Album Review – 1914 / Viribus Unitis (2025)

Trench warfare meets blackened death and doom in 1914’s fourth onslaught of war-torn fury, tracing a timeline from 1914 to 1919 while painting a grim journey through the war’s rise, climax, and hollow aftermath.

Continuing their warpath forged with the albums Eschatology of War (2015), The Blind Leading the Blind (2018), and Where Fear and Weapons Meet (2021), Ukrainian Blackened Death/Doom Metal formation 1914 returns with unrelenting force on their fourth studio album, Viribus Unitis, which is Latin for “With United Forces,” a phrase chosen as a personal motto by the Austro-Hungarian emperor Franz Joseph (1830-1916), reflecting the band’s resilience through war, loss, and upheaval, a powerful symbol of survival and solidarity. Recorded at Jenny Records, produced, mixed and mastered by Alexander Backlund and Tony Lindgren at Fascination Street Studios, and displaying another obscure artwork by Vladimir ‘Smerdulak’ Chebakov, the new opus by k.u.k. Galizisches IR Nr.15, Gefreiter, Ditmar Kumarberg on vocals, K.K. LIR Czernowitz Nr.22 Oberleutnant, Witaly Wyhovsky and K.K. LIR Stanislau Nr.20 Zugsführer, Oleksa Fisiuk on the guitars, k.u.k. Galizisch-Bukowina’sches IR Nr.24, Feldwebel, Armen Howhannisjan on bass, and K.K. LIR. Lemberg Nr.19 Fähnrich, Rostislaw Potoplacht on drums builds on the band’s acclaimed conceptual approach, pushing even deeper into emotional and musical intensity. Continuing their chronicle of World War I, 1914 shift their focus slightly, from the raw portrayal of death and destruction to themes of camaraderie, endurance, and the emotional landscapes of those who endured the horrors. Told through real events and personal accounts of a Ukrainian soldier in the K.u.K. army, the album traces a timeline from 1914 to 1919, painting a grim journey through the war’s rise, climax, and hollow aftermath.

War In (The Beginning of the Fall) is one of the band’s trademark intros we love so much, taking us to the horrors of war in 1914 (The Siege of Przemyśl), a lecture in Death and Doom Metal led by the demented drums by Potoplacht while Kumarberg roars and screams like a demonic war god. In other words, the album couldn’t have started on a more visceral, demolishing vibe, which is also the case in 1915 (Easter Battle for the Zwinin Ridge), where once again it’s fantastic how the excerpts, samples and songs from World War I added to their music always sound creepy, while the guitars by Wyhovsky and Fisiuk bring the heavy artillery to their already ruthless sonority. The bombs are coming strong in 1916 (The Südtirol Offensive), an explosive, scathing tune by 1914 where their incendiary riffs and blast beats bring sheer doom to our blackened hearts; and they keep hammering our cranial skulls with their Blackened Doom magic in 1917 (The Isonzo Front), led by the pounding drums by Potoplacht.

Then investing in a pure Doom Metal sound we face 1918 Pt 1: WIA (Wounded in Action), and the result is beyond haunting, heavy and grim, with Kumarberg’s deep vociferations sending shivers down our spines, followed by 1918 Pt 2: POW (Prisoner of War), with guest vocals by Christopher Scott of Precious Death, making an infernal duet with Kumarberg while the rumbling bass by Howhannisjan and the drums by Potoplacht sound like a true bombing squad. The third part of such an imposing aria, 1918 Pt 3: ADE (A Duty to Escape), features guest vocals by Aaron Stainthorpe of My Dying Bride and High Parasite, and when you have a guest like that you know you’re in for a treat of absolute Doom Metal madness, with the striking riffage by Wyhovsky and Fisiuk penetrating deep inside our skin; flowing into the very emotional and dark 1919 (The Home Where I Died), overflowing melancholy with the deep clean vocals by guest Jerome Reuter of Rome walking hand in hand with the song’s somber piano, before all comes to an end (or not) in War Out (The End?), as cryptic and obscure as usual, putting a stunning conclusion to the album.

While their previous releases centered on the futility and finality of war, Viribus Unitis explores the human bonds forged under fire and the strength of those who returned, broken, changed, yet still alive, deepening their commitment to historical authenticity, both lyrically and conceptually. You can join 1914’s ranks on Facebook and on Instagram, staying up to date with their unparalleled live performances, subscribe to their YouTube channel, stream their warlike music on Spotify, and above all that, put your blood-soaked hands on Viribus Unitis by clicking HERE. In other words, trench warfare meets blackened death and doom in 1914’s fourth onslaught of war-torn fury, and you better get ready as those unstoppable Ukrainians want you to join them in the battlefield, for victory or death.

Best moments of the album: 1914 (The Siege of Przemyśl), 1916 (The Südtirol Offensive), 1918 Pt 1: WIA (Wounded in Action) and 1918 Pt 3: ADE (A Duty to Escape).

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2025 Napalm Records

Track listing
1. War In (The Beginning of the Fall) 1:30
2. 1914 (The Siege of Przemyśl) 4:48
3. 1915 (Easter Battle for the Zwinin Ridge) 9:14
4. 1916 (The Südtirol Offensive) 6:11
5. 1917 (The Isonzo Front) 6:34
6. 1918 Pt 1: WIA (Wounded in Action) 6:20
7. 1918 Pt 2: POW (Prisoner of War) 6:12
8. 1918 Pt 3: ADE (A Duty to Escape) 5:50
9. 1919 (The Home Where I Died) 7:07
10. War Out (The End?) 3:10

3-LP Gatefold Vinyl Marbled Cristallo/Gold/Deluxe Wooden Box Bonus Vinyl/Welcome to the Trench Club EP
1. War In 1:07
2. Die Karpathenschlacht (Rework 2025) 6:02
3. Die Karpathenschlacht (Ship Her Son RMX) 4:30
4. 8 × 50 mm R. Infanterie Repetiergewehr M.95 (Rework 2025) 7:29
5. 8 × 50 mm R. Infanterie Repetiergewehr M.95 (Kadaitcha RMX) 6:55
6. War Out 1:33

Band members
k.u.k. Galizisches IR Nr.15, Gefreiter, Ditmar Kumarberg – vocals
K.K. LIR Czernowitz Nr.22 Oberleutnant, Witaly Wyhovsky – guitar
K.K. LIR Stanislau Nr.20 Zugsführer, Oleksa Fisiuk – guitar
k.u.k. Galizisch-Bukowina’sches IR Nr.24, Feldwebel, Armen Howhannisjan – bass
K.K. LIR. Lemberg Nr.19 Fähnrich, Rostislaw Potoplacht – drums

Guest musicians
Christopher Scott – vocals on “1918 Pt 2: POW (Prisoner of War)”
Aaron Stainthorpe – vocals on “1918 Pt 3: ADE (A Duty to Escape)”
Jerome Reuter – vocals on “1919 (The Home Where I Died)”

The Year In Review – Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2021

“I wanted to play drums because I fell in love with the glitter and the lights, but it wasn’t about adulation. It was being up there playing.” – Charlie Watts

And there goes another year without a single metal concert in Canada. Another year full of uncertainties, fears, polarization, restrictions, and everything else we “love” so much. I honestly don’t know what to say about 2021 apart form the fact it was undoubtedly much better than 2020, but that means nothing considering the total nightmare that 2020 was. We lost a lot of huge names in the rock and metal scene such as Joey Jordison, Dusty Hill, Mike Howe, Johnny Solinger, Marsha Zazula, Alexi Laiho, John Hinch, John Lawton, Charlie Watts and Hank Von Hell, among many others. Tons of festivals including Download, Wacken Open Air, Hellfest, Bloodstock Open Air, Sweden Rock Festival and Dynamo MetalFest were scheduled to return this year after the 2020 editions of those festivals were cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic, but unfortunately Sweden Rock, Hellfest, Download and Wacken Open Air were once again cancelled. With that said, why do we metalheads still believe in a better future? Is it because, despite all adversities, our favorite bands released some of their best albums from the past few years?

Hence, as new lockdowns are being imposed upon us in a never-ending pandemic loop, there’s not much we can do but enjoy The Headbanging Moose’s Top 10 Hard Rock/Heavy Metal Albums of 2021, excluding EP’s, best of’s and live albums, keeping us sane until this madness is finally over. Or maybe I should say if it will be over one day, of course. There’s a bit of everything for all types of fans, from classic Heavy Metal to the brutality of Death Metal, from the modern nuances of Melodic Death Metal to old school Thrash Metal, and so on, and in my humble opinions one of the most interesting facts about several albums launched in 2021 is their duration, with many of those surpassing the one hour barrier such as Senjutsu, Helloween, Persona Non Grata, Existence Is Futile and Blood on Blood, not to mention the over four hours of music from the Lordiversity boxset, which for me proves how much the bands responsible for those albums love their fans by offering them a lot of new music to enjoy during such difficult times. I would say that even if there are ZERO metal albums launched in 2022, we’ll still have a lot of great music to enjoy throughout the year thanks to all the amazing records released in 2021, don’t you agree?

1. Iron Maiden – Senjutsu (REVIEW)
Behold another masterpiece by the one and only Iron Maiden with its 82 minutes of tactics, strategy, war, resilience and determination.
Best song of the album: Hell on Earth

2. Helloween – Helloween (REVIEW)
A dream come true for all generations of “Happy, Happy Helloween” fans from all over the world.
Best song of the album: Skyfall

3. Trivium – In the Court of the Dragon (REVIEW)
It’s time to join Trivium in the court of the dragon to the sound of their magnificent new opus.
Best song of the album: Like a Sword Over Damocles

4. Exodus – Persona Non Grata (REVIEW)
Don’t be a “persona non grata” in the world of heavy music and get into the circle pit to the sound of this newborn thrashing beast.
Best song of the album: Lunatic-Liar-Lord

5. Cannibal Corpse – Violence Unimagined (REVIEW)
State of the art Death Metal played with passion and breathless precision by the most violent and unrelenting band of all time.
Best song of the album: Surround, Kill, Devour

6. 1914 – Where Fear and Weapons Meet (REVIEW)
Ukraine’s own doom infantry is back into the battlefield with another masterpiece, telling the gruesome tales of World War I.
Best song of the album: Pillars of Fire (The Battle of Messines)

7. Motorjesus – Hellbreaker (REVIEW)
Let’s drive through the fires of hell together with one of the best bands from the German rock and metal scene.
Best song of the album: Hellbreaker

8. Nervosa – Perpetual Chaos (REVIEW)
A deadly and thrashing lesson in perpetual chaos by four metalheads hailing from Brazil, Italy, Spain and Greece
Best song of the album: Time to Fight

9. Gojira – Fortitude (REVIEW)
Let’s all face up the world to the sound of the new masterpiece by one of the most dynamic bands of the current metal scene.
Best song of the album: Amazonia

10. Blaze Bayley – War Within Me (REVIEW)
The man who will live for a thousand years is back, inspiring us all to fight the war within us and to take our future in our own hands.
Best song of the album: Pull Yourself Up

And here we have the runner-ups, completing the top 20 for the year:

11. Running Wild – Blood on Blood (REVIEW)
12. Lordi – Lordiversity (REVIEW)
13. Cradle of Filth – Existence Is Futile (REVIEW)
14. Diabolizer – Khalkedonian Death (REVIEW)
15. Angelus Apatrida – Angelus Apatrida (REVIEW)
16. Moonspell – Hermitage (REVIEW)
17. Lutharo – Hiraeth (REVIEW)
18. Unflesh – Inhumation (REVIEW)
19. Scarlet Aura – Genesis of Time (REVIEW)
20. Coiled Around Thy Spine – From The Ashes (REVIEW)

In addition to all that, let’s bang our heads with our Top 10 EP’s of 2021 to prove once and for all that not all great albums of the year have to be so long. The EP’s from this list are simply awesome, showcasing the band’s talent and their ability to sound epic even if the music lasts for only a few minutes.

1. Eonian – The Nomad (REVIEW)
2. Lady Beast – Omens (REVIEW)
3. The Agonist – Days Before the World Wept (REVIEW)
4. Tantivy – Eyes in the Night (REVIEW)
5. Grale – AGITACIÓN (REVIEW)
6. Bouquet of Dead Crows – Hemispheres Part 2: Cerebral (REVIEW)
7. Kadavereich – Radiance Of Doom (REVIEW)
8. Wolvencrown – A Shadow Of What Once Was (REVIEW)
9. Juliet Ruin – Dark Water (REVIEW)
10. Black Hole Deity – Lair Of Xenolich (REVIEW)

Do you agree with our list? What are your top 10 albums of 2021? Also, don’t forget to tune in every Tuesday at 10pm BRT on Rádio Coringão to enjoy the best of classic and underground metal with Jorge Diaz and his Timão Metal, and every Thursday at 8pm UTC+2 on Midnight Madness Metal e-Radio for the best of underground metal with The Headbanging Moose Show! And if you lost some or most of our special editions of The Headbanging Moose Show, including our Top 20 Underground Albums of 2021 – Parts I and II, go to our Mixcloud page and there you have hours and hours of the best of the independent scene, sounds good?

Metal Xmas and a Headbanging New Year! See you in 2022!

And before I go, I’ll leave you with some touching words by Mr. Lordi and his crew of monsters…

Something something blah blah to you
All the sincere wishes come true
I put vengeance on my wish list
And that’s what Santa brought
So have a merry something and a happy blah blah blah

Album Review – 1914 / Where Fear and Weapons Meet (2021)

Ukraine’s own doom infantry is back into the battlefield with another masterpiece, telling the gruesome tales of World War I, its soldiers’ fate, their death, fear and feats to be never forgotten.

Lviv, Ukraine-based Blackened Death/Doom Metal offensive 1914 continues to reflect the gruesome tales of World War I, its soldiers’ fate, their death, fear and feats to be never forgotten, unleashing upon humanity their superb new opus entitled Where Fear and Weapons Meet, comprised of eleven tracks of pure historic harshness following up to the band’s sophomore album The Blind Leading the Blind and their debut effort Eschatology of War. Unlike their previous works, Where Fear and Weapons Meet is not about death, but about life, as most of the heroes and protagonists in the songs survived war, became heroes and finally returned home, with even the album cover emphasizing this by depicting an injured, shell-shocked and bleeding sole survivor of a shield attack holding his hand out to death, praying in agony, but death does not take him away. Furthermore, the album begins in Serbia and continues on the first track from the prospective of Gavrilo Princip, who assassinated Austrian Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife on June 28, 1914 in Sarajevo and caused the outbreak of World War I, all masterfully embraced by the massive fusion of sludge, death and doom sounds crafted by vocalist Ditmar Kumarberg, guitarists Liam Fessen and Vitalis Winkelhock, bassist Armin von Heinessen and drummer Rusty Potoplacht.

As expected the band kicks things off with their trademark intro War In, this time showcasing the original of the most famous Serbian song of the Great War period, “Tamo Daleko”, setting the stage for 1914 to crush our senses with FN .380 ACP#19074, with Rusty sounding infernal and ruthless on drums while Liam and Vitalis deliver endless electricity and heaviness through their wicked riffage. What a bestial start to the album, I might say, followed by Vimy Ridge (In Memory of Filip Konowal), offering us all another round of their WWI-inspired doomed lyrics growled by Ditmar (“Things didn’t go down as expected / Hill 145, ill-fated Vimy Ridge. / We are entrenched in mud as wild hogs, my 47th Battalion / A small wooded knoll we called “the Pimple” 2 miles in front of us. / We need to capture the machine gun nests, each was heavily defended”) in a demonic display of Ukrainian Sludge, Death and Doom Metal. Pillars of Fire (The Battle of Messines) describes the terrible events of the Battle of the Messines Ridge during June 7-14, 1917 in Belgium, one of the most insane episodes of the Great War, while musically speaking you better get ready for another multi-layered wall of sounds spearheaded by Rusty’s venomous blast beats and all the symphonic, cinematic background sounds; and continuing their path of doom and devastation we face Don’t Tread on Me (Harlem Hellfighters), where the sound of the guitars by Liam and Vitalis is phenomenal, not to mention the thunderous bass by Armin, whereas featuring Ukrainian country and folk musician, singer and songwriter Sasha Boole, Coward is very unique and distinct form the rest of the album, with the final result being really entertaining.

…And a Cross Now Marks His Place brings forward an amazing and brutal vocal duet between Ditmar and guest Nick Holmes (Paradise Lost), resulting in a lecture in old school Doom Metal that will inspire you to crack your neck headbanging, followed by Corps d’autos-canons-mitrailleuses (A.C.M), where a wicked intro quickly morphs into a Blackened Doom feast showcasing the band’s trademark warlike words (“Hold the line, Minerva will cover us / The Hotchkiss machine gun poured lead in all directions / Send our messages to all boches – We will avenge for the Belgium! / 16 of us were killed in action, / 16 of us in this Galizian sludge / They called home”). In Mit Gott für König und Vaterland we’re treated to five minutes of obscurity, brutality and fear in the form of ass-kicking Doom and Death Metal led by the demented growls by Ditmar; whereas the sound of bagpipes will penetrate deep inside your mind before 1914 come crushing like a war tank in their version for Eric Bogle’s The Green Fields of France (No Man’s Land), which original version can be appreciated HERE, an impressive rendition where Liam and Vitalis are on absolute fire with their unstoppable riffs, not to mention the song’s demonic, hellish ending, flowing into War Out, putting a climatic and stylish conclusion to their sonic battle.

It’s time to head into the battlefield together with the unstoppable troopers of 1914, and in order to do so you can enjoy the album in full on YouTube and on Spotify, follow the band on Facebook and on Instagram for tour dates and other nice-to-know information about them, subscribe to their YouTube channel for more of their austere music, and above all that, purchase your favorite version of the stunning Where Fear and Weapons Meet by clicking HERE. This masterpiece is indeed another heavily intense and deep-reaching output that will grant 1914 even higher appreciation than the five-piece is already credited with, and I must say that after such powerful and bold album the band has gone beyond the underground barrier and can now be considered one of the torchbearers of warlike doom worldwide. In other words, the Great War lives on, mainly thanks to the brilliant job done by the best Ukrainian metal band of all time.

Best moments of the album: Vimy Ridge (In Memory of Filip Konowal), Pillars of Fire (The Battle of Messines), …And a Cross Now Marks His Place and The Green Fields of France (No Man’s Land, Eric Bogle cover).

Worst moments of the album: Absolutely none.

Released in 2021 Napalm Records

Track listing
1. War In 1:11
2. FN .380 ACP#19074 5:54
3. Vimy Ridge (In Memory of Filip Konowal) 5:11
4. Pillars of Fire (The Battle of Messines) 7:04
5. Don’t Tread on Me (Harlem Hellfighters) 7:54
6. Coward (ft. Sasha Boole) 2:55
7. …And a Cross Now Marks His Place (ft. Nick Holmes) 7:29
8. Corps d’autos-canons-mitrailleuses (A.C.M) 7:54
9. Mit Gott für König und Vaterland 5:18
10. The Green Fields of France (No Man’s Land, Eric Bogle cover) 10:57
11. War Out 1:40

Band members
2.Division, Infanterie-Regiment Nr.147, Oberleutnant – Ditmar Kumarberg – vocals
37.Division, Feldartillerie-Regiment Nr.73, Wachtmiester – Liam Fessen – guitar
5.Division, Ulanen-Regiment Nr.3, Sergeanten – Vitalis Winkelhock – guitar
9.Division, Grenadier-Regiment Nr.7, Unteroffiziere – Armin von Heinessen – bass
33.Division, 7.Thueringisches Infanterie-Regiment Nr.96, Gefreite – Rusty Potoplacht – drums

Guest musician
Nick Holmes – vocals on “…And a Cross Now Marks His Place”
Sasha Boole – vocals on “Coward”