Monday, May 12, 2025

Full Length Review: Asagraum "Rituals in the Dark Temple" (Azermedoth Records) by Dave Wolff

Band: Asagraum
Country: Netherlands
Genre: Black metal
Format: Digital, CD
Label: Azermedoth Records (Mexico)
Release date: February 14, 2023
For a comprehensive sense of Asagraum's live experience I watched random Youtube videos while checking out their 2023 album "Rituals in the Dark Temple". After doing a search I found several live clips of the band, which was a good opportunity to add something visual to what I was listening to. I was first struck by how professionally the dissonant black metal written by founding member Obscura was presented on both mediums, with unusual guitar scales and a strong sense of her love for the genre.
I wanted to clarify I’m not covering this band solely because the members are female. In roughly ten years, the band has accumulated a substantial fan base. Fans of underground and extreme metal, in my experience, are mostly an intelligent and respectful bunch, so I'd gather they're accepted due to their ability, not gender. After hearing the album and seeing them onstage at YouTube, I don't see any sort of gimmick at play here. The feedback I hear they’re receiving from reviewers can substantiate this.
Currently based in the Netherlands, Asagraum derives its name from the Sumerian mythological demon Asag and the German word for "room". Obscura founded the band in 2015 with Norwegian drummer T. Kolsvart, but they parted company after some time. Since then they gained recognition in black metal communities by performing with a variety of musicians, issued three full length albums, and recorded "Rituals" at Mexico City club HDX in 2022. The recording benefits greatly from a private setting.
Obscura (who also works with Draugur, Obsidian Sun and Wolvenbloed) takes her commitment to black metal and the left-hand path seriously as an artist. Her perspective is unmistakably hers, motivated by autonomy and belief in nonreligion. Asagraum plays a stripped down black metal style with little theatrics besides corpse paint and stage lights for ambiance. It’s somewhat likened to classic Norwegian BM with a unique arrangement of notes, tremolo picking, discordant chords and sharpened vocals.
Instead of writing songs conventionally, Asagraum takes liberties with writing as if conjuring occultic visions. This resourceful approach makes "Rituals" more of a ceremony than a show, symbolically summoning malignant phantoms. Presented with unanticipated turns, each song has a distinct path to follow. The intro is brief and the band starts the show on a primal note, but their uncommon methods of writing slowly seeps into the picture, gradually beguiling you until you’re fully enchanted.
I have no doubt that the fervently devoted metal fans in Mexico reacted well to what Asagraum had to offer. As you listen to "Rituals," don't forget to check out their most recent full-length, "Veil of Death, Ruptured," which explores the themes discussed in greater detail. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Obscura: Vocals, guitar, bass
A Morthaemer: Drums

Track list:
1. They Crawl from the Brocken Circle
2. Transformation
3. Daar Swaar Ik Sterf
4. Leviathan
5. Black Sun Prayer
6. Dawn of Infinite Fire
7. I Burn Within the Devil
8. Black Triangle Temple
9. Waar ik Ben Komt de dood
10. Carried by Lucifers Wings

Friday, May 9, 2025

Interview with DJ Silver (Patrick McGroin) by Daniel Ryan

Interview with DJ Silver (Patrick McGroin) by Daniel Ryan

How long have you been a DJ for?
I've been a DJ for 11.5 years now. I started this journey on 12/7/2013 and love every minute of it.

What do you think of Asphyxium zine? It’s been around for a long time and has had many interviews with some great people.
I love all the interviews they have and the reviews. I feel like I learn a lot when I check out the site and the material.

What is your favorite piece of equipment to work with? Or to play on?
I enjoy my Heil microphone and Sennheiser headphones.

What stations have you played with before if any?
I have not done any in person stations but all virtual through the web. Over the years I have probably been on air for 25+ stations. I love reaching anyone who wants to have good entertainment and music.

If you had to layout all the stations in order you played in as a timeline what would they be?
Wow – I don’t think I could do that – I have played for so many. Whats so great about the stations is they all offer a different audience, management and overall vibe. M y very first station was The Rock Asylum. It was such a great station and group of DJ’s and I have done nothing but built relationships over the years for the other stations.

What is the coolest experience you have had as a DJ?
I would have to say getting to connect with bands and owners. That is where the basis starts for this. I want to make sure I represent the music they work hard to bring to the masses. I have had the chance to be live on air for events at fairs, at bars and even doing my show on a terrestrial station (live FM radio).

What inspires you to keep doing what you do?
Simply for the love of the music and just helping peeps forget their worries in life and focus on good music. Music is therapy for the soul!!

If you had to name some influences, what would they be?
As far as being a DJ, I don’t know if I have any influences since I beat to my own drummer. Ive worked with some of the best internet radio DJ’s in the business and I have learned a lot from them. I loved working with Rich Embury and Chris Tatts. All the owners are amazing and allow me to do my thing.

What is your favorite venue you been to or been a part of?
As a DJ, I have not been to any venues for this gig. I have been invited out by bands both to come to their shows and also sent merch for the band. I would love to do this full time but have never had that opportunity. Maybe the day will come before they bury me.

To sum up this interview where can we find your latest airings and any shout outs to anyone for the readers of Asphyxium zine?
You can find me on facebook at https://www.facebook.com/DJSilverSurfer4U or my DJ page at https://www.facebook.com/DJSIlverChromeMetal. I am also on X at https://x.com/DJSilver812 and my podcast be found at https://www.mixcloud.com/pat-mcgroin/.
I want to give a BIG shoutout to all the owners of the stations that allow me to broadcast on their station, to the fans and listeners who tune me in and support me and to the bands for their music.

-Daniel Ryan

Friday, May 2, 2025

Full Length Review: Skyjoggers "12021: Post-Electric Apocalypse" (Supernatural Cat) by Dave Wolff

Band: Skyjoggers
Location: Tampere
Country: Finland
Genre: Doom/space/psychedelic rock
Full length: 12021: Post-Electric Apocalypse
Format: Vinyl, CD, digital
Label: Supernatural Cat
Release date: May 2, 2025
Finland is known for bands like Impaled Nazarene, Amorphis, Ensiferium, Beherit, Children of Bodom and Finntroll. This is an eclectic enough mix of styles so it’s not surprising that an album of this magnitude should emerge from there.
Skyjoggers' purpose in working on their sixth album "12021: Post-Electric Apocalypse" during many adverse world events was to inject a positive note into the chaos surrounding them. Heavy, gritty and clearly inspired by doom and stoner, it's as nuanced between space rock and psychedelic rock, with other genres hinted at, creating new territory to expand your mind. As they experiment with hypnotic, epic-level songwriting, they transform their concepts of death, loss, and despair into something more optimistic and uplifting, something many bands strive to achieve.
No cannabis smoking is required to join the band's exploration through deep space, just be receptive to their atmospheric, echo-laden soundscapes. "12021: Post-Electric Apocalypse" may even be a cure for drug addiction as it produces a natural high and all you need do to experience it is press play. No doubt this wouldn't be a doom/stoner album without similarities to Black Sabbath and The Obsessed, but the keyboard and synthesizer effects, electronic sounds, delay and reverb extend those similarities much further into the limitless potential of doom and stoner rock.
The addition of these components alone enhances Skyjoggers' heavier aspects exponentially, allowing greater shades of color to be added once the basic framework for each song has been established. This approach to writing makes more room for adding various genres to enhance diversity and intensify the execution. Examples of this are post-punk, early grunge, sludge, acid rock, seventies metal, funk, blues, jazz fusion, and even some ska and reggae from the sound of it.
The band is also incredibly tight; every new mood is composed and played with an instinctual sixth sense to where they seem to be playing on autopilot. Or maybe they work themselves into such a groove they just want to keep going and see where they take themselves. Either way, "12021: Post-Electric Apocalypse" is an album that achieves more than get you high, It takes you to places unknown in the universe and opens you new ideas and concept you might not have suspected possible. -Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Juan Rico: Bass, synth, vocals
Alexi Belle: Guitars, effects
Gabo Sabor: Drums, vocals

Track list:
1. Huevos Rancheros/Rapid Round
2. Newtonin Kanuuna
3. Døpehølm
4. Tessæil

Monday, April 28, 2025

Full Length Review: Temple of Katharsis "Macabre Ritual" (Theogonia Records) by Dave Wolff

Band: Temple of Katharsis
Country: Greece
Genre: Black metal
Full length: Macabre Ritual
Format: Digital
Label: Theogonia Records (Poland)
Release date: August 4, 2023
Immerse yourself in the echoes of another ancient pagan world where all is chaos and nothing is sacred. Where the present is all but forgotten and the hidden is revealed. On this journey into unwritten history, however, there is no going back.
Greece, a country renowned conveying its past through art, poetry, drama, mythology, and music is the home of Temple of Katharsis. They may take a similar tack to Swedish and Norwegian black metal bands, but their essence is entirely rooted in Greek mythology and culture. Greece is also credited with giving rise to Thou Art Lord, Necromantia, Varathron, Rotting Christ, Macabre Omen and legions of bands.
How would "Macabre Ritual" compare to the work of Greek BM bands that have made a name for themselves abroad as their debut album (after a demo, EP, and a few split releases)? For the band, Greek culture must have had a deeply profound resonance in their spirits. The songwriting has a metaphoric quintessence of the inspiration behind Greek poets and artists from the distant past.
The intrigue behind dissonan and fuzz-laden guitars, tight and booming percussion, gravelly vocals evoking disquiet, and a sinister atmosphere rests in an insinuatory nature in the intro track and many of the following songs, plus a kinesthesia of secrecy and enigma, as if not all of the mystery is manifesting itself. Overall, it creates an outlandish foreshadowing of what you might discover exploring that abyss, and piques your interest in diving deeper to see what might be waiting there.
This element fuels your desire to encounter black metal in all its dark splendor. That is, assuming your definition of "cult" happens to be as broad and extensive as Temple of Katharsis' contributions to this album. Cryptic and captivating, "Macabre Ritual" is a prime portrayal of the pagan traditions that black metal bands have always strived to capture through their work. -Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Hellmaster666: Vocals, bass
Zeratul: Guitars
Souleater: Guitars
Nodens: Drums

Track list: 1. Abyssal Cold Void (Intro)
2. The burning flood of Antichrist
3. Erasure of Religious Existence
4. In the Dungeons with the Rats
5. Ο Αρχιερεύς των Λύκων (The Archpriest of the Wolves)
6. Inside the Medieval Crypt
7. The Kingdom of Hades
8. Macabre Ritual

Thursday, April 24, 2025

Full Length Review: Disjecta Membrae - Guillaume Tiger "Antiphona" (Bitume Prods) by Dave Wolff

Project/artist: Disjecta Membrae - Guillaume Tiger
Country: France
Genre: Funeral doom, dark ambient
Full length: Antiphona
Format: Digital, CD
Release date: April 11, 2025
Disjecta Membrae, the latest project of the French musician Asmael Lebouc, and French multi-instrumentalist/composer, Guillaume Tiger, collaborate on an album that may turn out to be a landmark in extreme metal, another creative step forward. Some might think they made the most egregious blasphemy ever, going by the bio Bandcamp provides for "Antiphona" at. The album is described as "the chiral image of the crucifixion shattering and collapsing onto itself, dragging mankind into a black pit of despair."
Rather than taking offense and just writing it off as heresy, I see the imagination behind this recording as similar to that behind avant-garde horror like "Begotten" and "At Midnight I'll Take Your Soul," from E. Elias Merhige and José Mojica Marins, filmmakers unafraid to try new, novel ways of interpreting religion and humanity. Their work is not quite like anythitng else.
The same can be said about these two musicians who participate in forming the most bizarre, unhinged, disturbing soundscapes to come from crossing over funeral doom, dark ambient music and black metal. It’s possible to compare the arrangement and performance to the dismantling of customary religious dogma. Though this duo isn't exactly Abruptum, the songs they compose for "Antiphona" are structured cacophony, tiered with increasing degrees of ferocity.
Occultic on a cinematic level from the layers of drone, noise and ambiance, it expresses pure grief and distress on a mental and aesthetical level. While Abruptum’s concept is clear and purposeful, you have to give "Antiphona" some thought. It seems it challenges you to reconsider your conceptions of life and the universe, light and darkness, and does so in an exceedingly abrupt way.
If you pay close attention to the musicianship, right down to the creative force fueling it, you can feel it erode your perception of the concrete and physical, shattering your perspective of reality, replacing substance with nothingness. The only tangible sensations are agony and loss at the location of the crucifixion; there are no gods to provide relief or prophecies to fulfill, only eternal pitch-dark.
Through meticulously crafted and ritualized music, "Antiphona" transports you to an unfathomable abyss that defies the conventions of extreme music and even assumes substantive qualities. -Dave Wolff

Track list:
1. Disjecta Membrae - Guttae Sanguinis Decurrentis In Terram
2. Guillaume Tiger – Deiclast

Tuesday, April 22, 2025

Full Length Review: I Ya Toyah "Drama" (Femme Fatale Records) by Dave Wolff

Artist: I Ya Toyah
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Country; USA
Genre: Experimental
Full length: Drama
Format: Digital, CD, exclusive collectors design vinyl
Label: Femme Fatale Records
Release date: October 4, 2024
Cyberpunk artist I Ya Toyah wants you to experience her innermost thoughts, feelings, and fears, as well as her battles to overcome them via raw woman power. Internal darkness caused by societal expectations and judgment conveyed via music is not new, but her proclivity to face and confront the darkness is presented to urge you to cheer her on "Drama."
I gather her work and stage presence are a mix between Lacuna Coil’s Cristina Scabbia and Pink, since she has a certain courage in expressing herself and her real life experiences in a way that resonates across genres. She has an inspiring and long-lasting capacity to transmute grief and despair into strength and resolve, as evinced by songs exhibiting qualities of vulnerability with firepower.
As a producer and label owner as well as a vocalist, musician, and composer, she has reportedly won awards for her promotional videos and received praise for her albums as a result of extensive national touring and bringing her emotional depth and professionalism to her recordings.
I imagine her natural ability for writing unlit, apprehensive and commercially viable music played a role in the acclaim she received for her vision. This admittedly makes much room for debate. Are her tastes more in line with commercial pop or darkwave, industrial and electronica? Is her on-stage persona merely an image or a more deeply rooted extension of herself? "Drama", co-produced with Walter Flakus of Stabbing Westward, might well hold the answers to these questions.
Right from the start, doors are opened from contemporary pop to a more reflective and dark place, a private space rarely discussed in the pop world. The multilayered rhythm of “Afterlight” is the first taste of the universe I Ya Toyah welcomes you into. Though it's a dark place, there’s no shortage of creativity to be experienced as your soul unites with hers.  If you dare to embark on this journey by your own free will, you experience genuine empathy and gain potent energy from your mutual sharing.
Not everything that follows will be pleasing however, and some moments might be so surreal they’re frightening, but there’s a burning resolve to heal throughout. I Ya Toyah's presence is more than enough to generate enough hot-blooded fury to ignite and turn the demons confronting you to ash, thanks to vocals as captivating and determined as the songs are diverse. An uncommon voice both underground and aboveground, I Ya Toyah seems bound to leave her mark through her art. –Dave Wolff

Track list:
1. Afterlight
2. Panic Room
3. Dream not to Dream
4. Drama
5. Denial
6. Hello, Hello?
7. I am the Fire
8. Caves
9. Fraud
10. Crashing Comet



Saturday, April 19, 2025

Full Length Review: Los Morts "Devil Inside" (We Are Horror Records) by Dave Wolff

Band: Los Morts
Location: Arequipa
Country: Peru
Genre: Horror metal
Full length: Devil Inside
Forrnat: Digital, limited edition gatefold 12" black vinyl, limited edition gatefold 12" transparent red vinyl, limited edition digipack compact disc, limited edition cassette tape black (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: We Are Horror Records
Release date: March 30, 2025
The most common images that come to mind when you think of horror in metal are likely werewolves, zombies, occult magic, Kandarian demons and cenobites. Los Morts likewise homages them while pondering what to write about the Creature from the Black Lagoon and Dr. Jekyll & Mr. Hyde.
On "Devil Inside" they draw inspiration from 40s and 50s horror. In this respect they resemble The Misfits more than brutal death metal bands. That implies that cheesy science fiction and horror can be as metal as well-known figures from more recent times. Only they weren't that cheesy then, since the horror films in question had inventive, science-inspired plots and were evocative and entertaining. That metal has long been socially conscious in one form or another and that fear of nuclear weapons served as inspiration for much 50s sci fi/horror may be another commonality.
Los Morts pays homage to their favorite horror stories with a blend of 80s power metal and thrash metal with contemporary symphonic metal. Their songs are full of atmosphere, precision, and inventive songwriting, and their classic metal vibe makes you feel as though you're watching the films they lyricize for the first time. After the opening "End of Time," "Hellraiser" begins the album with crunch and drive, with enough melody in the vocals to balance their harsh and slightly guttural tone. Occiso's vocals remind me a bit of Lake of Tears' Daniel Brennare on "Headstones."
Being that they’re from Peru, the band displays the slightest shades of South American death metal, which gives the material—especially the thrashy material—additional push. This complements synthesizers that give the songs a depth akin to prog and sporadic Iron Maiden-influenced passages like the one in "John Kramer," inspired by the Jigsaw Killer of the same name from the "Saw" movie series. Together these elements, while not breaking new ground, help to reinterpret the vision of bands that pioneered new ideas in metal, taking it to the next level. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Occiso: Vocals, bass
Giovaxe: Guitars, synthesizers
J. Frankenstein: Drums

Track list:
1. End of Time
2. Hellraiser
3. Devil Inside
4. Every Day is Halloween
5. Monster in the Night
6. I'm a Werewolf
7. John Kramer
8. Necronomicon
9. Dr. Jekyll Curse
10. Creature from the Black Lagoon
11. Undead Love

Thursday, April 17, 2025

Interview with Darren Smallman of Dez Dare by Dave Wolff

Interview with Darren Smallman of Dez Dare

Your bio mentions how social media diverts people's attention from what they miss and what they should value in their lives, and compares suburbia to the seventh circle of hell. Can you elaborate on these points?
Diversion: This is bigger than just social media. It is the way the world works. Digital media. The 24-hour news cycle. Depleted attention spans. I am in the same position, my attention span is terrible and I am exhausted by the constant flood of information. I am actively trying to consume less but it isn't easy with all the information flowing into our devices each second. Switch off for even half an hour, grab a coffee or wine, watch the world go by.
The suburbs: Yeah, I have nothing against the suburbs, but they are not for me. I grew up in them, and tried the country for a while. I am a city bird. I love the culture and anonymity of the city. Everything I need in a short walk.

Do you believe life was simpler before social media and the stream of knowledge that now pervades our world? How can you determine the difference between authentic and fraudulent news?
Simpler no, less intense yes. Humans haven't changed that much in the last 100K years. We have new toys but we are still the same at our most basic; en masse a destructive and aggressive animal. Just have a look at the way we keep treating each other, generation after generation, with each fall of each civilization. How to decipher nonsense from fact? Research and objectivity. Conversation with others that don't share your view. Sitting in bubbles perpetuates myths and untruths. We have to engage to understand. We have to be vigilant.

Which city or cities have you lived in to date? What components of city culture have always interested you? And how does anonymity factor into your taste for city life?
I have lived all over. I grew up in Geelong, just outside Melbourne and was born in Brisbane. I spent most of my adult life in Australia living in Melbourne. I lived in the Goldfields area of Victoria Australia for a bit, in Guildford and Daylesford. I have lived in Copenhagen, London, Tunbridge Wells and now Brighton. Brighton and Melbourne being my faves. I have always been fascinated with people watching and city life. Watching the rush of people scurry by. I have always been an artistic person. Started with art and brass bands, then to bands in the 90s. Different cultures make life interesting, food, drink, music, film. All available in the cities at all times. I like anonymity because I am Autistic and not always super social. If I want to find something to do or someone to hang out with I can, or I can just hang out by myself with little interruptions.

How did you initially become engaged in your local punk scene, and what made you see punk as a valid representation of your worldview at the time?
It wasn't really punk that got me into music as such, it was misfits. I never really felt like I fitted in at school. Me and my mates started skate boarding and diversifying our music tastes. Back before the internet you had to find the other freaks in the wild and we all congregated around houses and the local band venue. It was a community. Whether you played indie, punk, metal, you hung out in the same group. As said I already played brass and mates of mine had got a gig with the bands Bored! and The Dirty Lovers at a biker pub in Geelong and they needed a bass player. I leant how to play in the four weeks before the show. I was fifteen and Cris and Ben were twelve and thirteen. That show was a revelation. Our parents had to come with us and it scared the fuck out of them, we loved it. Beer cans flying everywhere, people shouting and swearing at the bands (lovingly), loud as fuck. It was a new free world. We were shit but it start all of all paths into music and the creative world.

Speaking of misfits, do The Misfits appeal to you on this level? What are your thoughts on bands with political lyrics: Dead Kennedys, Crass, Bad Brains etc?
I meant misfits as in people, although I love The Misfits as well! Danzig not so much. Weirdos and misfits find each other, start bands, have a good time. U.S. and Australian punk was the main influence back in the early years. Wipers, Butthole Surfers, The Stooges, MC5, Dead Kennedys, Bad Brains, Redd Kross; outsider rock. There is something visceral about rock and punk, whether the bands are political, social, dumb, the feeling was what got you going. Feeling the sound reverberate off the walls and skull, the chaos of noise. Lyrics were always important but riffs came first.

What kept you interested in punk culture all these years, and how did it help you grow musically?
Never stopped listening to the old stuff, you just collect more cool sounds over the years and become a little less closed off with your taste. Great records are great records. Never let the good ones go.

How much growth have you seen in punk through the years?
How you define punk is important to this question. I don't see punk as a style or sound. It's an idea. It's rebellion. Anti Establishment. Any music that holds to these ideas, is punk. So the genre for me is very broad.

Despite the mainstream's narrow view of punk I always found it broad minded. Does media portray "punk stereotypes" more or less these days?
I think it is broader in general, but it depends who you speak to. I know a lot of people who sit on both sides of the debate.

What are the genres you gravitated towards in addition to punk?
I really love anything with a melody. Whether that is in a synth or guitar, vocal. Doesn't matter to me. Never really got loads into grind core or super-fast stuff... back beat and melody... and fuzz!!

How many bands have you worked in since you became a musician and how do you communicate your views through music and lyrics?
I was asked to join a mate’s band when I was fifteen. I had to learn the bass and six songs in a month! Warped was my first band, we were twelve, thirteen and fifteen. When I was in Geelong I had Warped, then Toad with Dave and Buzz from Bored!, then Thee Vinyl Creatures which were more melody driven. In Geelong we also had Nine Inch Nob that disfigured the Nine Inch Nails logo for comedic purposes and was Geelong's (maybe only!) first rap band. In Melbourne I had a couple of experimental indie bands called The Sound Platform and The Wells Collective. All available to listen to. As far as lyrics and music go, I am an absurdist. I sing about a lot of serious social and philosophical stuff but I try not to take the music or myself too seriously. Life is weird, art should be as well!

How much material did you release with those bands you mentioned? Do you have examples of lyrics you wrote for some of them? Where can they be found online?
I have released a lot of records over the years but did stop for fifteen years to run labels and move over to the UK. You can get all my back catalogue on streaming services and Bandcamp. There are even old CDs and vinyl on Discogs. I won't be sharing any lyrics that I wrote when I was in my teens (smile). Bandcamp has all Dez Dare and some of the other bands.

What labels were you running while working on new music? How many bands did you help and what did you learn about the industry?
From 1999-2010 I ran Low Transit Industries in Australia with my mate Simon Baird. We worked with bands like Black Mountain, Okkervil River, Trans Am, The Mendoza Line and Kim Salmon… a lot. I ran Battle Worldwide Recordings, working with bands like Co-pilgrim, Falling Stacks and Empty Pools. Worked with a lot of bands, helping with management, touring, publishing and label duties. I confirmed what I already knew about the industry, by being in it. If you want to do anything worthwhile and creative, you need to take risks and be hands on. Don't wait for someone else. Just make good shit and get it out.

Has Dez Dare always been a solo endeavor since its inception, or did you eventually begin collaborating with other musicians?
It started out as a digital online project in the pandemic with a mate in Australia and another in the U.S. They were busy and I got bored; it became me. I wouldn't say no to band members in the future. At present though it makes sense for touring. I couldn't afford to take a band on the road and I am enjoying the freedom of doing it myself.

Compared to composing with a band on digital media, how much creative freedom do you have as a solo musician? Is it freeing to be able to write on your schedule without having to communicate online?
Yeah, I love making stuff from scratch and building it up in the studio. You are never quite sure how something will turn out from that initial idea. Only drawback is you have to try to work out what the fuck you wrote after the fact to play shows!

What equipment did you furnish your home studio with to develop the sounds you want?
Weird shit, cheap guitars and noisy pedals. I have the basics there, a good computer with some OK preamps and mics. I love fuzzy, synthy pedals and old tape delay units. Can't go wrong with a cheap Japanese guitar or three as well!!

How time-consuming is it to arrange songs for live performances whenever you have the chance to play out?
Pretty quick and easy. I just drop out the lead vocals and the guitar parts I want to do live. The rest is already recorded.

Give an overview of the albums you have put out. Did certain labels assist with distribution, or were they all released independently?
I have put out five albums and three EPs. Most of it is released by my label CH!MP; I have worked with Six Tonnes De Chair in France and God Unknown Records. I help run God Unknown as well, and I and Jason do radio plugging and PR for other bands and labels.

How long have you been running your CH!MP label and helping out with God Unknown Records? Is Six Tonnes De Chair still active today?
Six Tonnes is run by the top type Laurent. CH!MP was set up for Dez Dare, although Battle Worldwide is still running as my publishing brand. I started with GU last year when I released my last record 'A Billion Goats. A Billion Sparks. Fin.' Jason and I got along well and decided to start doing some PR work together which included GU artists.

Your work has received feedback from magazines like Maximum Rock N Roll and The Wire. Were you expecting to be recognized by publications like those?
We all hope we get support from media and fans. I have worked with loads of bands that have deserved more and never received it. Considering what I do is quite weird, I am lucky I get the support I do and thanks to all those you come out to see me play and buy my records, thanks to all the reviewers and radio DJs.

What label is assisting "CHERYL! Your Love Shines Down Like A Supernova's Death"? Who collaborated on the songs and packaging with you?
I am working on the new record with God Unknown. I have Jonny Halifax playing lapsteel on a track and loads of backing vocals, Laura Loriga on backing vocals as well. Both are God Unknown label mates!

Is this your first collaboration with Jonny Halifax and Laura Longa, or have you worked with them on any of your previous releases?
Nope, first time. I work with them on the label side of things. Top peoples.

Describe the making of "CHERYL!" and tell us how close it is to your earliest vision for it.
Any release starts with me fishing through my phone for the riffs I have recorded into it over the months. I start piecing them together in the studio and building a framework for the album. I usually have the name of the album and tracks at the same time as this. Then I build them all up... bass and drums... guitars, noises, synths... vocals always last. My least favorite thing to do is write lyrics. I really don't have much of a vision going in. I try to stay open. All I knew is I wanted it less cluttered and more direct. So the next record is gonna be weird!!

How much attention has your current song "Talk, Clown" received for the album since it was made available for streaming? What song did you previously release on video to promote the album?
Loads of video plays and some nice words from top types. Previous single was "Brutalised Robotics".

What kind of ideas have you been brainstorming for your next full length? Where have you been picking up inspiration along the way?
All I can say is my phone is filling up with ideas!

-Dave Wolff

Monday, April 14, 2025

Interview with Raynard Hannah by Daniel Ryan

Interview with Raynard Hannah by Daniel Ryan

How long have you been making music for?
My first serious recording sessions and small time music releases started to take place in 2005 with J.Hex's Creepshow on drums, & back up vox. But dabbled since 2001.

What is your favorite instrument to play on?
Built in Vocals is my fave. But I'm more involved in drumming these days. Some harmonica when rarely needed. Can't play anything else. But finally getting back on vox soon with a newly forming stoner doom project in the works here in Florida.

What acts have you played with before if any?
Most notably my own projects, Inverticrux, Vintage Flesh, John Hex's Creepshow, but also guest vox spots in Frost from Germany, Serve from the Netherlands, And the final release of Mystic Forest via France called "In the end" on Drakkar records (RIP Stefan). Now in a psychedelic garage rock band in Florida called Perthe Ambouys, and on my worship team at church on drums. Non-denominational of course... Oh and GraveSideService out of Rhode Island on their final label release on vox 2020.

If you had to lay out all the bands in order you played in as a timeline what would they be?
Double edge (CT), John Hex's Creepshow, Vintage Flesh, Inverticrux, Mystic Forest, GraveSideService, Perthe Ambouys. And the stoner doom band now in the works.

What is the coolest experience you have had as a musician?
I lost a lot of memories due to a massive brain injury 🤕 in 2013. I don't recall much from those days. I lived extremely godlessly back then. A lot of illegal activity for fun. Can't share. I'm all better now! 😀 But on stage was the best times jamming out with my best guitarist I ever had in Terry Savestano founding member of GRIEF (Boston) for a small east coast tour.

What inspires you to keep doing what you do?
I'm bound to the arts. Being artistically or musically creative expels the demons I still suffer. Gives me purpose. Killing time till the End times finishes us all off.

How are things going in the tattoo life?
Tattoo industry has gone downhill. I'm at it 31 years and now I'm tired of dealing with the latest batch of ego driven rock star arsehole tattooists. That's why I work alone now in a little shop of my own. But there's too much competition in Florida too. Kinda want to quit inking but I know there's nothing else that I’m good at or pays as well. I'm sorta jaded now. 😆 I sell Gothic horror paintings at the shop on the side too. Uncanny Conceptions on Facebook.

If you had to name some influences what would they be?
My #1 and #2 top influences will always be Alice Cooper and Black Sabbath. But I still love every genre of real Metal underground and above. Still excited as a teenager that way. Always discovering new dark artsy obscure bands that should be heard.

What is your favorite moments about recording? What’s your latest album?
I don't enjoy recording drums much but I still like recording vocals. I have more control vocally. Hanging with the band is fun though. Perthe Ambouys will be the latest release but it's a slow going old man band. I love the music 🎵 though. All originals. Think the Zombies, the Seeds, the Yard birds.

What’s life like doing gigs and shows for people? Do you enjoy it or do you like being in the studio more?
I prefer the studio product over the studio. I enjoy live shows better behind the microphone 🎤 over behind the drums. Less pressure to get it right. I don't promote much myself. The Facebook page for INVERTICRUX keeps people posted on my latest activities elsewhere and RAYZER WRECKER on YouTube shows what I'm getting up to recently. The stoner doom project is the one to really look out for. Stay posted.

To sum up this interview which website can we find your latest music and any shout outs to anyone for the readers of Asphyxium zine?
Shout out to all my fallen brothers in Metal who didn't survive this long. How did I?! You are loved and missed. Thanks, D.L.!!! BE WELL!!! 🙏

-Daniel Ryan

Saturday, April 12, 2025

Full Length Review: Marble Orchard "Ruminations of Ruin" (Morbid And Miserable Records) by Dave Wolff

Band: Marble Orchard
Location: San Antonio, Texas
Country: USA
Gemre: Gothic doom metal
Full length: Ruminations of Ruin
Format: Digital, CD
Release date: March 21, 2025
Marble Orchard’s portrayal of personal loss and cherished memories is represented in a realm, an entire cosmos, little larger than an old darkened cathedral with halls and archways made of immaculate stone and what suspiciously appears to be blood covering the floor. Like Francis B. Gröss’ morbid dream in “Faces of Death”, everything is quiet and there’s the semblance of an endless funeral. But something alive is here, waiting to be confronted face to face.
As Lacuna Coil had in the 2000s, “Ruminations of Ruin” has a way of commanding attention from the limitless abyss of goth, doom, and gothic doom musicians. The nightmarish cover artwork represents an environment personifying the darkest essence of your soul where introspection and catharsis create an appropriate ambiance for Type O Negative, My Dying Bride, Swallow the Sun and November’s Doom. Marble Orchard accompany you on the passage into spirit nighttime via finely composed and arranged gothic metal flowing like blood on the cathedral floors.
Sustaining this mental and emotional panorama relies heavily on presence. Like the audial and visual stimulation of “Building Monuments to Misery”, “Ruminations of Ruin” has a presence that emanates tenebrosity with an occasional touch of penumbra, enticing you to venture further into the darkness with a sense of tranquility rather than a sense of disquiet. This formula depicts Marble Orchard conveying their intended ideas (which show the appeal of Type O Negative, My Dying Bride, Swallow the Sun, and November's Doom) through their song titles and lyrics.
While this is going on, the vocals and instrumentation let that invisible thing take on a life of its own. While the former album is a straightforward depiction of the empty spaces left by false religious promises and unmet goals, the latter appears to fill those spaces with a certain knowledge, ties to lighter days, and a stronger desire to experience them again. Once those memories are experienced, they may be carried with you on your endless journey into the twilight. Marble Orchard's "Ruminations of Ruin" takes subtle but obvious advances toward the future of gothic metal. -Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Gran Inquisidor - Patris - Omnia Instrumenta et Productionem - ♃
Alguacil - Filii - Cithara plumbea - ♄
Calificador - Spiritus Sancti - Tympana - ⛢

Track list:
1. Contemplating the Garden of Gethsemane
2. Engraven
3. A Bitter Home for Memories
4. Hosanna
5. When Night Gives Way to Day
6. When Everything is Lost
7. Mea Culpa
8. A Life Not Worth Living
9. Anti-Mirth (Anhedonia)
10. Via Dolorosa
11. Seven Swords, Seven Sorrows
12. Come Wander with Me