Saturday, May 2, 2026

Full Length Review: Appalachian Winter "Wintermountains Rise" (Nine Gates Records) by Dave Wolff

Location: Schellsburg, Pennsylvania
Country: USA
Genre: Symphonic black metal
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

Saturday, April 25, 2026

Full Length Review: Nequient "Avarice" (Nefarious Industries) by Dave Wolff

Band: Nequient
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Country: USA
Genre: Grindcore. hardcore
Full length: Avarice
Format: Digital, limited edition gatefold LP, limited edition cassette, limited edition CD (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Release date: April 24, 2026
Artists who, according to Nequient frontman Jason Kolkey, prefer to fit neatly into algorithmic recommendation engines are the least he feels alienated and frustrated about. Channeling these feelings into their third album, “Avarice,” the band appears to intentionally steer clear of algorithmic recommendation engines. Does this suggest they want to be overlooked, or are they pushing free expression and open-mindedness to an extreme?
Realizing how much worse the world has become over the past two decades, the band decides to raise their objections through even more bizarre and unconventional music than their previous works, their EPs “Infinite Regress” (2015) and “Collective Punishment” (2021), and their albums “Wolves at the Door” (2018) and “Darker than Death or Night” (2022). Essentially a hardcore/grindcore band rooted in extreme metal, Nequient surpasses the eccentric songwriting of even the most experimental bands, integrating prog elements with relentless intensity.
Intentionally crafting tumultuous, disorganized sounding songs, they deliver alarmingly authentic portrayals of the vexation and cognitive dissonance caused by a system that methodically dismantles what individuals personally value, justifying it with contradictory arguments. The staggering amount of aberrant material packed into less than three quarters of an hour creates a mind-bending experience, offering listeners who share these frustrations a powerful outlet for expression, while also providing an opportunity to listen to a grindcore band unlike any other.
Taking what they wrote into the studio, Nequient collaborated with producer Sanford Parker, known for his work with Yob and Lair Of The Minotaur and masterer Collin Jordan, known for working with Voivod and Harm’s Way. They couldn’t have found a better team to translate their intricate, manic compositions, achieving unrefined clarity, intensity and complexity. The album’s dissonance, blending jazz, blues and doom rock with its prog elements, along with sudden shifts in theme and mood, its controlled fury, its near-desperate vocals, all create a sense of imminent unravelling.
The album is like a massive dam on the verge of crumbling and unleashing floodwaters that will eventually engulf everything. It symbolizes an inevitable social and societal collapse, the result of years of corruption and manipulation, with humanity unable to undo the damage of decades past. Arifullah Ali and Scott Shellhamer’s cover art is as mind-bending as the album itself, existentially illustrating Nequient’s point. It depicts humanity, blinded and screaming in chaos and entropy, unheard amid the turmoil surrounding it. Because humanity ignored past warnings, it must now face the devastating consequences of its own hubris. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Jason Kolkey: Vocals
Patrick Conahan: Guitar synthesizers
Aaron Roemig: Bass, backing vocals
Chris Avgerin: Drums

Track list:
1. Mad King / Fool
2. Christofascist Zombie Brigade
3. Splenetic and Moribund
4. Brain Worms
5. Rintrah Roars
6. Obsolete Machines
7. Siege Mentality
8. Enshittification
9. Stochastic Terror

Thursday, April 23, 2026

Full Length Review: The Stone "Kletva" (Immortal Frost Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: The Stone
Country: Serbia
Genre: Black metal
Full length: Kletva
Format: Digital, digipack CD, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: November 28, 2025
Based on what I’ve read, Serbian black metal is rarely discussed. An example is The Stone, formed in 1996 as Stone to Flesh. Emerging under the shadow of the well-known Norwegian and Swedish black metal scenes, they have faced an ongoing uphill battle. It wasn't until their 2002 debut, "Словенска крв" (Slovenian Blood) that their lyrical focus shifted from Serbian paganism to themes of nihilism, misanthropy, and existentialism. This marked the beginning of a significant transition from traditional black metal themes to their own unique perspectives on life and the world, almost creating a philosophical side to nihilism and misanthropy.
With the lyrical evolution of "Kletva," The Stone refined their sound and the black metal style characteristic of their home country, transforming it into something persistent and urgent. This transformation made them compelling enough to attract black metal fans across multiple countries. Their style features a primitive, tribal percussion that uses its own momentum to shift the mood and tone of a song, embellishing the chosen tempos with consistent fills to enhance the sense of urgency. This fosters a tighter interplay with raw guitars and bass, combined with cleverly written progressions, ensuring everything is closely knit and cohesive.
The formula The Stone develops for this album strikes me not as a bleak, stormy outpouring of sarcasm and bitterness. Instead, it strikes me as an internal tempest, an intense struggle to reject doctrines and ideologies adopted by people, ideologies that lack true meaning or substance, or true spiritual worth. It captures the disenchantment and dissatisfaction that arises, alongside a passionate, fervent quest for personal understanding and authenticity. From this perspective, the tight restraint of the songs makes sense. It’s an internal process of discovering questions, forging answers, and developing a personal perspective—preparing it for eventual release.
"Kletva" travels far beyond black metal’s expected blasphemous content, as the existential questioning, challenging and forming of metaphysical thoughts putting to the test people who weaponize God and withstanding rebuke is pictured with monumental resourcefulness. The convictions that grew from Slavic paganism are symbolized by pensiveness, elegance and passion. Changes in tempo, sections with rumbling bass and relentless bombast, tremolo-picked lead guitar passages and enraged screams all represent this process of searching for answers, finding moments of clarity and moving forward to establish your own ontology. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Glad: Vocals
Kozeljnik: Lead Guitar
INIMICVS: Rhythm guitar
Vrag: Bass
Honza Kapák: Drums

Track list:
1. Sve sravnjeno, sve spaljeno
2. Kletve lovor
3. Trag u večnosti
4. Slutnja
5. Denying the Axiom
6. Besi
7. Sveća je dogorela


Monday, April 20, 2026

Full Length Review: Leila Abdul-Rauf "Andros Insidium" (20 Buck Spin) by Dave Wolff

Artist: Leila Abdul-Rauf
Location: Oakland, California
Country: USA
Genre: Experimental
Full length: Andros Insidium
Format: Digital
Label: 20 Buck Spin
Release date: April 17, 2026
Drawing inspiration from Sumerian myth, Silvia Brinton Perera’s “Descent to the Goddess,” and ancient pagan feminism, Leila Abdul-Rauf expresses defiance and rebellion against a historically dominant patriarchal society. Described by her as the album she has wanted to create for years, “Andros Insidium” reflects experiences of marginalization and ostracism by communities that failed to understand her need to express rage, grief, and the tension between hope and despair through a dark, intimate narrative.
Having finally completed her ambitious project, channeling the passion of years of writing and recording, Abdul-Rauf imbues “Andros Insidium” with enough intimate darkness to evoke centuries of repression, bringing forbidden myths and legends to life and re-invoking the feminine divine as a transformative force. Uncompromisingly untamed, it seems to establish its own timeliness.
First published in 1983, Perera’s book reflects Abdul-Rauf’s longing for an inner female authority. She merges ancient scriptures with modern visions to resurrect and reintroduce the Great Goddess from numerous pre-Christian faiths into contemporary culture. Like the Necronomicon, it uses metaphor through the Mesopotamian myth of Inanna (Sumer) or Ishtar (Babylonia, Assyria), who journeyed to the underworld to confront her sister, the dark goddess Ereshkigal.
In the legend recounted many times over, Inanna was murdered by Ereshkigal, having given up her protection from the dark forces surrounding her, her body imprisoned, and she was later resurrected, a story somewhat akin to the legends of Christ and the Egyptian god Osiris. Abdul-Rauf’s work deeply, personally explores this transformative cycle of death and rebirth leading to redemption.
Cold, dark, ambient, and imposing, “Andros Insidium” can be seen as the culmination of Abdul-Rauf’s projects since 2013’s “Cold and Cloud.” While it shares affinities with Diamanda Galás, Dead Can Dance, Jarboe/Swans and Roberta Baum, its portrayal of the afterlife is so esoteric and abstract that it defies typical descriptions you would give to goth, dungeon synth, black metal or occult rock.
The ancient, lingering sensations woven through her multifaceted songwriting evoke a ritualistic echo carved in the blackest darkness known to man, or a ceremonial journey through the universe. An eternal state suspended between death and rebirth, until a slow, gradual awakening begins to restore consciousness, so at long last the legend of Inanna/Ishtar can be retold.
With guest musicians including Kienan Hamilton of Cartilage, Gregory C. Hagan of King Eider, and Drew Zercoe of Field Of Fear contributing to the material she wrote and recorded, Abdul-Rauf delivers a powerful sensory experience. Paired with Greg Wilkinson’s expert mixing and mastering, gained from his work with Autopsy and High On Fire, she crafts a cinematic narrative that penetrates deeply into your very soul. Using majestic songwriting, aboriginal percussion, evocative vocals, and sacred liturgy, she evokes centuries and millennia of primal self-awareness and female spirit wisdom, transcending any and all surface understanding.
As Abdul-Rauf pushes her imagination and skills beyond anything she has previously explored, your perception of Inanna’s descent into the underworld, her search for her sister, the goddess of perdition, their confrontation, and her sacrifice, are heightened and intensified, revealing profound and unexpected insights into the suppressed female archetype. You experience her pain, emptiness, and ultimately her metamorphosis and renewal, a reawakening of a spirit long believed to be lost in time and space, but whose time has come around again. –Dave Wolff

Track list:
1. Descent into Kur
2. Stripped Before the Eye of Death
3. Eros Anima
4. Senex Rule
5. Fractured Body
6. Andros Insidium
7. A Requiem for Ishtar
8. Return to Anu

Friday, April 17, 2026

Full Length Review: Thronium Vrondor "Drowning in the Distorted Light" (Immortal Frost Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: Thronium Vrondor
Country: Belgium
Genre: Black metal
Full length: Drowning in the Distorted Light
Format: Digital, jewel case CD, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: April 25, 2025
Sven Houfflijn, aka SvN, has been an active vocalist since 1991, fronting Ascend-ency, Anesthesy, Wounds of Old, Fleshmould, Dodengod, and others. His bands have performed with obscure and well-known acts, and he has recently begun exploring composition on keyboards with his project This Scorching SvN. With his extensive experience, he seems comfortable delving into dark sound and unleashing hell from his gut, experimenting with the vocal textures emerging from his throat. His vocal work on Thronium Vrondor’s latest album “Drowning in the Distorted Light” highlights his passion for live performance and what he calls the creative process.
In an interview with Daniel Ryan a few years ago, SvN added Danzig, Dead Can Dance, and Neurosis to his list of influences. While “Drowning in the Distorted Light” presents Thronium Vrondor as stripped down to their abrasive, dissonant core, elements of doom, ambient, atmospheric, and post-metal styles are slowly becoming integral to their sound. This is evident not only in SvN’s experimentation but in the unsettling hubbub that permeates much of the material, especially in the guitar and bass.
From the opening section of “A Solemn Vigil,” an ominous mood sets in, like fog drifting into a darkened environment. Hypnotic rhythms and sharp guitar harmonics give way to controlled fury, threatening to descend into chaos at any moment. Inventive tremolo picking propels the chord-heavy composition forward. The menacing atmosphere introduced at the start reappears throughout the album, enveloping the listener in blackness. Moments like the brief intro of “Gruwlijke Leegte” lend a chilling realism; the relentless triplet rhythm resonates with gloomy harmonics and an underlying dank atmosphere, giving much meaning to the album’s title.
For an album with tendencies of calling back Mayhem’s “Wolf’s Lair Abyss” and Marduk’s “Heaven Shall Burn When We Are Gathered,” “Drowning in the Distorted Light” fuses avant garde climate with profanatory severity so closely you can tell Thronium Vrondor have had a lot of practice channeling both into their songwriting. The way they deliver rawness with atmosphere is an ideal backdrop for the way SvN makes his nuanced vocals flow and overlap, almost as if multiple vocalists were hired for the recording sessions. The echo added to the vocal tracks match the contrast between the guitar and bass lines.
“Drowning in the Distorted Light” sometimes evokes the raw intensity of Mayhem’s “Wolf’s Lair Abyss” and Marduk’s “Heaven Shall Burn When We Are Gathered,” blending avant-garde climates with profane severity. Thronium Vrondor’s experience in how seamlessly they combine these elements into their songwriting is evident, as rawness is fused closely with atmospheric layers. This creates a fitting backdrop for SvN’s nuanced flowing, overlapping vocals as if multiple vocalists were hired for the recording sessions. The echo added to the vocals enhances the contrast between the haunting contrasts between many of the guitar and bass lines.
In my opinion, the most promising track illustrating the band’s direction is near its end: “To Burn the Absolute,” featuring a guest appearance by Ars Veneficium bassist/vocalist S. This is the coldest, most dissonant track, with sharper tremolo picking, more menacing effects and relentless blast beats, and dual vocals making it the most immersive song here. "Skulptur Aus Fleisch" serves as a kind of epilogue to the carnage you've experienced, reserved for when your mind has been completely eroded. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
SvN: Vocals
Vrondor: Guitars, bass
Crygh: Drums

Track list:
1. A Solemn Vigil
2. Drowning in the Distorted Light
3. Gruwlijke Leegte
4. Cursed Salvation
5. All Spears Point Towards the Hunter's Moon
6. Zalvende Haat
7. To Burn the Absolute (ft. S. / Ars Veneficium)
8. Skulptur Aus Fleisch


Tuesday, April 14, 2026

Full Length Review: Emily Rach Beisel "Sumptuous Branching" (Amalgam) by Dave Wolff

Artist: Emily Rach Beisel
Location: Chicago, Illinois
Country: USA
Genre: Experimental
Full Length: Sumptuous Branching
Format: Digital album, limited edition 12” vinyl
Label: Amalgam (Chicago, IL, USA)
Release date: April 10, 2026
It’s not metal, it’s not rock, it’s not synth-electronica, though in the case of the latter, Emily Rach Beisel’s use of electronics, wind instruments, her own voice, and what’s called “extended techniques” creates soundscapes that cleverly blend electronic, organic and atmospheric elements. She seems to give birth to resurrected demons, unleashing them from an endless sea of cyber-hallucinogenic water that exists only in memory, with sounds never before heard in recorded history.
In what nameless, bottomless subterranean hell did these demons reside before they were brought into existence? We may never know for certain, as Beisel’s compositions stem from fleeting moments of inspiration lost in time, with no clear place in the grand scheme. Her second full-length album, “Sumptuous Branching,” begins with the haunting, ethereal mantra “You won’t find me…,” suggesting her ideas originate in a secret place known only to her, only to dissolve again into the ether.
Practically speaking, Beisel’s inspiration draws from the writings of Sun Ra, Homer, Guillaume de Machaut, and Mark Z. Danielewski. Co-produced with Bill Harris, the album particularly echoes Danielewski’s 2000 horror novel “House of Leaves,” which is described as immersive and disorienting. The novel is a metafictional journey featuring layered, intricate ideas about a labyrinth discovered inside a family’s home. Its multi-perspective theme seems to have influenced Beisel’s songwriting, not as a mirror to the soul, but as a door or window into a world that’s both realistic and surreal.
Balancing imagination, ambiguity and personal interpretation, “Sumptuous Branching” offers chant throughout its ever-changing musical landscapes. The album shifts from one section of the labyrinth to another, refusing to define itself with any single theme. This approach keeps listeners uncertain of what path they’ll take next, where they’ll end up, or what entities might be waiting around the corner, smiling sweetly and inviting you onward.
The promotional video Beisel created for “Catilovers” showcases the natural beauty of her work on a broader scale. Filmed in a single take, it captures the ambiance of being there, every sound recorded as if you were present during filming, surrounded by strategically placed, otherworldly lighting. Strange camera angles evoke “The Twilight Zone” and “The Outer Limits,” while the instruments seem to come at you from all sides, plunging you inescapably into Beisel’s world. –Dave Wolff

Track list:
1. Introit
2. To Rise In Arms
3. Cantilevers
4. Hollow Ships
5. Her Still Singing Limbs
6. We Who Behold the Bright Surface
7. Sumptuous Branching

Thursday, April 9, 2026

Single/Video Review: Mindlapse "Rage of Masses" (Ragebreed Records) by Dave Wolff


Band: Mindlapse
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Melodic death metal
Single/video: Rage of Masses
Format: Streaming
Label: Ragebreed Records
Release date: January 18, 2026
Besides her involvement with Lake of Dreams, Karina Sher is the frontwoman of Mindlapse and builds on their melodic death metal roots by blending gritty vocals with increased melody and fluent hardcore/rap metal elements. Their website bio cites Angela Gossow, Cristina Scabbia, and Tairie B as vocalists relatable to her. Active since 1996, a time when underground metal was beginning to reach new heights of originality, Mindlapse has had ample opportunity to incorporate progressive and gothic metal elements for atmosphere, technical proficiency, and a spooky edge, finding a direction to explore freely.
Sher’s commanding presence in Lake of Dreams’ video, “Hold Me,” showcases beauty within darkness and order within disorder. A duality reflected in Mindlapse’s stage performances, energizing their shows with an emotional balance between existential dread and inner catharsis. Their promotional videos for “Visions,” “Haunted,” “The Prophecy,” “Love My Hate,” and “Risen” visually represent each song in story form, exemplifying why critics across rock, goth, and metal communities regard their long period of experimentation as noteworthy.
Unlike “Hold Me,” which uses nature imagery to depict its story, Mindlapse’s videos feature nightmarish images of violence and trauma, images seemingly buried in the unconscious but suddenly dragged into the light. “Rage of Masses” has thematic ties to Sher’s upcoming film project (which I discussed while reviewing “Hold Me”), with the druidess lead character undergoing a transformative journey to hell, not as damnation but as a rite of passage. It parallels the idea of confronting challenges and undergoing profound change, a central theme in the film.
In hell, she witnesses the souls of fallen soldiers engaged in a battle with demons, where the stakes are either redemption or eternal damnation. As life, death, and salvation intertwine into a single concept, she uncovers the secret of redemption through spirit guides and spiritual warriors who came to comprehend and master darkness without losing their core essence. This is a pivotal moment in Sher's story, serving as a crucible that prepares her for future conflicts in the realm of the living.
Through this ordeal, she learns to become a more resilient healer. The chaos of her environment, her rite of passage, and her unwavering commitment to her true self are embodied in her songwriting (performed by John Mitchell), which merges powerful guitars, raw and ethereal vocals, and subtle piano melodies to symbolize her external terror and inner resolve. The song soars to great heights and plunges into the darkest depths of the underworld, with immersive qualities that evoke a visceral desire to experience the druidess's journey as vividly as possible. Transcending music and film, this project could be a significant step in metal’s evolution. –Dave Wolff

Tuesday, April 7, 2026

Single/Video Review: Lake of Dreams "Hold Me" (Ragebreed Records) by Dave Wolff

Location: Leicester
Country: United Kingdom
Genre: Folk
Video/single: Hold Me
Format: Streaming
Label: Ragebreed Records (distributed through Earache Records)
Release date: December 29, 2025
Karina Sher, frontwoman of the UK melodic death/groove metal band Mindlapse and founder of Ragebreed Records, launched Lake of Dreams as a visionary project. As the vocalist of Mindlapse, her style is reminiscent of bands like Otep, Arch Enemy, and The Agonist, but she has also explored deeper, more personal facets of her artistry. Her motivation for creating Lake of Dreams was to develop a conceptual fantasy project that transcends traditional music and film by merging haunting melodies with cinematic storytelling.
Since 2022, Sher has released a self-titled EP and four promotional videos. Her latest, “Hold Me,” uses music and film to explore the ephemeral and spiritual aspects of nature, mysticism, and existence. It demonstrates her ability to intertwine sound and imagery into a cohesive tapestry. “Hold Me” is a short film that reflects both the light and dark sides of her personality, relying on her voice and folk music composed by John Mitchell. The film breaks the fourth wall through compelling visuals and emotional intimacy.
The opening scene’s tranquil, mystical setting is enhanced by serene guitars, which quickly shift to tension and apprehension. The story introduces two characters on opposite sides of a conflict, a druidess and a king’s knight tasked with killing her, infusing a fairy-tale-like narrative. Unlike traditional fairy tales that only hint at the villain’s danger, “Hold Me” presents well-rounded characters, offering multiple perspectives. The carefully crafted guitars and vocals convey the compassion and doubt experienced by both characters. The theme centers on unresolved longing, lingering long after the story ends.
Based on Sher’s bio, it seems this ending is intentional, as the four videos form part of a larger narrative that will include a full-length film and a screenplay. The film will expand on the story told in the videos, incorporating spoken word passages, dream imagery, and symbolism to complement the deeply spiritual folk music that forms the foundation of her video singles. Sher and Mitchell’s musical and visual work has piqued my interest in how the final film will turn out. Since they are in the earliest stages, this project holds the potential to evolve into something truly profound. –Dave Wolff

Sunday, April 5, 2026

Full Length Review: Corrosion of Conformity "Good God, Baad Man" (Nuclear Blast Records) by Dave Wolff

Band: Corrosion of Conformity
Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
Country: USA
Genre: Doom rock, southern rock
Full length: Good God, Baad Man
Format: Digipak CD, vinyl, digital
Label: Nuclear Blast Records
Release date: April 3, 2026
I've been a fan of Corrosion of Conformity since their socially and politically charged era; “Eye for an Eye,” “Animosity,” “Six Songs with Mike Singing” and “Technocracy.” These releases established their sound and helped lay the groundwork for hardcore punk in the 80s. In the 90s, they shifted toward a traditional doom rock style, finding their niche and beginning a long process of reinvention.
When I heard their longstanding lineup; drummer Reed Mullin, bassist Mike Dean, and guitarist Woody Weatherman; was ending their late 2000s hiatus to perform live and record again, and that they were considering reforming as a four-piece with guitarist/vocalist Pepper Keenan, my interest was reignited. After they released “Corrosion of Conformity,” “IX” and “No Cross, No Crown” (featuring Keenan), Mullin passed away in 2020, and Dean left the band in 2024. Weatherman and Keenan began writing with a new lineup to do Mullin’s memory justice.
Realizing they’d accumulated a diverse collection of songs, more than could fit on a single album, they decided the best path forward was a conceptual double album. Thus, “Good God, Baad Man” was born. Each song, crafted with patient delivery and gritty production, was written in casual circumstances that reflected the mood of the band at the time.
Drawing from Beatles-like psychedelia, Black Sabbath-style doom, stoner metal, southern rock, rhythm and blues, post-punk and something entirely new for them, the album is unified by the raw sound engineered by Warren Riker, who has experience producing Cathedral, Down, and Fugees.
The band’s improvisational approach, sometimes improvising between songs, gives the album a lived-in, edgy and infectious feel. Several writers pointed out songs that spoke to them on different levels. For me, one was "Run for Your Life," one of the album’s longer songs. Evolving organically from doom rock, it bore similarities to Jimi Hendrix, Ted Nugent, Pink Floyd, The Obsessed, Bongzilla, and Cathedral. Difficult to categorize, it showcased the band’s potential for continued evolution.
Another experimental track, "Asleep on the Killing Floor," also resonated with similarities to Pearl Jam, Soundgarden, Butthole Surfers, and Black Sabbath. "Surviving the Amplified" featured unexpected turns, hypnotic melodies, and background vocals inspired by soul music, evoking Saint Vitus at times. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Pepper Keenan: Guitar, vocals
Woody Weatherman: Guitar
Bobby Landgraf: Bass
Stanton Moore: Drums

Track list:
1. Good God?/Final Dawn
2. You Or Me
3. Gimme Some Moore
4. The Handler
5. Bedouin's Hand
6. Run For Your Life
7. Baad Man
8. Lose Yourself
9. Mandra Sonos
10. Asleep On The Killing Floor
11. Handcuff County
12. Swallowing The Anchor
13. Brickman
14. Forever Amplified




Friday, April 3, 2026

Mini Album Review: Cryfemal "Puro Carbón" (Immortal Frost Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: Cryfemal
Country: Spain
Genre: Black metal
Mini album: Puro Carbón
Format: Jewel case CD, vinyl, digital (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: February 28, 2025
"Puro Carbón" is Cryfemal’s latest release, following their 2023 full-length album, "La Gran Victoria Del Mal." If you’ve heard that album, you may recall its profound depth and atmospheric richness, evoking sensations of descending into hell’s deepest recesses, immersed in a tempest of searing heat and unquenchable flames. Minimal songwriting deviations created a massive layered sound reflecting Spanish occultism, which involves hidden traditions, Catholic superstition, medieval legends, and European paganism.
The lower-tuned seven-string guitars enhanced the portrayal of eternal damnation, subjecting you to an unending fall while infernal fire and tormented screams intensified and converged, reaching an agonizing crescendo. The lower scales conveyed unfathomable darkness; tremolo picking resembled flames licking and melting flesh from bone; the thick atmosphere depicted furious winds relentlessly buffeting you; and the shrieking vocals rose from the depths, promising endless torture at the inevitable terminus.
With their new outing, Cryfemal pushes themselves to surpass the chaos they crafted previously. However, if you’re expecting an exact copy of their last album, your expectations may be subverted. If "La Gran Victoria Del Mal" was like paying a visit to hell and back, then "Puro Carbón" is being irrevocably possessed by all the devils of hell, embarking on a spree of calculated violence.
"Puro Carbón" features less atmosphere and shorter track durations, with a slightly refined sound and streamlined, precise musicianship. The energy and focus they previously channeled into creating a vast atmosphere are now redirected into fitting greater violent intensity into the shorter tracks. The push toward chaos needed to represent this is as tangible as the sensations of being roasted, flayed, and suffocated in that realm below the ground, but Cryfemal makes it easy to discern the form of their tremolo picking and the manner in which they shape their arrangements.
The raspy vocals, instead of being high-pitched, carry a harrowing edge, searing into your mind like countless condemned souls loosed to take control, urging you to vomit forth fire as the volcano erupts. The lyrics, poetic, conveyed through those rasping, harrowing vocals, evoke a solitary, isolated mood, leaving it open to interpretation whether the narrator is experiencing a delusional psychotic break or truly connecting with occult secrets, such as those linked to the Spanish occultism mentioned earlier.
This is just my personal interpretation, but for me, it amplified the psychotic qualities that accompany the occult-themed lyrics, creating a sense of uncertainty about what’s truly happening as you listen to the album. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Ebola: Vocals, guitar, bass
Guayota: Drums

Track list:
1. Atlantico Caos
2. Guadana Alzada
3. La Muerte Masturbada
4. Sonambulo Profanador
5. Satan Autista
6. Panteon Mental
7. Sangre De Deceso
8. Karma Invertido
9. Nobrac Orup

Tuesday, March 31, 2026

Single Review: Kommunion "Rebel Thing" (Xenomorph Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: Kommunion
Country: USA
Genre: Experimental
Single: Rebel Thing
Format: Digital
Release date: July 19, 2025
Kommunion merges a quasi-futuristic goth aesthetic with an arena-sized sound, offering new perspectives on sexuality through music, defying preconceived ideas of what dark music can be.
Their ambitious debut single “Rebel Thing,” created by vocalist Azul Far and musician/producer Sebastian Komor, was designed to be grand. Not only in scope and cross-genre appeal but with massive venues and high attendance in mind, comparable to the likes of Kiss and Rammstein. Their combined experience in The True Union and Komor Kommando, respectively, goes beyond blending styles; it pushes the boundaries of imagination and accessibility.
The guitar-driven electro of the track, adding industrial, EDM, metal, pop, German electro-pop, dancehall, and trip-hop, supports raw, dark vocals with pop diva presence and confidence. Komor remains in the background while Far embodies the visual direction they pursue together. Her future-noir aesthetic, showcased in the cover art, is somewhere between Blade Runner, Hellraiser, and The Fifth Element. However, this visual style makes only a modest statement compared to her contribution to the single.
Her cadence in the verses and choruses steadily partners the diverse beats and atmospheric layers, radiating primal woman power. A sensual desire lies beneath, suddenly erupting with brief rasping vocals and quickly shifting back to seductive melody. This unpredictable style is a vehicle for open-ended lyrics blurring the lines between love, desire, and masochism, with notable religious undertones referencing the serpent in Eden.
Enhancing the canorous, stringent songwriting, Far simultaneously explores themes of fulfillment and shame, inviting listeners to interpret their dichotomy. As Komor’s instruments thrum and pulse like a cybernetic heart pumping fluid through an organic body, the lyrics craft an edgy narrative. It guides you through a initial act of rebellion, submission to inner desires, the duality of heaven and hell, a gradual descent into mortification, and ultimately, a final surrender to forbidden evil.
Following the single is an instrumental version that offers a different kind of edginess. Where Komor’s parts previously rose and fell like waves around Far’s vocals, this version shifts the focus to the electronic and atmospheric sounds, highlighting their nuances and rich variety of textures.
The trip hop elements in the original version function as effectively as straightforward electro and EDM in the instrumental. This demonstrates considerable potential for the band, as two versions of the same track can sound so radically different, highlighting their versatility and range. -Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Azul Far: Vocals and lyrics
Sebastian Komor: Music and production

Track list:
1. Rebel Thing
2. Rebel Thing (Instrumental)

Friday, March 27, 2026

Full Length Review: Mara "Sword of Vengeance" (Immortal Frost Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: Mara
Country: Sweden
Genre: Pagan black metal
Full length: Sword of Vengeance
Format: Digital album, digipak CD, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: June 27, 2025
Three years after “Loka Mær,” Swedish black metallers Mara revive the old crypts and uncover what lies within on “Sword of Vengeance.” The band maintains their raw approach, recording lead vocals live in the studio to craft a deliberately underproduced sound that heightens its gritty atmosphere, evoking the agony of a reanimated mind trapped in a stiffening, rigor mortis-ridden body.
In my review of “RÖK,” I observed how modern recording technology, when used skillfully, can authentically capture rawness and even make it presentable. The eight tracks on Sword of Vengeance initially required multiple listens to fully sink in, but now they convincingly evoke the lo-fi aesthetic of early black metal, from a time when bands had limited budgets and resources to work with, relying on rawness they produced as their defining trait. The enduring popularity and inspiration of this approach are evident, as Mara’s sophisticated simplicity continues to evolve toward greater darkness and decay.
There's palpable atmosphere functioning as a backdrop to the pervasive rawness. Hints of Swedish black metal reinforce the rot and decay, subtly supporting the overall sense of physical deterioration portrayed here. The material’s writing, performance, and recording evoke a visceral sense of cold as the crypt door swings open, the stench of centuries of rot, and the corpse that calls this crypt home. You can feel it, smell it, see it, even feel his physical and mental pain as his movements are hindered by the effects of time on a dead body.
The layers are organically crafted through the searing harmony of power chords and tremolo picking, the relentless combined drive of bass and drums, and the anguished, agonized quality of the vocals, all of which deepen the album’s dehumanizing atmosphere. One reviewer compared Mara to Czech black metal bands like Maniac Butcher, which makes sense since their obscurity allowed them to push their raw quality to the extreme in the mid-90s. However, despite the prominence of Mara’s raw sound, their recent albums demonstrate that it's not a limitation on them.
There are quite a few moments when they show how capable they are of transcending their rawness when needed. The band cleverly leverage the intensity of their blast, crafting guitar parts as soporific as they’re sharply incisive. This allows Mara to captivate the listener like modern-day snake charmers, amplifying their tortured visceral qualities with narcotic ingenuity. -Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Vindsval: Vocals, guitars, bass
J: Guitars
P: Drums

Track list:
1. Primordial Son
2. Nidingr
3. Elite
4. Lokabrenna
5. Élivágar
6. Blakkr Heart
7. Urkraft
8. Surtaloga

Wednesday, March 25, 2026

EP Review: Fulci "Risorsero dalla Tomba e Fu… L’Apocalisse!" (20 Buck Spin) by Dave Wolff

Band: Fulci
Country: Italy
Genre: Death metal
EP: Risorsero dalla Tomba e Fu… L’Apocalisse!
Format: Digital, 12” vinyl
Label: 20 Buck Spin
Release date: March 20, 2026, May 1, 2026 (vinyl)
In 2024 the Italian giallo death metal band Fulci continued their tradition of homaging Italian cult horror with “Duck Face Killings,” a loose tribute to director Lucio Fulci’s classic “The New York Ripper.” Released in 1982 as a low-budget exploration of madness and murder, some of its graphic murder scenes were not too well-presented but had an impact on independent cinema and helped to shape Italian horror, gore, and splatter.
At the time, having an indie horror film banned outside Italy for being too provocative was a mark of distinction. The increased sexual and violent content of “The New York Ripper” led to its ban in the UK until 2002. Inspired by the raw, primal, stripped-down style evident in most of Fulci’s films, the band sought to tap into that energy. Despite limited budgets, fans recognized how much art Fulci created with scarce resources, helping to redefine cinema.
Having homaged “City of the Living Dead,” “Zombie,” and “Voices From Beyond,” and recorded an anthology at Florida’s Morrisound Studios to establish their presence in the birthplace of US death metal, they made an album some say surpasses the movie in its detailed murder scenes, vividly capturing the killings and the killer’s state of mind. To build their reputation, the band launched Fulcicon to highlight Fulci’s status as a visionary among his Italian fans and horror and death metal enthusiasts worldwide, in 2025.
This year the band will premiere the trailer for “Risorsero dalla Tomba e Fu… L’Apocalisse!,” an indie short directed by Domenico Montixi for which they wrote a soundtrack. Drawing from “City of the Living Dead” and the obscure 1975 Fulci film “The Four of the Apocalypse,” the short is a spaghetti Western involving paranormal themes. Set in Dunwich, England, in 1980, the teaser evokes a cold, harsh, foreboding Quentin Tarantino-like atmosphere, creating timeless dread as two people stumble upon something they probably shouldn’t. Despite its half-minute runtime, it leaves an impression making viewers eager to see what’s found.
In the soundtrack the band aims to capture not just the sound but the essence of Fulci’s movies. The scores by Fabio Frizzi and Francesco De Masi, though crude, rough-hewn, and under produced, dug into the malevolence and psychosis Fulci brought to the screen, bringing out the dark depths from which they emerged. The three songs on Fulci’s EP made me want to watch those moves again, as they return that otherworldliness to life for a new generation of metal and horror fans more than forty years later.
The eerie atmosphere, the sense of confinement, the foreboding feeling of impending doom, the hint of unleashed evil… everything conveyed on screen is reflected in how the songs were composed. They sound like they were crafted by a band deeply immersed in those themes of Fulci’s films, intuitively capturing the mood and emotional intensity. The full production creates a rich, immersive atmosphere, with a clear sound that emphasizes the pervasive presence of evil lingering in the air, lurking beneath the ground and hiding in the deepest mysteries.
A suffocating sense of dread permeates everything from the intro through the next track, which begins with an ominous tri-tone reminiscent of Black Sabbath and continues with crushing riffs, guttural vocals, and unsettling lead guitars. The band also covers “Apoteosi del Mistero” from the “City of the Living Dead” soundtrack, reworking it to fit the EP’s sound and adding lyrics to showcase the potential they recognized in the original piece from their first viewing of the film. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Jason Dahlke: Vocals
Fiore Stravino: Vocals
Dom Diego: Lead guitar, synthesizer
Ando Ferraiuolo: Acoustic and rhythm guitar
Klem Diglio: Bass
Edo Nicoloso: Drums

Track list:
1. Risorsero dDlla Tomba e Fu… L’apocalisse!
2. Paura che Uccide
3. Apoteosi Del Mistero


Friday, March 20, 2026

Full Length Review: Neurosis "An Undying Love for a Burning World" (Neurot Recordings) by Dave Wolff

Band: Neurosis
Location: Oakland, California
Country: USA
Genre: Post metal, sludge
Format: Digital album
Label: Neurot Recordings
Release date: March 20, 2026
It’s been a decade since we last heard from Neurosis. After the release of “Fires Within Fires,” certain sensitive issues involving their former frontman Scott Kelly surfaced and the band took an extended hiatus. I won’t go into details, but said issues were so serious that Kelly was asked to leave the band and retired as a vocalist and musician.
As sudden as their departure, their re-emergence was marked by a new vocalist, a new album, and a scheduled appearance at the Fire in the Mountains festival in Montana this July. From what I’ve read so far, the band is being welcomed back enthusiastically. “An Undying Love for a Burning World” aims to speak to listeners at the center of their being, demonstrating Neurosis’ ongoing relevance to post-metal and sludge.
The album introduces Aaron Turner, head of Hydra Head Records, who was the frontman of the post-metal band Isis and has worked with Sumac, House of Low Culture and Old Man Gloom and made guest appearances with the Japanese experimental band Boris. According to the band, past albums like “Enemy of the Sun,” “Through Silver in Blood,” “A Sun That Never Sets” and “The Eye of Every Storm” were made to be emotionally charged, serving as a cathartic outlet to purge tensions felt more personally than usual.
For many, they offer a form of catharsis from sensory overload from an increasingly insane society that seems more out of control. With all his experience, Turner brings a level of energy that matches the energy generated by the band, which has steadily increased in terms of the angst and frustration channeled into their work. There’s more than ever a desire to experience the sensation of sanity slipping away, wearing away, and to examine its causes more closely.
The evolution toward de-evolution and a breakdown of conventional songwriting mark a step forward for Neurosis’ revamped lineup. The band has always been adept at using cover artwork to hint at what awaits inside. This time the ever-expanding black hole on the cover, a portal into complete mental and emotional oblivion, primes you for the chaos and disorder that grips you from the outset, only to grow and intensify.
The heightened levels of distortion, dissonance, diatribes of division fostered upon humans shouted until throats are raw and hoarse, abrupt transitions to atmospheric passages, jarring shifts to nightmarish keyboard sections, strange noises and a barely restrained unraveling of structure defines Neurosis’ music more powerfully than I remember from them. Even so, there’s a strange sense of compelling beauty that accompanies all that chaos, as if the loss of sanity is a transformative journey, a trial by fire from which you emerge with a sense of inner peace and acceptance, having separated yourself from the overwhelming pressures that pushed you toward mental collapse.
As the band has described, the writing and recording process acted as a form of purging and purification, a means to reclaim some semblance of sanity after the hellish realization of how much of yourself you had lost beforehand. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Aaron Turner: Guitars, vocals
Steve Von Till: Guitars, vocals
Noah Landis: Synthesizers, backing vocals
Dave Edwardson: Bass, backing vocals
Jason Roeder: Drums

Track list:
1. We Are Torn Wide Open
2. Mirror Deep
3. First Red Rays
4. Blind
5. Seething and Scattered
6. Untethered
7. In the Waiting Hours
8. Last Light

Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Full Length Review: Sidious "Malefic Necropolis" (Immortal Frost Productions) by Dave Wolff

Band: Sidious
Location: London
Country: England
Genre: Black metal
Full length: Malefic Necropolis
Format: Digital, digipack CD, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Immortal Frost Productions
Release date: January 30, 2026
Since they formed in 2012, Sidious has released an EP and four full-length albums; “Malefic Necropolis,” released this past January, is their latest.
This is black metal delivered with occasional atmospheric sections, spacey and somewhat industrial in nature. My first impressions of the music were of billions upon billions of microbes massing in Earth's orbit, preparing for a mass invasion of a scale beyond imagination. It evoked something like “Invasion of the Body Snatchers,” only the microbes descend to Earth through the air itself and turn the human race while they’re awake.
Of course, this is not what Sidious had in mind while writing and recording the album, but with their lyrical ideas, something unspeakably malevolent is descending on earth and the utter destruction of the human race seems inevitable all the same, until all that remains are corpses and the maggots eating them, then going on to feast on the corpse of the earth.
Although some comparisons were drawn to Cradle of Filth and Hecate Enthroned, I was somewhat reminded of Mayhem, Watain, Marduk, and Carpathian Forest. Originating in the UK, Sidious has been refining their black metal with a distinctive British flair, earning acclaim for their 2022 full-length, “Blackest Insurrection.”
Their style is intricate, complex, and enigmatic, yet accessible and not prone to be mired in misanthropy grandiosity Instead they envelope their ability in an aura of occult mystery that invites listeners to dive deeper. As much as their songwriting, their atmospheric pieces I was talking about, more like interludes, show that Sidious is far from a stagnant paint-by-numbers black metal band. They’re one of those bands that skillfully adjust their abilities to suit each song’s needs. The differences are subtle but make all the difference in the big picture, adding depth and nuance to the overall experience.
In most cases, the energy they establish at a song’s outset builds and intensifies through subtle variations, ultimately culminating in a sense of suffocation where life itself is extinguished Reflecting on the mood they evoked while composing the album, imagine that gradual sensation of suffocation spreading across the world, inexorably pressing down until all life everywhere is extinguished.
Featuring guitars that blend complex dissonance with thrash and groove, astringent vocals balanced by haunting background vocals and spoken word passages, drums that adapt to the evolving moods of the songs, and bass that anchors everything with enough prominence to evoke the presence of a massive cosmic serpent enveloping the world, “Malefic Necropolis” portrays the apocalypse from fresh angles, offering perspectives that reinforce the ever-changing corpse-painted face of black metal. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Isfeth: Vocals
Indomitus: Guitars, backing vocals
Baalrath: Bass
Valdr: Drums

Track list:
1. Shears of Atropos
2. Rotborn Terror (ft. Völniir)
3. Inversion and Collapse
4. Cosmossuary
5. Grave
6. Crows Atop the Gallows
7. Vortex of Boundless Unlight
8. Sanguineous Art
9. Bloodlust Command Infinite

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Full Length Review: Osmium Gate "Cannibal Galaxy" (Independent) by Dave Wolff

Band: Osmium Gate
Location: Salt Lake City, Utah
Country: USA
Genre: Black metal
Full length: Cannibal Galaxy
Format: Digital album
Label: Independent
Release date: March 13, 2026
Osmium Gate from Salt Lake City, Utah offers a fresh perspective on black metal, composing instrumental pieces with raw, atmospheric, melodic, and symphonic elements. The songs on their debut full-length album “Cannibal Galaxy” are instrumentals that tell stories without lyrics or vocals, relying on guitars, bass, and drums to communicate with the listener. This approach to black metal lifts its limitations, allowing them to express themselves and embellish their ideas.
When guitarist/bassist Drew Ehrgott began writing for this album, he had concepts in mind he felt could be expressed rather than lyricized. In an interview the band did for Off Shelf, he said he channeled emotion into the material through a stream-of-consciousness process, adding that this gave him more inspiration than he would have had otherwise and helped him complete the album with expedience.
What most makes his project stand out is that Ehrgott essentially does the work of three or four band members, filling roles as guitarists, bassist, and frontman. Handling lead and rhythm guitars, he works overtime to fill the void left by the absence of vocals and lyrics. The appeal of “Cannibal Galaxy” lies in the fact that the material was born from sudden inspiration, without overthinking or overplanning.
Such was the strength of what he created that he felt he only needed a competent drummer to complete the recording, rather than a full band. Relying on each other in relative isolation and sharing a common vision helped them reach into the infinite within themselves.
Ehrgott plays an almost unlimited amount of lead passages in these songs, often overlapping parts within a single part. There’s a real sense of traveling through the cosmos with nothing but your own consciousness to keep you company, feeling your awareness expand ever outward, perpetually opening and reaching out until it becomes one with the infinite. If this could be expressed in novel or movie form, the closest analogy would be what David Bowman experienced in “2001: A Space Odyssey.”
As the drummer, Rene Gomez plays a crucial role and goes all out to keep pace with Ehrgott. You can hear him playing harder and louder to give the material additional push, working harder than usual to complement Ehrgott’s intricate, complex songwriting. His blast beats and drumming are written and arranged around the guitar riffs, and he’s given free reign to accentuate his playing and help make the music sound more epic with as many fills as he deems appropriate.
It's unclear whether “Cannibal Galaxy” will ultimately revolutionize extreme metal, but at the least it’s opening doors for bands to experiment. It’s likewise apparent that Osmium Gate has only scratched the surface of what they’re capable of. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Drew Ehrgott: Guitar, bass
Rene Gomez: Drums

Track list:
1. Waters of Natron
2. Sailing Stone
3. Booming Dunes
4. Whale Fall
5. Nacreous
6. Blood Rain
7. Cannibal Galaxy
8. Lights Over Hessdalen

Saturday, March 14, 2026

Full Length Review: Monstrosity "Screams from Beneath the Surface" (Metal Blade) by Dave Wolff

Band: Monstrosity
Location: Florida
Country: USA
Genre: Death metal
Full length: Screams from Beneath the Surface
Format: Digital, vinyl (see Bandcamp link for more information)
Label: Metal Blade
Release date: March 13, 2026
Since their formation in 1990, Floridian death metal pioneers Monstrosity have remained dedicated to their craft, demonstrating resilience and growth.
As part of the original DM scene, they had the distinction of being fronted by vocalist George “Corpsegrinder” Fisher who later joined Cannibal Corpse after Chris Barnes’ departure. Although most of the original members left since they began, introducing new members has revitalized them exponentially.
After seven years of inactivity, “Screams from Beneath the Surface” shows massive growth on their part with shades of thrash, prog and symphonic metal. Rather than making efforts to out-brutal noted DM pioneers with the same longevity they take other sub-genres of metal, attach them to their traditional formula, brutalize them and forge their own evolutionary path.
The band underwent a meticulous process of recording and producing at different studios with Jim Morris (Savatage, Iced Earth) and Jason Suecof (Deicide, The Black Dahlia Murder). The lines between those subgenres disappear as if Monstrosity had always been a prog-death-thrash band.
Understanding the importance of developing song structure, band and producers paid special attention to balancing fury and finesse. The brutality is there, but this time it’s not their be-all-end-all; it less regimented as people might think as it naturally allows for more melody and dexterity to enter the picture, especially where the symphonic flavored solos.
The techniques of DM, thrash and classic metal are so tightly fused together it almost sounds like a new subgenre is being pioneered here. I’d go so far as to say “Screams from Beneath the Surface” compares as much to Testament and Kreator as to DM mainstays, and as such takes another leap toward validating DM’s capacity for advancement.
The band’s maturity comes from their giving each other equal room to contribute to the material, as much as the band and those who worked on the production. The bass tracks, mixed just enough to contribute color to the material, enhance the guitars with the notes they hit. The percussion, reminding us of the band’s DM roots, likewise allows license for the band to elaborate and expand. By accident or on purpose, the close knit method by which everyone worked together gives the material something present in greater quantities than you would have expected: heavy emotion.
Before joining Monstrosity as vocalist in 2021, Ed Webb worked with Massacre, Diabolic, and Fleshreaper, Here he emphasizes his years of experience in DM and death-thrash vocals, projecting an old school tone from the gut to deliver clipped lines and sustained growls, employing his vocal cords to articulate each phrase. This technique, occasionally flavored with high-pitched howls, establishes presence over the complex instrumentation behind him.
Taking its own direction without following any guidelines, “Screams from Beneath the Surface” is a push for Monstrosity to be given credit for their role in US death metal and validated the band’s determination to stay in the game. –Dave Wolff

Lineup:
Ed Webb: Vocals
Matt Barnes: Guitars
Justin Walker: Guitars
Mark van Erp: Bass
Lee Harrison: Drums

Track list:
1. Banished to the Skies
2. The Colossal Rage
3. The Atrophied
4. Spiral
5. Fortunes Engraved in Blood
6. Vapors
7. The Thorns
8. Blood Works
9. The Dark Aura
10. Veil of Disillusion