#40 - Goths: Shelley (hatemeditations.com) takes the lead today for an outside of the box episode focusing on goth culture. Tim, aka The Blogging Goth, runs a popular goth blog https://theblogginggoth.com/ which focuses on news, commentary, and upcoming events in the UK goth scene. Whenever a major media outlet does a feature on goth culture,... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Kurokuma, Kato, Kluizenaer
Kurokuma: Born of ObsidianOut 4th February, self-released Eight years and a small collection of promising EPs later, Sheffieldโs own Kurokuma have landed their debut album in 2022, entitled โBorn of Obsidianโ. Although aesthetically their take on sludge/stoner doom borrows from a wide pool of punk and metal influences, their approach has always been one of... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Theandric, Nathr/Ordo Cultum Serpentis, Ninth Realm
Theandric: Flight Among the TombsOut 11th February, self-released The fact that a band like Theandric with an EP like โFlight Among the Tombsโ can exist in 2022 is a source of both hope and exasperation. Hope (and confusion) that there are still far flung corners of the world โ Detroit no less โ where this... Continue Reading →
Making Burzum a contested space
What the left gets wrong about black metalโs latent radicalism Thus far, the leftโs attempts to develop a political counterweight to black metalโs far right tendencies have misunderstood the radical potentials inherent in black metal itself. Rather than jettisoning the deeply problematic elements of black metalโs history wholesale and seeking to build on new, politically... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Theomachia, Thorn, Trest
Theomachia: The TheosophistOut 4th February on Xenoglossy This conceptually weighty EP self identifies as โgnostic black metalโ. Borrowing artwork from William Blake, and drawing heavily on ancient Roman and Greek esotericism, one could be forgiven for thinking that โThe Theosophistโ would be a confused exercise in sensory overload so common to modern extreme metal with... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Silhouette, Malefic Throne, 800 Throats
Silhouette: Les RetranchementsOut 28th January on Antiq The slow burn debut from this French outfit sees DSBM of a particularly melodic bent placed in a Petri dish with fragments of darkwave, post metal, and blackened doom. And if that all sounds like a clusterfuck to you then fear not, it's simultaneously much better and worse... Continue Reading →
Necopolis Podcast #39 – Giuseppe (Thecodontion)
#39 Giuseppe (Thecodontion): Giuseppe from Thecodontion (also one of the individuals behind Xenoglossy Productions) joins Necropolis to discuss the prehistoric theme surrounding Thecodontion, the ethos of Xenoglossy Productions, metal in Italy and other elements of Italian culture, and some dialogue about metal related matters such as the metal publications that we read.
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Ultra Silvam, Ouija, Saidan/Klanen
Ultra Silvam: The Sanctity of DeathOut 25th February on Shadow Records / Regain Records Ultra Silvam gut the bracing melodicism of Swedish black metal, remove the regal innards, explode the restrained dignity and poise of a Dawn, Dissection, or a Sacramentum by condensing this riff laden style into dense, violently short bursts of razor-sharp metallic... Continue Reading →
Reign of the accelerationist: Exodus and Overkill
Despite the unrelenting feeling of acceleration, a strong case could be made for culture moving at a much slower pace today than thirty years ago. The sheer quantity and speed at which content is produced in contemporary life leads to a static zeitgeist. Singular artefacts and symbols take time to reach a level of popularity... Continue Reading →
Beyond the North Waves: shifting the narrative of 90s black metal
Following on from the article โDeath metal for the general listenerโ โ an attempt to recast death metal as an inherently experimental form of music โ I wanted to write up a similar list for black metal. This proved more challenging than expected however, because - despite their closely knit histories - black metal is... Continue Reading →