Band: Appalachian Winter
Location: Schellsburg, Pennsylvania
Country: USA
Genre: Symphonic black metal
Full length: Wintermountains Rise
Format: Digital
Label: Nine Gates Records
Release date: June 9, 2026
Appalachian Winter first released "Wintermountains Rise" as a three-song EP in 2023; over three years they expanded it to an eight song full length, presenting a deeper exploration of its theme. With their 2013 debut EP “Ravenforest” they started crafting a distinctive, imposing black metal style that incorporated folk, ambient, and symphonic elements, putting a human face on nature at its most unforgiving.
For a US band, Appalachian Winter draw inspiration from nature and the past in a similar way to Scandinavian black metal bands. “Wintermountains Rise” draws from the Appalachian Mountains in the eastern part of North America, a very old mountain range extending from Newfoundland, Canada all the way to mid-Alabama. Believed to be among the oldest mountain ranges on Earth, the Appalachians formed more than a billion years ago. In modern times its holds deep cultural significance as indigenous Native American tribes like the Cherokee, Shawnee, Creek and Iroquois lived there for millennia.
The region has preserved a blend of Native American, African, and European cultures through music, craft and storytelling, traditions largely untouched by modern man. Personifying its history, cultural significance and especially its timeless nature, “Wintermountains Rise” carries impact through scope, breadth, and richness. Those folk, ambient and symphonic elements I mentioned, introduced with keyboards, horns and strings, all contribute to making their black metal greater than the sum of its parts,
For example, the track “Wolves” evokes a dark yet authentic sense of the land’s timelessness and reverence. It explores the enduring presence of this vast landscape, questioning whether humanity still remembers its many years of history. Not only does it give a face to the enduring nature but it gives a voice to the spirits who dwelled there from ancient times until today, hinting the real monsters are humans who attempt to erase them from history.
This motif recurs in the song and lyric writing of “Mountainwraith,” “Hopeforsook,” “All Coldness Comes,” and “So Howls the Wind.” Each track gives voice to different spirits from this ancient realm, the common themes being the loss of paradise, the inevitability of death, the destructive force of nature, a search for solace and hope for renewal, and a plea for divine strength and warmth in the face of isolation and loneliness. In the end however, the mood changes from darkness and despair to awakening and hope as you emerge from a long, cold, dark period to celestial awakening, a reclaiming of identity and purpose, signifying that nature is ultimately as patient as it is harsh and unforgiving. –Dave Wolff
Track list:
1. Mountainwraith
2. Wolves
3. Forestwhiten
4. Hopeforsook
5. Endless Ice Falls
6. All Coldness Comes
7. So Howls the Wind
8. Angelfrost









