Album Review – Gorrch / Stillamentum (2026)

This two-headed Black Metal beast arises from its lair in Italy with a new full-length opus, pushing further into darkness with an unwavering commitment to raw emotion and existential dread, crafting a labyrinth of shadows and pain.

Formed in 2010 in Northeastern Italy as a duo composed of brothers Chimsicrin (on vocals, drums and keyboards) and Droich (on the guitars and bass), the uncanny Black Metal beast known as Gorrch has been carving their niche in the Italian underground with a singular, uncompromising vision of Black Metal, from the feral intensity of their 2013 self-titled EP and the 2015 full-length Nera Estasi, to the more experimental, dissonant, and atmospheric textures of their 2020 EP Introvertere. Now in 2026 such a ruthless two-headed creature returns in full force with Stillamentum, a full-length album steeped in claustrophobic intensity, dissonant chord structures, and relentless sonic tension. Recorded, mixed and mastered by Andrea Petucco and Gorrch, the album sees the duo push further into darkness with an unwavering commitment to raw emotion and existential dread, crafting a labyrinth of shadows and pain.

Nimbus brings forward absolute chaos and darkness from the very first second, with Chimsicrin sounding inhumane on drums while his devilish vociferations will send shivers down your spine. Droich continues to exhale sheer adrenaline and violence from his riffs and bass in Vorago, just as demented and detailed as its predecessor, always in the name of Italian Black Metal; and the duo shows no mercy for our impious souls in Larvæ, crushing us all like insects with their fusion of Experimental, Dissonant and Avantgarde Black Metal. There’s no time to breathe as their sulfurous sounds continue to permeate the air in Cryptæ, with the acrid stench flowing from Droich’s riffage living up to the legacy of the genre; whereas Angor is even more dissonant and visceral, spearheaded by the ruthless Black Metal blast beats by Chimsicrin. Needless to say, the duo is on total fire until the very last note of the song. Finally, they end such a demonic album just like how it started with Phlegma, oozing a vile blend of Black Metal that will melt your face to the scorching riffs by Droich until all that insanity fades into nothingness.

Always carrying an aura of mystery, which have helped them build a cult following among the followers of extreme, chaotic Black Metal, Gorrch channels their own obsession with sound as ritual and catharsis in Stillamentum, something that can be easily noticed from its punishing tremolo riffs and blasting drumming to its cavernous production that evokes suffocating atmospheres. Gorrch are another band that decided to stay away from all types of social media, but of course you can still find their music online available on Spotify, and purchase Stillamentum from their own BandCamp, from Avantgarde Music’s BandCamp, or from Sound Cave as a CD or an LP. Stillamentum is not an album for the lighthearted, nor for the average listener. This is the union of Black Metal and absolute chaos, and you’ll soon find yourself immersed in the turbulent and dark waters ruled by Chimsicrin and Droich in their excruciating new opus.

Best moments of the album: Nimbus and Phlegma.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2026 Avantgarde Music

Track listing
1. Nimbus 6:24
2. Vorago 6:33
3. Larvæ 5:30
4. Cryptæ 6:13
5. Angor 5:03
6. Phlegma 7:35

Band members
Chimsicrin – vocals, drums, keyboards
Droich – guitars, bass

Album Review – Culto Negro / La Noche Oscura del Alma (2022)

This Costa Rican horde will crush your senses with their debut opus, transforming the dark night of the soul into a first-class fusion of Black and Speed Metal.

Forged back in 2015 in the dark pits of Heredia, one of Costa Rica’s most historical cities, Black/Speed Metal horde Culto Negro (which by the way means “black cult” in English) has just unleashed upon humanity their debut full-length opus, beautifully titled La Noche Oscura del Alma, or “the dark night of the soul”, a sulfurous album of old school extreme music that exhales rage and adrenaline. Recorded by the band’s own guitarist Isak Arroyo at Orion Studios, mixed and mastered by Colin Marston at Menegroth Studios, and displaying a sick artwork by Nuno Zuki of Belial NecroArts (with additional artworks by Alan Corpse at Leprous Hands Arts), La Noche Oscura del Alma doesn’t have a single second of peace, offering our avid ears 39 minutes of a sonic Armageddon masterfully crafted by vocalist D.N., guitarists Esteban Sancho and Isak Arroyo, bassist AntiChristopher and drummer Vörago.

More than just a simple intro, Espectro Lunar (“lunar spectrum”) is already a bestial attack by Culto Negro where the riffage by Esteban and Isak is truly infernal, setting the stage for D.N. to kill in Desdoble (“unfold”), a fast and furious hybrid of Black and Thrash Metal that will please all fans of the genre bringing forward an amazing job done by Vörago on drums, keeping the music vibrant and evil from start to finish. Then it’s pedal to the metal as this Costa Rican party has no time to end to the sound of El Quinto Ángulo (“the fifth angle”), where D.N. makes his personal tribute to Hardcore and Punk Rock on vocals while the band’s guitar duo delivers sheer awesomeness through their riffs and solos, followed by Verso Adivinado (“guessed verse”), another frantic, demonic creation by the quintet where AntiChristopher’s bass punches add a touch of dementia to their scorching guitars, while Vörago hammers his drums in a true demented way. And Navajas, Cadenas y Espejos (“knives, chains and mirrors”) sounds like a hellish fusion of the music by Slayer, Motörhead and The Exploited, being therefore a fantastic option for slamming into the pit like there’s no tomorrow.

Get ready to be smashed like a bug by Culto Negro in the venomous Rojo Siniestro (“sinister red”), with D.N.’s vocals sounding more deranged than ever while Vörago keeps dictating the pace with his Punk Rock-infused beats; whereas in Caos o Cosmos (“chaos or cosmos”) the name of the song says it all, offering us all a chaotic sonority from the very first second with Esteban and Isak delivering pure thrashing riffs for our total delight. And such dynamic guitar duo revs up Culto Negro’s engines once again in Salvajes Destructores (“savage destroyers”), highly recommended for some nonstop headbanging and slamming into the pit; while Violencia Psicoactiva (“psychoactive violence”) is Black, Thrash and Speed Metal straight to your jugular, showcasing more of AntiChristopher and Vörago’s infernal kitchen. La Larga Marcha (“the long march”) can be considered the most infernal, brutal and caustic of all tracks where D.N. continues to vociferate like a rabid creature. Put differently, let’s all raise our horns to Culto Negro and their anti-religious extreme music. Last but not least, we have their cover version for Hermética’s Desterrando a los Oscurantistas (“banishing the obscurantists”), which original version can be enjoyed HERE, from Hermética’s 1989 self-titled debut album. It’s indeed an amazing rendition by those Costa Rican metallers, with AntiChristopher hammering his bass in great fashion until the very end.

If you believe you have what it takes to join the black cult ruled by such talented horde form Costa Rica, you can stream  La Noche Oscura del Alma in its entirety on YouTube and on Spotify, and of course purchase it from the Godz ov War Productions’ BandCamp page or webstore, as well as from the Violence Records’ BandCamp page. Culto Negro are also waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram armed with the austere chants found in La Noche Oscura del Alma, showing us all Costa Rica is a metallic country as opposed to what most people think about it. They managed to transform the dark night of the soul into top-tier Extreme Metal in their debut effort, and may their music continue to darken the skies for many years to come.

Best moments of the album: El Quinto Ángulo, Navajas, Cadenas y Espejos and Salvajes Destructores.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2022 Godz ov War Productions/Mythrone Promotion/Violence Records

Track listing
1. Espectro Lunar (Intro) 1:53
2. Desdoble 2:51
3. El Quinto Ángulo 2:52
4. Verso Adivinado 3:29
5. Navajas, Cadenas y Espejos 3:38
6. Rojo Siniestro 3:57
7. Caos o Cosmos 4:02
8. Salvajes Destructores 3:43
9. Violencia Psicoactiva 4:29
10. La Larga Marcha 5:29
11. Desterrando a los Oscurantistas (Hermetica cover) 2:15

Band members
D.N. – vocals
Esteban Sancho – guitars
Isak Arroyo – guitars
AntiChristopher – bass
Vörago – drums