Album Review – GraveRipper / Seasons Dreaming Death (2023)

The dead will rise and chaos will take over the entire world to the sound of the first full-length album by this venomous American Blackened Thrash Metal horde.

The dead will rise and chaos will take over the entire world to the sound of Seasons Dreaming Death, the newborn beast by Indianapolis, Indiana-based Blackened Thrash Metal horde GraveRipper. The first full-length album in their career, following up on their 2020 debut EP Complete Blinding Darkness and on their 2021 EP Radiated Remains, Seasons Dreaming Death showcases all the dexterity and passion for extreme music by Corey Parks on vocals and rhythm guitars, Keegan Hrybyk on lead guitars, Chris Pilotte on bass and Jacob Lett on drums, all spiced up by the top-notch engineering, mixing and mastering by Wesley Heaton at Postal Recording, and the sick artwork by one of the best illustrators of the current scene, Adam Burke of Nightjar Illustration, offering fans of bands like Skeletonwitch, Toxic Holocaust and Wraith everything they crave in heavy music and more.

Corey and Keegan begin their ruthless stringed attack in Into the Grave, a frantic fusion of Black, Thrash and Death Metal that will certainly inspire you to slam into the pit like a headbanging bastard, followed by Ripped and Torn Apart, a hard-hitting, no-shenanigans creation by the quartet where Jacob is relentless on drums adding his share of violence and heaviness to the overall result. Let’s keep hammering our skulls inside the circle pit to the sound of Divine Incantations, with Corey barking rabidly while his riffs together with the sounds generated by his bandmates will pierce your damned soul mercilessly; whereas Chris’ bass and Jacob’s drums will make the earth tremble in the Thrash Metal feast Seasons Dreaming Death, once again presenting the band’s animosity infused with intricate and dark sounds. And it’s nonstop action in the high-octane tune Premeditated, again blending the rebelliousness of Thrash Metal with the aggressiveness of Death Metal, spearheaded by the venomous roars by Corey.

The quartet adds hints of Hardcore, Grindcore and even Melodic Death Metal to their core sonority in An Influx of Fear, bringing forward the always caustic riffage by Corey and Keegan, and the complex but demented drumming by Jacob, and it’s then time to speed things up and generate a hurricane of thrashing sounds in Resist Against the Light, by far one of the most breathtaking songs of the album with the low-tuned bass by Chris brutally smashing your cranial skull. As you might have notice, it’s one demented tune after another, and the band keeps crushing our frail bodies in Red Skies, where their riffage sounds utterly acid and incendiary inspired by our good old Punk Rock. Back to a more traditional Thrash and Death Metal mode, Jacob takes the lead with his intricate beats in And I Curse Reality, simply perfect for some vigorous headbanging; and closing such pulverizing album we have Only Coldness, offering more of their gripping hybrid of extreme styles, with Jacob’s Black Metal drums matching perfectly with the riffage by the band’s guitar duo.

“The album title is my take on Halloween/Samhain,” commented Corey, “the day of the year where the veil between the world of the living and the world of the dead is the thinnest.” Well, let’s say the band truly captured the essence of such mysterious and adored day in Seasons Dreaming Death, which is already available for pre-order from their own BandCamp page and will be unleashed upon us before we can say “death”. Hence, don’t forget to also follow the band on Facebook and on Instagram for news, tour dates and all things GraveRipper, and to stream their sick creations on Spotify. As mentioned, the dead are about to rise when the excellent Seasons Dreaming Death is officially released, and you better be armed with GraveRipper’s demented new album in your hands if you want to join such deadly party.

Best moments of the album: Ripped and Torn Apart, Premeditated and Resist Against the Light.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Wise Blood Records

Track listing
1. Into the Grave 4:11
2. Ripped and Torn Apart 3:58
3. Divine Incantations 2:19
4. Seasons Dreaming Death 3:05
5. Premeditated 4:08
6. An Influx of Fear 1:53
7. Resist Against the Light 3:43
8. Red Skies 3:28
9. And I Curse Reality 3:31
10. Only Coldness 3:31

Band members
Corey Parks – vocals, rhythm guitars
Keegan Hrybyk – lead guitars
Chris Pilotte – bass
Jacob Lett – drums

Album Review – Krigsgrav / Fires in the Fall (2023)

Behold this grandiose, atmospheric and haunting album of Black, Death and Doom Metal masterfully crafted by an amazing band from Dallas, Texas.

The sky darkens, the wildfires roar, and Fires in the Fall, the new album by American Black/Death/Doom Metal entity Krigsgrav emerges from the smoke. Formed in 2004 in Dallas, Texas, Krigsgrav (which by the way means “war grave” in Swedish) approach two decades as a project co-created by vocalist and multi-instrumentalist David Sikora, appealing to the autumnal heart beating within fans of Agalloch, Mother Of Graves, and My Dying Bride alike. Mixed and mastered by Owe Inborr at Wolfthrone Studios, and displaying a classy artwork by Cameron Hinojosa, Fires in the Fall offers the listener over 52 minutes of darkness and doom (or as the band likes to call it, Atmospheric Blackened Doom) carefully brought into being by the aforementioned David Sikora on drums, clean vocals and bass alongside Justin Coleman on vocals, guitars and synths, and Cody Danielson also on the guitars, resulting in the perfect follow-up to their 2021 album The Sundering.

Like a creature arising from the underworld the band comes crushing our senses in The opening tune An Everflowing Vessel, dark and sinister from the very first second, showcasing poetic yet acid lyrics (“Man’s foolish pride and perdition / Seems our hereditary mission / with blindness and ignorance / only a toxic future awaits”) while the guitars by Justin and Cody will pierce your mind mercilessly; and more of their first-class Doom Metal-infused riffs and bass lines permeate the air in The Black Oak, again showcasing a deep, demonic vocal performance by Justin while David keeps hammering his drums in the name of darkness. There’s not a single space left empty by those three skillful musicians in The World We Leave Behind, where Justin and Cody are on fire with their riffs and solos generating a menacing atmosphere tailored for admirers of the genre, exploding into the visceral and heavy-as-hell In Seas of Perdition, a brutal composition by Krigsgrav overflowing rage and madness where David sounds fantastic with both his blast beast and rumbling bass.

Then featuring guest vocals by Chris “Blutjäger” Sweigart (who was the band’s vocalist from 2004 until 2010, and also former vocalist of Obsidian Throne), it’s time for the Stygian hymn Shadowlands, with the band blasting obscure Doom Metal for the masses while their bass lines couldn’t have sounded heavier and more metallic. In Journeyman the lyrics reek of desolation (“Through times fertile, but wrought with storms / Traversing paths to an unknown end / A beacon lit and a brother’s code / May we never again kneel in suppression”) while the music is a grandiose and imposing hybrid of Black, Death and Doom Metal dictated by David’s galloping drums, followed by Alone With the Setting Sun, the last song of the regular version of the album, offering us all melancholic passages and a pensive ambience while also being full of breaks and variations, alternating between absolute darkness and ethereal moments, and with David once again stealing the show with his infernal drums. And if you go for the CD version of the album you’ll be treated to When I’m Gone, Let the Wolves Come, definitely worth the investment in the physical copy, a top-notch extension of the album presenting all elements that make it so compelling.

The talented guys from Krigsgrav are waiting for you on Facebook and on Instagram with news, tour dates and other nice-to-know details about the band, and don’t forget to also stream their creations on Spotify and to purchase a copy of Fires in the Fall from their own BandCamp page or by clicking HERE. “We wrote Fires in the Fall almost immediately after we completed writing The Sundering, so it almost feels like a double album, but they are very different,” shared Justin Coleman about their new opus. “We intentionally approached writing Fires in the Fall with the idea that it would be more atmospheric, and we would let the music breathe a bit more. That’s why the songs have more of a tempo change than those on The Sundering. With Fires, we wanted everything to be grandiose and bigger, but really emphasize giving each song a haunting feel.” Well, we must all agree they more than succeeded in making the music found in their new album even more atmospheric and epic than before, setting fire to the current underground scene and paving an even more interesting path ahead of them.

Best moments of the album: The Black Oak, In Seas of Perdition and Journeyman.

Worst moments of the album: None.

Released in 2023 Wise Blood Records

Track listing
1. An Everflowing Vessel 6:27
2. The Black Oak 6:21
3. The World We Leave Behind 6:12
4. In Seas of Perdition 4:27
5. Shadowlands 7:49
6. Journeyman 7:31
7. Alone With the Setting Sun 7:27

CD bonus track
8. When I’m Gone, Let the Wolves Come 6:39

Band members
Justin Coleman – vocals, lead and rhythm guitars, synths
David Sikora – drums, clean vocals, bass
Cody Daniels – lead and rhythm guitars, bass on “Alone With the Setting Sun”

Guest musician
Chris “Blutjäger” Sweigart – vocals on “Shadow Lands”