Album Review – Hrob / Brána Chladu (2026)

These ruthless Slovakian death dealers are ready to attack with their debut opus, a putrid Death and Doom Metal abomination that evokes a sense of dread and desolation.

Founded in the beautiful Slovakian capital of Bratislava in 2021 by vocalist ansd guitarist Michal Matúš Uharček and guitarist Kiko Kavický as a side-project to their band Krudus, the indomitable Death/Doom Metal creature Hrob ( a word of Slavic origin, primarily meaning “grave” or “tomb”) is unleashing hell with their debut offering, entitled Brána Chladu, or “gate of cold” from Slovakian. Recorded by Michal Matúš Uharček and Kiko Kavický, mixed by Michal Matúš Uharček, mastered by James Plotkin at Plotkinworks, and displaying a bitterly cold artwork by Jan Vlášek, the striking debut by the aforementioned Michal and Kiko alongside bassist Anton “Vrana” Rozbora and drummer Matej Žitňanský is a putrid Death and Doom Metal abomination that evokes a sense of dread and desolation, shifting between slime-slow passages soaked in brooding heaviness and shake-you-from-a-trance pummeling blasts.

The album’s sinister, atmospheric Intro will penetrate deep inside your mind before you’re dragged into darkness to the sound of Chrám Prázdnoty, or “temple of the void” from Slovakian, a beyond infernal display of Blackened Death and Doom Metal led by Matej’s crushing drums, all boosted by the gruesome, evil vociferations by Michal. Their Death and Doom Metal attack goes on in full force in Tiene Stromov (“shadows of the trees”), a lecture in the style where the guitars by Michal and Kiko exhale sulfur and obscurity, while the neck-breaking Genocída Snov (“genocide of dreams”) offers more of the band’s trademark sound, with Michal’s demonic guttural walking hand in hand with the sluggish beats by Matej. Then after the folk-ish interlude Medzihra we face Zotročený Oheň (“enslaved fire”), alternating between sheer Death Metal violence and grim Doom Metal passages, with Vrana and Matej hammering their instruments manically. And lastly, the title-track Brána Chladu concludes the album on a demolishing mode, with Michal and Kiko once again firing Stygian riffs nonstop.

Brána Chladu is undoubtedly a morbid celebration of those fertile years of the early-to-mid 90’s when death-doom rose from rotting Death Metal and each bled b(l)ack into the other, being therefore highly recommended for fans of early Paradise Lost and Septic Flesh as well as Disembowelment, Asphyx, and Gorement, among several others.  Those Slovakian death dealers are not fooling around when it comes to delivering sheer heaviness and doom in their debut offering, and you can get in touch with them to let them know how much you love their obscure music via Facebook and Instagram, stream their savage creations on Spotify, and grab a copy of their devilish album from the Night Terrors Records’ BandCamp or webstore. Brána Chladu is as deadly as it is cold, bringing to us all a venomous fusion of Death and Doom Metal that will certainly keep the band moving forward for years to come, letting their harsh music reverberate to the four corners of our decaying world.

Best moments of the album: Tiene Stromov, Genocída Snov and Zotročený Oheň.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Memento Mori/Night Terrors Records

Track listing
1. Intro 1:25
2. Chrám Prázdnoty 7:15
3. Tiene Stromov 5:31
4. Genocída Snov 6:19
5. Medzihra 1:16
6. Zotročený Oheň 5:58
7. Brána Chladu 9:00

Band members
Michal Matúš Uharček – vocals, guitars
Kiko Kavický – guitars
Anton “Vrana” Rozbora – bass
Matej Žitňanský – drums

Album Review – Vessel of Iniquity / Void of Infinite Horror (2019)

Get ready for total annihilation, disembodiment and the disintegration of reality and existence in the form of a horrific strain of noise-infested black and death decimation.

Ritual black and death invocation. Terror noise-metal aimed at disintegrating one’s being and entire existence through the sheer force of hell in audial form. These are some of the words that can be used to describe the visceral music found in Void of Infinite Horror, the first full-length opus by British Black/Death Metal one-man sonic extermination entity Vessel of Iniquity. Formed in 2015 in Oxfordshire, a county in South East England, in the UK, Vessel of Iniquity is the brainchild of vocalist and multi-instrumentalist A. White, a talented musician who definitely knows  how to transform austere topics such as annihilation, disembodiment and the disintegration of reality and existence into a horrific strain of noise-infested black and death decimation.

Once again crafted and home-recorded in total seclusion, mastered by James Plotkin (Plotkinworks) and featuring layout and design by M. Alagna, Void of Infinite Horror offers the listener five unrelenting tracks of extreme music, sounding claustrophobic, abominable and twisted, all enfolded by a minimalist and dark cover painting by American artist Ellen Hausner named “Untitled (Monoprint series 1A)”. If you’re a fan of the massacring industrial noise scarification by entities like Gnaw Their Tongues, Sutekh Hexen and Abruptum, as well as the grandiose and bludgeoning sonic warfare of bands like Teitanblood and Impetuous Ritual, you’ll have a blast with Void of Infinite Horror, positioning this insanely heavy and wicked one-man army of darkness as one of the most promising names in the the vast but yet unexplored land of what can be labeled as “Terror Noise Metal”.

And the opening track of the album, beautifully entitled Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent, is already the perfect depiction of that so-called Terror Noise Metal, offering our ears a disruptive, eccentric and dissident avalanche of sounds and noises by A. White, with its drums sounding like a machine gun perforating our skulls mercilessly. Babalon is even darker and more menacing, presenting low-tuned sounds and deep, obscure roars that feel more like whispers, resulting in a modern-day Blackened Doom feast tailored for fans of devilish music. Hence, this track could easily be used as part of a horror movie score due to its strength, range and potential to instill fear in our hearts.

A. White’s demented onrush of sounds and noises goes on in Void of Infinite Sorrow, blending the most Stygian elements from Black and Doom Metal in its sluggish beats, thunderous riffs and bass, and malevolent rhythm, also presenting a menacing aura that ends up boosting its impact even more. If you think A. White and his Vessel of Iniquity will have to slow down at a given point to let us breathe you’re absolutely wrong, as his hurricane of dementia only gets stronger and darker as the music flows in Mother of Abomination, being utterly insane from start to finish, before the music switches from total chaos to an atmospheric and ethereal vibe in Once More Into the Abyss, where A. White delivers to our perturbed minds an endless amount of hypnotizing and damned sounds. Furthermore, I’m not sure if this can be called Atmospheric Black Metal, Drone, Noise, none of these, or even all at once, proving how unique and vile Vessel of Iniquity’s music can be.

If I had to summarize the music found in Void of Infinite Horror in one word, that would certainly be “chaos”, and if chaotic music is exactly what you crave in underground metal you must give Vessel of Iniquity a chance and support such distinct one-man act by following him on Facebook, and obviously by purchasing your copy of the album from the Sentient Ruin Laboratories’ BandCamp, from the Xenoglossy Productions’ BandCamp (in a fancy, old school cassette format), from CD Baby or from Discogs. No one knows exactly what lies ahead for A. White and his Vessel of Iniquity, as it’s not an easy task to predict what type of madness and experimentation musicians like him might add to their compositions, but at least we can rest assured that, as long as this cryptic metal entity is alive, chaos will reign.

Best moments of the album: Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent and Babalon.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2019 Sentient Ruin Laboratories/Xenoglossy Productions

Track listing
1. Invocation of the Heart Girt With a Serpent 3:50
2. Babalon 4:26
3. Void of Infinite Sorrow 4:59
4. Mother of Abomination 4:55
5. Once More Into the Abyss 6:07

Band members
A. White – vocals, all instruments