Album Review – Moonspell / Far from God (2026)

Born out of five years of creative searching, doubt and ultimate rediscovery, the brilliant new opus by these Portuguese Dark Metal masters shines like a black diamond, luminous yet shadowed in texture and color.

Born out of five years of creative searching, doubt and ultimate rediscovery, the embracing Far from God, the new opus by Portuguese Dark Metal masters Moonspell is a work that feels like a rebirth, darker, sharper and emotionally unfiltered, following on the band’s more recent releases Extinct (2015), 1755 (2017), and Hermitage (2021). Produced, mixed and mastered by Jaime Gómez Arellano at Orgone Studios, and displaying another darkly beautiful artwork by Eliran Kantor, the new album by frontman Fernando Ribeiro, guitarist Ricardo Amorim, bassist Aires Pereira, keyboardist Pedro Paixão, and drummer Hugo Ribeiro shines like a black diamond, luminous yet shadowed in texture and color, both musically and sonically.

The enfolding guitar lines by Ricardo kick off the beautiful Cross Your Heart, with its poetic lyrics being declaimed by Fernando in great fashion (“Crosses and flowers by the side of the road / Someone died here, they were so fucking young / Skulls and bones, buried in the dirt / Morning has broken, it’s the wake of the ghost”); and in Far from God we face more of their vampiric lyrics (“I am not of this earth and I am not of this time / I don’t even exist, I could never belong / I am far from God”) while Aires blasts his bass in the name of absolute darkness in a lecture in Gothic Metal. Aires’ bass also ignites the band’s dark engine in Biblical, with the keys by Pedro bringing an extra touch of finesse to their music; and the stunning The Great Wolf in the Sky features Spanish musician Alicia Nurho on violin, which clashes majestically with the thunderous kitchen crafted by Pedro and Hugo, not to mention Fernando’s deep vocals sound hypnotizing.

Then they blast one of the most atmospheric yet also one of the heaviest songs of the album, titled Your Promise of Light, alternating between truly phantasmagorical moments and bursts of violence, all reflected on Fernando’s dynamic vociferations; whereas For the Love of Mortals reminds me of some of the songs from Extinct, where the band blends Gothic Metal with atmospheric and melancholic nuances, resulting in stunning ballad by Moonspell. Our Freedom to Fall is a hard hitting tune which will inspire us to bang our heads in pitch black darkness, presenting elements of Doom Metal to give it an extra kick, in special through Hugo’s pounding drums; and the scorching riffs by Ricardo bring an overdose of heaviness to Reconquista, offering six minutes of Fernando’s anguished, Stygian vocals, therefore concluding the album on a truly obscure and venomous mode.

Rather than bending to modern trends, Moonspell double down on identity and substance in Far From God, a bold and beautiful statement of Gothic Metal in its purest form, sounding dark, romantic, dramatic and unapologetically heavy. If you want to follow the band in their path to the dark side, you can find those Portuguese veterans on Facebook, Instagram and YouTube, stream their unique music on any platform like Spotify, and of course purchase the darkly enfolding Far from God from BandCamp or from Napalm Records. In the end, Far from God is not only a powerful reminder that Moonspell remain a defining force in the genre they helped shape, but an album that will certainly help save Gothic Metal from boredom and predictability.

Best moments of the album: Far from God, The Great Wolf in the Sky, For the Love of Mortals and Reconquista.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Napalm Records

Track listing
1. Cross Your Heart 4:48
2. Far from God 5:06
3. Biblical 5:00
4. The Great Wolf in the Sky 5:50
5. Your Promise of Light 5:01
6. For the Love of Mortals 5:45
7. Our Freedom to Fall 4:41
8. Reconquista 6:11

Band members
Fernando Ribeiro – vocals
Ricardo Amorim – guitars
Aires Pereira – bass
Pedro Paixão – keyboards
Hugo Ribeiro – drums

Guest musician
Alicia Nurho – violin on “The Great Wolf in the Sky”