Of all the old school revivalist trends of the last decade, the return to pre-1990 blackened thrash metal has to be one of the most successful. Not only in pulling black metal back from the brink of disappearing completely up its own arsehole, but also by reiterating the true roots of black metal it brings... Continue Reading →
UKBM and chasing phantoms: Winterfylleth and Wodensthrone
Despite boasting some of metal’s most ground-breaking albums over the years, the UK has never really had a handle on black metal. Why is that? The lush green countryside has never inspired the same awe and reverence as the rest of Europe? More twee than grim? Soul crushing urban life has dominated the extreme end... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Zealotry, Ande, Venenum
Zealotry: At the Nexus of All Stillborn Worlds (2018) Zealotry’s third LP ‘At the Nexus of All Stillborn Worlds’ is a many tentacled beast of elastic progressive death metal mastery. It’s an album that reaches for the very top of the shelf when it comes to high concept, otherworldly death metal, heavily referencing the rhythmic... Continue Reading →
How does punk endure?: Fearless Iranians From Hell and Die Kreuzen
It’s a question that remains at the very heart of punk ever since its inception. For every single offshoot of punk over the years, the looming spectre of uncertain longevity has all but killed off the promise of evolution. The germinal of every punk movement is primitive, reactionary, but also hamstrung from the start by a... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: HOR, Live Burial, Mork
HOR: Exitium (2019) HOR is new black metal outfit from Greece, which – based on the increasing number of newer Greek bands making headways overseas – is quickly reasserting itself as a black metal hotspot. ‘Exitium’ is their debut LP released in 2019. A streamlined and direct battering of four songs that stretch to just... Continue Reading →
Death metal’s lost lore: Cemetary and Gorement
Two more Swedish death metal offerings that have rightly been canonized, although, due to the relatively brief careers of the bands that spawned them, it’s arguable that the albums themselves are revered over and above the artists. They tap into an informal trend within death metal in the early 1990s that seems to have all... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Sweven, Temple of Abraxas, SS-18
Sweven: The Eternal Resonance (2020) The long awaited follow up to Morbus Chron’s revered 2015 offering of the same name, Robert Andersson returns with new project Sweven, and a new album: ‘The Eternal Resonance’. Much like the album itself, my feelings on this are a flaccid cocktail of meandering, unfocused, directionless non-events. In one sense... Continue Reading →
Rays of darkness: A Transylvanian Funeral and Kaeck
It’s been a tough decade for black metal. False profits have lurked round every corner. Reasonable metrics of quality have been dismissed as the elitist ramblings of arbitrary cultural gatekeepers, or worse, just plain backward looking. This has allowed shallow novelty or avant-garde free-for-alls to define not only what counts as new and innovative, but... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Sorgelig, Horrendous, Entrails
Sorgelig: We, the Oblivious (2019) Greece’s Sorgelig dropped their second LP last year: ‘We, the Oblivious’. Rather than following in the wake of their country’s forbears they have looked north for their inspiration, and offered up what is essentially a more complex ‘Transylvanian Hunger’. Now, before you point out how you may have read that... Continue Reading →
Reclaiming sacred ground: Execration and Morbus Chron
I think I've mentioned this point before, so I don't want to over-egg it: technical death metal - a genre with much potential - was hijacked towards the late 1990s, and boy did it take a while to recover. Suffocation were a fantastically influential band, and rightly so, but with the rise of Nile and... Continue Reading →