Album Review – Dysgnostic / End Whispers (2026)

Continuing to refine their hypnotic blend of Technical and Dissonant Death Metal, this Danish squad returns with their sophomore album, sounding dense and complex while retaining the cover of darkness.

Continuing to refine their hypnotic blend of Technical and Dissonant Death Metal by adding more nuance and structure to it since their inception in 2021 in Roskilde, a city in Denmark, west of Copenhagen, the venomous beast known as Dysgnostic returns from the underworld with their sophomore offering, titled End Whispers, following up on their 2022 debut opus Scar Echoes. Displaying a hellish artwork by the always amazing Belial NecroArts, the newborn spawn by Thomas Fischer (Elitist, Apparatus, Defilementory) on vocals and bass, Simon Kannegard (Denial of God, Defilementory) and Mads Bertram H Gath (Crocell, Heaven’s Damnation) on the guitars, and Richardt Olsen (Carbon Tomb, Defilementory) on drums is dense and complex while retaining the cover of darkness, inducing a state of pleasurable numbness where you witness an otherwise harrowing maze of constantly shifting tunes and it all seems perfectly logical and in place.

The opening tune The Last Refrain feels like like a dissonant version of the mighty Immolation, with Thomas’ deep guttural walking hand in hand with the intricate, top-of-the-line drumming by Richardt, followed by Into Salvation’s Night, as technical and demolishing as the opening track, with the guitars by Simon and Mads cutting our flesh mercilessly in the name of Death Metal; and their strident riffage will also haunt our damned souls in The Black Sun, while Thomas and Richardt make the earth tremble with their obscure and thunderous kitchen. One of the singles released, the title-track End Whispers, offers more of the inhumane growling by Thomas, darkening our minds and thoughts mercilessly, whereas Ignis Fatuus starts in a serene, melancholic manner before evolving into a massive beast of Experimental and Dissonant Death Metal.

They continue to pulverize our senses with their harsh sounds in Feast of Emptiness, alternating between sheer savagery and very detailed, multi-layered passages, showcasing the band’s focus and passion for the genre; followed by The Shattered Timekeeper, again blending the heaviness of Death Metal with progressive, technical and dissonant elements, led by the massive beats by Richardt. The minimalist guitar lines by Simon and Mads will pierce your minds in Orphaned and Abandoned, exploding into absolute chaos and fury where Richardt once again pounds his drums nonstop, and the quartet concludes their dark festivities with the enfolding and grim Glimpses of a Lost Horizon, where their riffs and solos match flawlessly with the demonic vociferations by Thomas in a lecture in violence, dexterity and intricacy.

In the end, it’s clear that End Whispers is only as impenetrable as it is multifaceted, an album that starts making sense after a few listens and one that will make you keep coming back to it to unravel more of its intricacies, being therefore highly recommended for admirers of the music by Ulcerate, Evilyn, Gorguts, Crown of Madness, and Undersave, just to name a few. If you want to know more about such an amazing band from the always incredible Denmark, you can find those guys on Facebook, Instagram, and Spotify, and of course purchase their ass-kicking sophomore opus from their own BandCamp or from the Transcending Obscurity Records’ BandCamp, main store, US store or EU store. The music by Dysgnostic is absurdly technical, dissonant and visceral, not recommended for the lighthearted, and once you let the sounds from End Whispers penetrate deep inside your mind, get ready for one hell of a ride.

Best moments of the album: Into Salvation’s Night, The Black Sun and Glimpses of a Lost Horizon.

Worst moments of the album: The Shattered Timekeeper.

Released in 2026 Transcending Obscurity Records

Track listing
1. The Last Refrain 3:18
2. Into Salvation’s Night 5:13
3. The Black Sun 4:16
4. End Whispers 3:27
5. Ignis Fatuus 6:16
6. Feast of Emptiness 4:31
7. The Shattered Timekeeper 4:40
8. Orphaned and Abandoned 4:05
9. Glimpses of a Lost Horizon 5:44

Band members
Thomas Fischer – vocals, bass
Simon Kannegard – lead guitars
Mads Bertram H Gath – guitars
Richardt Olsen – drums

Album Review – Serpents Lair / Circumambulating the Stillborn (2015)

If you’re one of those black metallers who can only live in darkness to survive the downfall of our putrescent society, this album is for you.

Rating4

serpents lair coverLet’s keep the streak of darkness alive and burning at The Headbanging Moose with yet another nefarious, caustic and sulphurous Black Metal brigade, this time hailing from the blazing fires of Sjælland, a large island that’s part of Denmark and that’s home to the capital Copenhagen and to the city of Roskilde, among other smaller towns and villages. The band in question is called Serpents Lair, and they’re bringing forth their debut full-length album entitled Circumambulating the Stillborn, a series of dissonant and kaleidoscopic Black Metal hymns tailored for diehard metallers who chose darkness as their sanctuary.

Formed in 2013, Serpents Lair already took the underworld of metal music by storm in 2014, when they released their demo named MMXIV. What was already evil in that demo became even more heinous in Circumambulating the Stillborn due not only to the refined production of the new album, which can also be seen on the amazing cover art by Misanthropic-Art Illustrations, but mainly to the advancements in their compositions, putting together a classic Black Metal sonority with the heartache and sorrow of Doom Metal and Blackened Doom.

What starts like an aria at the house of worship, named by the band as Epipháneia, suddenly becomes a Black Metal attack entitled Epistemology of Death, sounding cleaner than usual but still putrid and devilish. This 9-minute opus, which was one of their demo tracks, offers the listener winged riffs and beats interspersed with obscure and sluggish passages, always blustering those desperate growls and howls of dark music.

serpents lair photoThe title-track, Circumambulating the Stillborn, an old school Black Metal tune with piercing riffs and unholy lyrics (“We salute thee harbingers of the end of man / Oh ye true nihilists, bringer of empty chalices / For thou shalt be the error correcting itself / As thouest thirst to death / In denial of the nothing you bring”), sounds diabolically mesmerizing especially when it slows down; while Mortui Vivos Docent presents an ominous and ritualistic intro before morphing into a profane mass, displaying a demonic musicality with aggressive vocals and fiendish riffs. Furthermore, it never gets too heavy or too fast, just vile enough to disturb our minds from start to finish.

If you thought things couldn’t get more doomed, Serpents Lair bring you an outstanding ode to torment named The Serpentine Gnosis. It is Blackened Doom breathing sulfur from the pits of hell, with its killer drumming and possessed roars only making things even more gripping. And after an eerie instrumental tune named Dwelling on the Threshold to Tartarus, the band burns our souls with the amazing Devouring Wrathe, an ancient form of Black Metal with the album’s high-end production intensifying its blasphemous words (“Spare no praying man, / As he is not of glorious potential / Invite the odious omnipotence / To descend with divine purpose / Let it revelate itself / Upon the congregations of so called righteousness”), its relentless riffs and a morbid feeling of hopelessness to close the album.

In summary, the doomed Black Metal crafted by Serpents Lair at their unhallowed den undoubtedly deserves a shot, in special if you’re one of those metallers who can only live in darkness to survive the downfall of our putrescent society. With that said, you can listen to their music on their YouTube channel, and find Circumambulating the Stillborn for sale at their BandCamp page, at the Fallen Empire Records webstore (US) or at the Duplicate Records webstore (Europe). Just go for it if you have the guts.

Best moments of the album: Circumambulating the Stillborn and The Serpentine Gnosis.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2015 Hellthrasher Productions/Fallen Empire Records/Duplicate Records

Track listing
1. Epipháneia 1:30
2. Epistemology of Death 9:22
3. Circumambulating the Stillborn 5:17
4. Mortui Vivos Docent 8:30
5. The Serpentine Gnosis 8:57
6. Dwelling on the Threshold to Tartarus 2:55
7. Devouring Wrathe 7:04

Band members
*Information not available*