Apr 202026
 

(written by Islander)

On April 23rd the Armenian black metal band Rahvira will have their latest album in a 20+ year career jointly released by Holy Mountains Music (Yerevan, Armenia), Underworld Echoes Records (Greece), and More Hate Productions (Russia), with official distribution by Satanath Records (Georgia). The album’s title is In the Darkness of Silence (“Լռության խավարում”).

Once again the band’s founder Tigran Rahvira is the sole songwriter, and the lyrics are again in Armenian. We’re told that the texts “explore the search for personal and national identity, the idea of struggle, reflections on life and death, and the necessity of spiritual rebirth.”

What we have for you today is the premiere of the second song to be revealed from the album so far, and its name in English is “Eternal War” (Հավերժական Պատերազմ). Continue reading »

Apr 202026
 

(written by Islander)

“Formed in late 2023 on Chicago’s northside, VOW draw from the melodic and emotional intensity of European death metal greats such as Eucharist, Gates of Ishtar, and Dawn, merging those influences with the urgency of hardcore and the metallic edge of the NWOAHM.”

That’s part of the introduction provided by press materials we’ve received for Vow’s debut EP, Death Will Be My Bridge, which they describe as their “first definitive vision of mournful, forlorn melodic death metal, crafted for dark nights and darkened skies”. Those materials also include statements by Vow guitarist Aaron O’Neill, including this:

While working out the new material I was very conscious of what our peers were doing and where we may or may not fit in. Ultimately, I grew tired of worrying what others would think and just wanted to create something memorable that would hopefully stand on its own regardless of what was happening around us.

I do not disguise my influences; without name-dropping there are flourishes of melodic death & black Metal, epic doom, heavy metal, USPM, and 2000s metalcore often all within the same song. My goal for this record was to weaponize our affinity for these styles in an original way that makes sense and is true to us.

As an even more immediate representation of Vow’s multi-faceted dynamics, what we have for you today is the premiere of the EP’s powerful title song in advance of the record’s May 15 release by Iron Fortress Records. Continue reading »

Apr 202026
 

(Andy Synn stares blindly into the abyssal realms… and is very pleased by what stares back)

It probably shouldn’t (I know how the game is played, after all) but it still rankles with me whenever I see bands getting major deals, support slots, etc, based on who their members are rather than the quality of their music.

At the same time, however, when bands we love here at NCS break up – and in this case we’re talking about Vermont-based Prog-Sludgers Barishi – I’m always happy to keep an ear out for whatever their members do next.

Does this make me a hypocrite? Probably. But I comfort myself with the thought that there’s at least a qualitative difference between, say, a major festival giving a so-called “super-group” a slot before they’ve even released any music and a site like ours trying to keep up with the careers of some of our favourite underground artists.

Hypocrisy or not though, the debut album from Ordh demonstrates exactly why it’s so important to keep track of this level of talent, wherever they end up.

Continue reading »

Apr 202026
 

(We present Comrade Aleks’ interview of Gregory Person from the Breton black metal band Möhrkvlth, whose new album Gwenojennoù An Ankounac’h is set for release by the Antiq label on May 5th.)

In the eight years since the release of their first album, the French band Möhrkvlth has seen almost a complete lineup change. However, this hasn’t stopped the new members from following the masterplan of the band’s lead guitarist Gregory Person, and another full-length work entitled Gwenojennoù An Ankounac’h is here. Their atmospheric black metal with notes of depression, lyrics in Breton, and very light hints of traditional music influences may be considered as authentic, and indeed it’s one of the most interesting and memorable black metal discoveries of this spring.

Antiq Records focuses on albums with stories behind them, and so do I, thus let me introduce you to Möhrkvlth further through this interview with the band’s founder.

Continue reading »

Apr 192026
 

(written by Islander)

I mentioned yesterday that I had collected 69 new songs or complete releases as a starting point for deciding what to recommend in this weekend’s usual columns. After yesterday’s selections that magic number had diminished, but not enough to make today’s choices any easier. Still, choices must be made.

I can’t identify any musical or thematic throughline for these six recommendations, so you’re in for a fair amount of bouncing around. I do have reasons for why I arranged them in the order I did, but I doubt those are very interesting so we should just get to the music.

P.S. I want to recommend something else today besides music. After a long time of anxiously waiting for the movie Sirāt to hit streaming services, I was finally able to watch it last night (it never played at any theaters anywhere close to where I live). I thought it was a stunning as the many stunned reviewers said it was. Be forewarned: it’s a desolate and devastating story, one that creates a shroud of near-ever-present tension. But it’s also a near-perfect piece of filmmaking, and if you see it I don’t think you’ll forget it. I’ll leave this link to a more comprehensive review.

P.P.S. These lines appear on the screen when the movie begins, and explain the meaning of its Arabic title: “There is a bridge called SIRĀT that links hell and paradise. Whoever crosses it is warned that it is narrower than a strand of hair, sharper than a sword.” Continue reading »

Apr 182026
 

(written by Islander)

As I often do, I made a list of links for new songs and videos I wanted to check out in anticipation of this Saturday’s column, i.e., things that had surfaced or that I had noticed since last weekend. Having done that, I counted the number of links, and there were 69 of them (I swear that number is completely coincidental!), including a few I noticed for the first time this morning. It wasn’t even a complete list; I had a bunch of other tabs open on my desktop that I didn’t add to the list because I knew time was running short.

I recognize this is odd behavior. Why make a list that long when you know you won’t make it through even a quarter of the items? Why make a list that long when you know it will only knot up your brain in deciding which of them to check out? I have no answer, though perhaps a trained therapist would have some theories.

As usual, I resorted to impulse. The only calculated part of the process was a desire to mix up bands I already like and others that were new to me, and a further desire to mix up the genres so that visitors here will be at least somewhat caught off guard if they move from one choice to the next and the next. Continue reading »

Apr 172026
 

(written by Islander)

The origins of the phrase “elevator pitch” are murky, but the meaning isn’t. It refers to someone describing an idea to someone else who doesn’t have long to listen, or doesn’t want to give you much time. You’ve got the length of an elevator ride to get your point across and sell it.

In our field, record labels, publicists, and artists make elevator pitches too, usually in writing. Some are better at it than others. Sometimes the elevator pitch for a band’s music tells you pretty much all you need to know in deciding whether to check out the goods, especially when a band’s music isn’t much more complicated than a couple of quick paragraphs can capture. But sometimes the elevator pitch really doesn’t tell you (and can’t tell you) everything that makes the music worth hearing.

Which brings us to the New Zealand band Vaeovon and their debut album Spiritual Nullification. Continue reading »

Apr 172026
 

(For the Dead, released in March on Remorseless Records, is the first full-length from the Canadian death-doom entity Rötual, and what follows is Comrade Aleks’ interview of band-member Nicolas Miquelon.)

Since the release of the Canadian Norilsk’s first album, I haven’t missed a single one of their albums, and at some point I noticed that their guitarist Tom Hansen and vocalist Nic Miquelon, alongside their comrades Ben Bertrand (bass) and Mike Berrigan (drums), had formed a side project called Rötual. Over the course of a couple of years, the project grew into a band and recently released their first full-length album.

While Norilsk has taken liberties with the doom genre throughout their career, allowing for various experiments in related areas, Rötual strictly adheres to quite traditional death-doom. The men have invested expertly in the material and managed to successfully include virtually every element in the album For the Dead, from short bursts of lead guitar to its massive and dirty riffs, from growling parts to brief passages of clean vocals – and all in all it works and hooks.

The band’s ideology adheres to a pernicious, deadly canon, as evidenced not only by the cover and the album title, but also by track titles like “Mycelium,” “Worms,” ​​and “To Live Is to Rot,” which I adore for its mournful, clear-voiced chorus. At the same time, For the Dead doesn’t feel particularly decadent – ​​it’s clear that the band approached the work creatively, not simply taking the framework of ’90s death-doom but transforming it with their own ideas. As always, there’s hope that such a move as an interview may draw more attention to the band, and here we are to spread the word For the Dead together with Nicolas Miquelon. Continue reading »

Apr 162026
 

(written by Islander)

This isn’t the first time we’ve premiered music from the Italian death-dealers in Helslave. We did it twice in 2021 in the run-up to their second album, From the Sulphur Depths, which we predicted (pretty accurately) would “become a huge favorite for fans of massive, marauding, deliciously gruesome old school death metal”.

And now here we are, five years later — five years of unpredictable and tumultuous change in the world at large, including a global pandemic that maliciously chose to explode right about the time when Helslave’s last album dropped. It would be surprising if Helslave itself had not undergone some change of its own, and in fact it has — a very exciting change — because the band have themselves a new vocalist in the person of Enrico H. Di Lorenzo from Hideous Divinity and Eyeconoclast.

We are also very pleased to announce that Helslave have recorded a new EP that’s projected for digital release on May 8th, and we have for you today the premiere of its first single, “Burning Rebirth“. Continue reading »

Apr 162026
 

(Andy Synn offers up three more prime Brtish exports for you to enjoy)

Like I’ve said before, we like to keep you guessing here at NCS, which is why after spending the start of the week covering riff-happy ragers from At The Gates and Inherit the Curse I’ve decided to dedicate the end of the week to three UK-based bands who err more towards the expressive, progressive, and/or atmospheric side of the musical spectrum.

Continue reading »