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Tag Archives: the ocean that fills a wound

Album Review – Ba’al / The Fine Line Between Heaven And Here (2025)

Posted on July 18, 2025 by Gustavo Scuderi
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This amazing Blackened Post-Metal act from the UK strikes back with a dark new album, drawing on the band’s personal experiences, exploring themes of grief, depression, suicide, substance abuse and existential dread.

Forged in the fires of Sheffield, in South Yorkshire, England, Blackened Post-Metal creature Ba’al (a title and honorific meaning “lord” in the Northwest Semitic languages spoken in the Levant during antiquity, which came to be applied to gods from its use among people) is unleashing upon us their new album, titled The Fine Line Between Heaven And Here, a caustic fusion of Black, Sludge and Post-Metal recommended for fans of Crippled Black Phoenix, Harakiri For The Sky, Inter Arma, and Sgaile, among others. Recorded and mixed by Joe Clayton at No Studio and mastered by Brad Boatright at Audiosiege, the same team that brought such a richly textured darkness to the last Ba’al release, and adorned in the stunning artwork of True Spilt Milk Designs, the new album by Joe Stamps on vocals, Nick Gosling and Chris Mole on the guitars, Richard Spencer on bass, and Luke Rutter on drums draws on the band’s personal experiences, exploring themes of grief, depression, suicide, substance abuse and existential dread, invoking the intensely human struggles that are played out against this backdrop of disparate elements and in every other place our troubled species has carved out a home.

Mother’s Concrete Womb is simply dark and sinister from the very beginning, gradually morphing into a massive hybrid of the harshness of Melodic Black Metal with the finesse of Post-Black Metal, with the nonstop screams by Joe sounding truly devilish, smoothly flowing into Waxwork Gorgon, where the minimalist yet caustic guitars by Nick and Chris exhale darkness, not to mention all Doom Metal elements present in the music make it even heavier and more compelling. Floral Cairn brings forward more of their neck breaking, melodic and piercing sounds, with Luke showcasing tons of dexterity and power behind his drums, dictating the song’s pace flawlessly; and the band then captures our senses in a dark embrace with the 11-minute aria Well of Sorrows, with the riffage by Nick and Chris guiding the listener through the band’s unruly Post-Black Metal waters, sounding all very detailed, vibrant and doomed. The Ocean That Fills a Wound is even more introspective and enfolding, another lecture in Post-Black Metal where Joe declaims the song’s pensive words with tons of passion, alternating between atmospheric moments and crushing, anguished passages, whereas lastly it’s time for Legasov, bringing to our avid ears one final onrush of melodic yet harsh sounds, with their haunting vocals, sharp riffs and Doom Metal drums putting a phantasmagorical ending to the album.

The journey through the musical landscapes in The Fine Line Between Heaven And Here is a dark and exciting one, and I’m sure you’ll have an amazing time listening to it from start to finish. Ba’al are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, tour dates and more of their music, and you can not only stream their music on Spotify, but also purchase their excellent new album from BandCamp, from Road to Masochist, or by clicking HERE, letting their blackened sounds penetrate deep inside your mind and soul while at the same time connecting their music with your own personal experiences and struggles, proving why modern-day Post-Metal is one of the most humane styles in heavy music and, therefore, allowing the musicians involved to open up their hearts to us fans with each of their amazing songs, just like what’s offered to us all in The Fine Line Between Heaven And Here.

Best moments of the album: Well of Sorrows and The Ocean That Fills a Wound.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Road to Masochist

Track listing
1. Mother’s Concrete Womb 12:56
2. Waxwork Gorgon 8:41
3. Floral Cairn 7:46
4. Well of Sorrows 11:03
5. The Ocean That Fills a Wound 13:25
6. Legasov 8:18

Band members
Joe Stamps – vocals
Nick Gosling – guitar
Chris Mole – guitar
Richard Spencer – bass
Luke Rutter – drums

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Posted in 2025 New Releases | Tagged audiosiege, baal, black metal, blackened post-metal, brad boatright, chris mole, doom metal, england, floral cairn, joe clayton, joe stamps, legasov, luke rutter, melodic black metal, mother's concrete womb, nick gosling, no studio, post-black metal, post-metal, richard spencer, road to masochist, sheffield, sludge metal, south yorkshire, the fine line between heaven and here, the ocean that fills a wound, true spilt milk designs, uk, waxwork gorgon, well of sorrows | Leave a reply

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