Letโs take a moment to consider albums that are universally detested. They hold an enduring fascination entirely distinct from the music itself. When well established bands publicly shit the bed, everyone has an angle to offer on what went wrong. Some albums surpass โbadnessโ as a critical metric altogether, and become studies on the nature... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Mefitis, Gjoad, Hate Forest
Mefitis: Offscourings (Out 30th January on Hessian Firm) Listening to Mefitis is like looking through a window to an alternative timeline. We are transported back to 1994 to re-witness history as it could (or should) have unfolded. Perhaps a bit of background is in order. If we read the story of death metal from around... Continue Reading →
Prize offcuts: Raate and Verdunkeln
Hate Meditationsโ quest to document the lesser trodden corridors of extreme metalโs history enters its fifth year. Since 2017 we have been selecting two albums to run over to the lab each week for further analysis. Pairings are based on similarity of style and/or era; once the findings are rigorously peer reviewed they are published.... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Vitriolic Sage, Demoniac, Writhing
Vitriolic Sage: Enlightenment (2020) The current crop of black metal acts emerging from China seem to be marked by a committed grimness (before the word took on its present clichรฉ meme fodder status), but supplementing these darker immersive tendencies with an overarching fragility worked into the melodic tendencies. The debut EP from Chinaโs Vitriolic Sage... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Uncertainty Principle, Tsalal, Grimcult
Uncertainty Principle: Sonic Terror (out 5th February 2021 on Xenoglossy Productions) Uncertainty Principle are a long running and mightily prolific industrial/drone/doom/noise outfit with a new album in the pipeline for February 2021; the significant beast of a work entitled โSonic Terrorโ. As the basket of genre tags suggests, digesting this album is a venture not... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Abigor, Valravn, Engulfed
Abigor: Totschlรคger (A Saintslayer's Songbook) (2020) There was a time when laboured artistic premeditation was the preserve of older acts, whose image and intentions were already deeply embedded in the minds of their fanbase. Beholden to the axioms of expansion, the next statement would have to be bigger, more ambitious, more novel, more thought-through than... Continue Reading →
Iโll have a burger and riffsalad please: Massacra and Protector
Death thrash? Thrash death? Even my pedantry has its limits. If weโre talking in terms of pure extremity, then these artists exist at the borders of thrash, at least philosophically if not in actual output. Thereโs no quirky dissonance, the drums are sticking with straightforward bursts of energy that rely on their relentlessness over anything... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Mongrelโs Cross, Black Death Cult, Negative or Nothing
Mongrelโs Cross: Arcana, Scrying and Revelation (2020) Brisbaneโs Mongrelโs Cross return for a third LP in the form of โArcana, Scrying and Revelationโ, and โ following the unceremonious dissolution of Absu โ Proscriptor McGovern has joined the party for want of employment, offering his unmistakable vocal talents to the fray. And what โ I hear... Continue Reading →
Cold and Waste: Blood of Kingu and Walknut
For all the lofty words weโve dedicated to Burzum over the years, itโs easy to forget that the legacy of my boy Varg is far patchier than the actual music he gifted us. Usually the echoes of canonized artists of yore can be felt across a plethora of quality artists to follow; Black Sabbath, Slayer,... Continue Reading →
I like the beats and I like the yelling: Tempestarii, Sainte Marie des Loups, Cryptic Shift/Replicant/Inoculation/Astral Tomb
Tempestarii: Chaos at Feast (2020) Black metal as sentimentality; itโs probably one of the pivotal shifts in philosophy from the โoldโ to the โnewโ school that has determined the creative decisions of each ethos. But of the old school, the techniques and traditions that set it apart from other forms of metal always did lend... Continue Reading →