Album Review – Deteriorot / Awakening (2025)

Standing shoulder to shoulder with early Death Metal legends, this old school American horde returns with their pulverizing fourth studio album.

Formed from the ashes of Mortuary in 1989 in New Jersey, the legendary American Death Metal brigade known as Deteriorot returns with their highly anticipated fourth studio offering, titled Awakening. Standing shoulder to shoulder with early Death Metal legends the likes of Immolation, Incantation, and Mortician, carving their place in underground history with a sound that merges the suffocating atmosphere of early Finnish and UK Death Metal with the brutality of the Swedish scene and the raw, uncompromising intensity of their New Jersey roots, the band formed of Paul Zavaleta on vocals and guitars, Arthur Reid also on the guitars, Travis Meredith on bass, and James Goetz on drums is on absolute fire throughout their entire new album, a worthy follow-up to their 2023 beast The Rebirth.

The dark and sinister intro Awakening, led by the Stygian bass by Travis, warms us up for The Flame, a primeval, gruesome display of Death Metal by the band with Paul vomiting the song’s words like a rabid beast; and the crushing, pounding drums by James walk hand in hand with the scathing riffs by Paul and Arthur in In Battle to Survive, a headbanging monster that will please all fans of the genre. The band’s ruthless guitar duo continues to spread darkness and hatred through their axes in Horrors in an Everlasting Nightmare, sounding as evil as it can be, whereas their hammering sounds will keep smashing our cranial skulls in A Ghost in the Mirror, with Paul once again vociferating rabidly for our total delight, with the final inhumane solo by Paul adding even more electricity to the song. And Deliver Us from Fiction is simply perfect for slamming into the pit in a demented way, sounding fast, heavy and absolutely aggressive. Needless to say, it will work majestically live.

Then a beyond phantasmagorical start gradually evolves into a visceral display of prehistorical Death Metal entitled Haunting Images from a Past Life, with James hammering his drums mercilessly, and the band then demolishes our senses with sheer savagery in the form of Programmed by Fear, alternating between Blackened Doom moments and classic, no shenanigans Death Metal. There’s no sign of peace or love in the album, and of course Winter Moon sounds as brutal as it is obscure, showcasing another excellent axe attack by Paul and Arthur. It’s also impressive how they managed to add so much doom to their core Death Metal like in In Silence, with James taking the lead with his grim beats, followed by The Spirit, the shortest of all songs and also the most violent, pulverizing everything and everyone that crosses their path, with Paul’s roars sending shivers down our spines before all comes to an end with the cadaverous outro To Sleep.

Deteriorot are definitely not fooling around when it comes to craft old school, visceral Death Metal, and the quality of the music found in Awakening is proof of their passion for the extreme and unrelenting hard work. Hence, you can find those American marauders on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with their demolishing live performances, stream their demented creations on Spotify or any other streaming platform, and grab a copy of their wicked new album from the Xtreem Music’s BandCamp. After their “rebirth” and their “awakening” in recent years, it’s time for Deteriorot to rise back to the top of the classic American Death Metal mountain, staying strong and ruthless just the way we like it, and leaving us eager for more of their music in the near future.

Best moments of the album: In Battle to Survive, Deliver Us from Fiction and The Spirit.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Xtreem Music

Track listing
1. Awakening 1:24
2. The Flame 4:11
3. In Battle to Survive 3:35
4. Horrors in an Everlasting Nightmare 3:46
5. A Ghost in the Mirror 3:33
6. Deliver Us from Fiction 3:57
7. Haunting Images from a Past Life 2:32
8. Programmed by Fear 3:52
9. Winter Moon 3:25
10. In Silence 4:04
11. The Spirit 1:55
12. To Sleep 0:33

Band members
Paul Zavaleta – vocals, guitars
Arthur Reid – rhythm guitars
Travis Meredith – bass
James Goetz – drums

Album Review – The Spirit / Songs Against Humanity (2024)

This ruthless German duo brings forth a compilation of songs against humanity in their newborn Blackened Death Metal beast.

Formed in Saarbrücken in 2015, The Spirit have emerged from the depths of the German Extreme Metal void to breathe new life into the Black and Death Metal genre. Now in 2024 the duo formed of Matthias Trautes on vocals and stringed weapons, and Manuel Steitz on drums attacks again with their fourth full-length installment, titled Songs Against Humanity. Mixed by V. Santura (Triptykon) at Woodshed Studio, and displaying a grim artwork by Eliran Kantor, Songs Against Humanity is a Blackened Death Metal beast highly recommended for fans of Harakiri For The Sky, Dissection, Satyricon, UADA, Hypocrisy and Kataklysm, among others, circling around an astronomic leitmotif in its lyrics and concepts while mixing a misanthropic view on the world with cosmic metaphors and the call to see our often narrow-minded and egocentric existence in the larger context of our whole universe.

It’s absolute chaos and hatred from the very first notes in Against Humanity, with Manuel taking the lead with his Thrash Metal-inspired drumming while Matthias roars like a beast in the name of extreme music, followed by Room 101, presenting psychological lyrics barked by Matthias (“Suppressing the words of sanity / As we lost our way towards utopia / Instead evolved into a dystopian nightmare / When technological progress / Gave rise to the indoctrination of the human mind”) amidst a melodic yet visceral sound. And the duo continues to venture through the realms of Melodic Death, Thrash and Black Metal in Cosmic Rain and Human Dust, sounding ruthless until the very end, with Matthias’ riffs feeling absolutely caustic.

Spectres of Terror is another explosion of austere, infernal words barked by Matthias (“A grotesque embrace / Of an impending misery / When the past and sense / Are displaced by ideology / Madness and insanity / A grim bane you invoked”), whereas Death is my Salvation offers a more introspective, progressive side of the band, with Matthias slashing his axe manically accompanied by the always venomous beats and fills by Manuel. Then we’re treated to Nothingness Forever, which begins in a serene, grim manner before evolving into a straightforward Black Metal aria led by the crushing drums by Manuel. Finally, we have the extended outro Orbiting Sol IV, which despite being a solid tune, it ends up taking away some of the electricity from the album due to its length.

You can take a very nice and detailed listen at the scorching Songs Against Humanity in full on YouTube and on Spotify, and of course show your support to one of the heaviest duos of the current German scene by purchasing a copy of their new album by clicking HERE or HERE. Don’t forget to also start following them on Facebook and on Instagram for news and tour dates, as they do play live (with the support of guitarist Stanley Robertson and bassist Linus Klausenitzer), having an absolute blast to the sound of their sharp and vile fusion of Black and Death Metal. Matthias and Manuel are bringing forth a compilation of songs against humanity in their newborn beast, and there’s nothing better than their first-class Blackened Death Metal to show how putrid, corrupt and evil the entire humanity can be.

Best moments of the album: Against Humanity, Cosmic Rain and Human Dust and Nothingness Forever.

Worst moments of the album: Orbiting Sol IV.

Released in 2024 AOP Records

Track listing
1. Against Humanity 8:06
2. Room 101 4:15
3. Cosmic Rain and Human Dust 4:55
4. Spectres of Terror 5:39
5. Death is my Salvation 8:33
6. Nothingness Forever 5:46
7. Orbiting Sol IV 3:34

Band members
Matthias Trautes – vocals, guitars, bass
Manuel Steitz – drums

Guest musicians
Stanley Robertson – guitars (live)
Linus Klausenitzer – bass (live)

Album Review – The Spirit / Cosmic Terror (2020)

The soundtrack to the fear of vast nothingness in the form of melodic and progressive Black and Death Metal made in Germany, beautifully dragging the listener into a musical catharsis.

As far-reaching as the literary, philosophical and psychological meanings behind the term Cosmic Terror might be, for German Black/Death Metal trio The Spirit naming their sophomore full-length album with this title opens up a world of its own. They do not want to explain anything nor to analyze their lyrics, characterized by misanthropy and social criticism, having only one simple goal in mind, which is to let their music speak for itself. The result is a bold and breathtaking album containing seven raging tracks that blend and bend Black and Death Metal, extensive instrumental passages and some of the most face-ripping riffs you’ll hear, which apparently even attracted nearby snakes to the studio’s terrace during the recording according to the band members themselves.

Formed in 2015 in Saarbrücken, the capital and largest city of the state of Saarland in the always beautiful and vibrant Germany, The Spirit are currently comprised of MT on vocals and guitars, AT on bass and MS on drums, a talented and unrelenting trio of fairly anonymous musicians who have been making a name for themselves in the underground scene since the release of their debut opus entitled Sounds from the Vortex, in 2017, being highly recommended for fans of bands like Dissection, Satyricon and Naglfar, among others. Finalized with a unique cover artwork by French artist Valnoir (Metastazis), Cosmic Terror tears the listener into a musical catharsis, with the band once again crafting their own soundtrack to the fear of vast nothingness.

The trio wastes no time and begin blasting their crisp and incendiary Black Metal in Serpent As Time Reveals, offering over six minutes of classy and vicious extreme music for our avid ears where MS is a true beast on drums, while MT growls the song’s beautiful lyrics in great fashion (“The ability to spread agony / A sick craft you truly master / The enduring thirst for power and dominion / Poison, obsessional voracity / Dangerous strength to the perverted insane / Unleash hell to enhance pathetic egotism”); and they continue their obscure and melodic attack in Strive For Salvation, with MT’s heavier-than-hell riffs and AT’s fulminating bass lines generating the perfect ambience for the enraged gnarls by MT while MS keeps pounding and smashing his drums manically. Then drinking form the same infernal fountain as renowned acts like Marduk, Immortal and Mayhem, the trio explodes our senses with the fantastic Repugnant Human Scum, a lesson in Black Metal infused with Death Metal and Melodic Black Metal nuances.

A melancholic and somber intro morphs into a mid-tempo headbanging feast titled The Path Of Solitude, where all band members are in absolute sync and with MT sounding diabolical with both his roars and riffs, resulting in an ode to darkness and solitude in the form of ass-kicking Black Metal. After such dense tune, it’s time for more disruptive and Stygian sounds by The Spirit in Pillars Of Doom, where MT sounds possessed with his demonic riffage while AT and MS make the earth tremble with their respective weapons of mass destruction. In The Wide Emptiness the band doesn’t stop hammering their instruments and consequently our heads, showcasing classic Black Metal with more contemporary nuances, not to mention how impressive it is that only three guys can generate such bold and hellish sound, with MT’s soulful solo serving as the icing on the cake. Lastly, the title-track Cosmic Terror comes as an arrow piercing our ears and minds, concluding the obscure Black Metal journey by the trio that started “long time ago” with the opening track. However, despite being an amazing display of extreme music, the fact that it’s only an instrumental song takes away a little of its rawness and energy, but that’s just my opinion as I truly enjoy MT’s harsh vocals.

In a nutshell, the excellent Cosmic Terror, which is available from the AOP Records’ BandCamp page, from the EMP webstore, from IndieMerchstore.com in CD or 12” vinyl format, as well as from several other locations which you can check by clicking HERE, not only points to a bright future for The Spirit, positioning the band as one of the most promising names of the German extreme music scene, but it’s also a mandatory listen for fans of the more contemporary wave of Black and Death Metal bands with a huge focus on progressiveness, melodies and atmospheric passages. Hence, don’t forget to give The Spirit a shout via their official Facebook page, and let the cosmic terror flowing form their wicked creations penetrate deep inside your damned soul.

Best moments of the album: Repugnant Human Scum, The Path Of Solitude and The Wide Emptiness.

Worst moments of the album: Cosmic Terror.

Released in 2020 AOP Records

Track listing
1. Serpent As Time Reveals 6:38
2. Strive For Salvation 4:34
3. Repugnant Human Scum 5:18
4. The Path Of Solitude 8:07
5. Pillars Of Doom 5:51
6. The Wide Emptiness 6:13
7. Cosmic Terror 6:32

Band members
MT – vocals, guitars
AT – bass
MS – drums