
Best song of the album: Spittle-Flecked Rant

3. Aborted – Vault of Horrors (REVIEW)
These Death Metal and Deathcore beasts open their demonic vault of horrors to bring brutality, gore and evil to our damned souls.
Best song of the album: Death Cult

4. Necrowretch – Swords of Dajjal (REVIEW)
This French Blackened Death Metal horde returns blacker than ever with a magnificent opus dedicated to the Islamic Antichrist.
Best song of the album: Vae Victis

5. Gaerea – Coma (REVIEW)
The torchbearers of present-day Black Metal arise again, erupting with intensity, casting forth black ashes over the world.
Best song of the album: Coma

6. Blood Incantation – Absolute Elsewhere (REVIEW)
Blood Incantation offer us all two sensational compositions that are as confounding as they are engaging in their scope.
Best song of the album: The Stargate [Tablet I]

7. Benighted – Ekbom (REVIEW)
Let’s dive into the auditory abyss with this Brutal Death Metal and Grindcore entity armed with their newborn beast.
Best song of the album: Fame of the Grotesque

8. Fleshgod Apocalypse – Opera (REVIEW)
One of the torchbearers of Symphonic Death Metal worldwide returns with their strongest opus to date.
Best song of the album: I Can Never Die

9. Arhat – Secrets of Ancient Gods (REVIEW)
The newborn spawn by this Ukrainian horde will take you on a journey into the world of ancient gods and mysterious rituals.
Best song of the album: Abyss of Flame

10. Grand Magus – Sunraven (REVIEW)
Sweden’s own Heavy and Doom Metal institution is back with a new collection of battle hymns inspired by the tale of Beowulf and Grendel.
Best song of the album: Skybound

And here we have the runner-ups, completing the top 20 for the year:

11. Ecclesia – Ecclesia Militans (REVIEW)
12. The Last of Lucy – Godform (REVIEW)
13. Rotting Christ – Προ Χριστού (Pro Xristou) (REVIEW)
14. Rage – Afterlifelines (REVIEW)
15. Ingested – The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams (REVIEW)
16. Blaze Bayley – Circle of Stone (REVIEW)
17. Striker – Ultrapower (REVIEW)
18. Kerry King – From Hell I Rise (REVIEW)
19. Accept – Humanoid (REVIEW)
20. Hiraes – Dormant (REVIEW)

In addition, as I always like to say, sometimes a band doesn’t need to release a full album to kick some ass, and that’s why we also have our Top 10 EP’s of 2024 to show that sometimes less is more, or maybe I should say, less is heavier!

1. Rifftera – Coda (REVIEW)
2. Trollwar – Tales from the Frozen Wastes (REVIEW)
3. Atavistia – Inane Ducam (REVIEW)
4. Ways. – Are We Still Alive? (REVIEW)
5. Enforced – A Leap Into The Dark (REVIEW)
6. Gutvoid – Breathing Obelisk (REVIEW)
7. Onslaught Kommand – Visions of Blood and Gore (REVIEW)
8. Golgothan Remains – Bearer of Light, Matriarch of Death (REVIEW)
9. Infernalivm – Conquering the Most High (REVIEW)
10. Dragoncorpse – Fall of House Abbarath (REVIEW)

Do you agree with our list? What are your top 10 albums of 2024? Also, don’t forget to tune in every Tuesday at 10pm BRT on Rádio Coringão to enjoy the best of classic and underground metal with Jorge Diaz and his Timão Metal, and every Thursday at 8pm UTC+2 on Midnight Madness Metal e-Radio for the best of underground metal with The Headbanging Moose Show!

Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year! See you in 2025!

In the end, there’s no Christmas-inspired song this year, nor anything festive like that, but I’ll leave you with the official video for one of the most important songs ever recorded by Iron Maiden, one with a strong punk and thrash vibe, with the one and only Paul Di’Anno on vocals. Let’s raise our horns to him forever and ever, my fellow metalheads! RIP legend!

Album Review – Necrowretch / Swords of Dajjal (2024)

Branded with the mark of the beast, this French Blackened Death Metal horde returns blacker than ever with a magnificent opus dedicated to the Islamic Antichrist.

Formed in 2008 by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist Vlad in Valence, a city in southeast France in the Auvergne-Rhône-Alpes region, with the revival of old school Death Metal while always branded with the mark of the beast, Blackened Death Metal entity Necrowretch has just opened the most ambitious chapter of their career with Swords Of Dajjal, their three-years-in-the-making fifth album. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Francis Caste at Studio Sainte Marthe, Swords of Dajjal isn’t just named after the Islamic Antichrist, but a statement of the devotion to Satan by the aforementioned Vlad on vocals and guitars alongside guitarist and bassist W. Cadaver, and drummer N. Destroyer, being highly recommended for fans of Possessed, Dark Angel, Dissection, Necrophobic, and Merciless, or to anyone who sold their whole souls to the devil just like this French horde. Represented on the cover of the album (masterfully brought into being by Stefan Thanneur, also known as Manifeste) with his double-edged sword and bathed in the same kind of reddish and orangey mesmerizing lights one can experience when the sun sets on wind-beaten deserts, all eight songs on the album are prophecies, past and future, where Dajjal plays the leading role.

The Stygian guitars by Vlad and W. Cadaver ignite the opening tune Ksar Al-Kufar (describing a dark and forbidden land characterized by disbelief and ominous imagery), offering us all pure evil in the form of Blackened Death Metal; whereas N. Destroyer hammers his drums in the name of absolute darkness in The Fifth Door, living up to the legacy of the genre and being tailored for admirers of Behemoth, Belphegor and Septicflesh, while Vlad vociferates rabidly in a pure Black Metal style. Then obscure riffs and menacing vocal lines set the tone in Dii Mauri (or the “Mauran gods” mentioned in Latin inscriptions of the third century in North Africa), a phantasmagorical creation by Necrowretch that should sound insane live, summoning all creatures of the netherworld to their feast of blackened music. And the title-track Swords of Dajjal is a lecture in extreme music, blasphemy and hatred, with the harsh roars by Vlad walking hand in hand with the strident, piercing riffage by W. Cadaver while N. Destroyer keeps demolishing his drum set with endless dexterity and anger.

It’s time to bang your heads nonstop to the visceral sounds blasted by Necrowretch in Numidian Knowledge, another song where their passion for the darkest side of music becomes even stronger, whereas speeding things up and sounding more venomous than ever we have Vae Victis, which is Latin for “woe to the vanquished”, where Vlad is inhumane on vocals, barking and roaring like a beast from the crypts of Hades in a must-listen for admirers of Blackened Death Metal. The second to last burst of sulfur by the band is offered to our ears in Daeva (a supernatural entity of disagreeable nature, an evil spirit, or demon in Zoroastrianism), a more melodic composition, or an instrumental interlude that’s not bad but doesn’t add much to the album, flowing into the cryptic closing tune Total Obliteration, bringing forward six minutes of classy, energetic and grim Black and Death Metal that will haunt your damned souls for all eternity, all spearheaded by the visceral screams by Vlad supported by the always sharp riffs by W. Cadaver.

Armed with the biggest, most complex and intense album of their career, Necrowretch are about to yield their sword of destruction and exterminate everything in sight. The result is, according to Vlad, “our most black metal record, with splashes of death metal here and there. Whereas on the previous album all tempos were pushed to the extreme, there’s far more variety here to be found. It also gave us free reins to reach a more mystical, Biblical if you will vibe” fed by his experience living in Turkey in the late 2010’s. “We choose to focus on the Dajjal character, basically the antichrist in the Muslim religion. The Coran says that he’ll appear as a false prophet only to bring doom to this world, with an army of demons coming from the east.” Hence, if you’re also willing to sell your soul to the devil alongside the guys from Necrowretch, you can stream Swords of Dajjal in full on YouTube and on Spotify, and grab a copy of the album from their own BandCamp page, from Season of Mist, or by clicking HERE, and don’t forget to also give the band a shout on Facebook and on Instagram. Necrowretch are sounding blacker and more sulfurous than ever, bringing doom to our already decaying world just like Dajjal with their new album, and I’m sure you’ll have a blast listening to such masterpiece of darkness.

Best moments of the album: The Fifth Door, Swords of Dajjal, Vae Victis and Total Obliteration.

Worst moments of the album: Daeva.

Released in 2024 Season of Mist

Track listing
1. Ksar Al-Kufar 4:21
2. The Fifth Door 5:29
3. Dii Mauri 5:06
4. Swords of Dajjal 4:55
5. Numidian Knowledge 4:11
6. Vae Victis 4:18
7. Daeva 2:49
8. Total Obliteration 6:13

Band members
Vlad – vocals, guitars
W. Cadaver – lead guitars, bass
N. Destroyer – drums

Guest musician
R. Cadaver – bass (live)