Jun 022026
 

(written by Islander)

Once again we find ourselves in the fortunate position of helping Everlasting Spew Records announce their release of a jaw-dropping new album. This time it’s the third full-length from the Minnesota-based purveyors of “Digressive Death”, Nothingness.

The name of the new album is Godslaughter, and it follows Hollow Gaze of Death (2019, Independent) and Supraliminal (2023, Everlasting Spew Records). Our friend Gonzo reviewed that second album for us, summing it up as “a dizzying, uncomfortable, and overall suffocating experience in interdimensional sonic terror.”

You could guess from the name of the new album (and the cover art) that Nothingness haven’t backed away from the nightmarish hostility of their musical conceptions. If anything, they have doubled-down. Here’s how Everlasting Spew previews the experience: Continue reading »

Jun 022026
 

(written by Islander)

Ill winds usually blow no one any good, or so the old saying goes, though in its earliest expression (before the meaning morphed) the writer John Heywood actually suggested that a wind unlucky for one person would bring good fortune to another. In the case of the Peruvian band Illwind, they have brought good fortune indeed through their debut album The Unfolding at the End of Light, which will be released on July 3rd by Personal Records.

Almost anyone who has come across the circulating press materials for the album is bound to be intrigued. For one thing, they disclose that the Illwind quartet includes members of such bands as Reino Ermitaño, Cobra, Arcada, and Argul. For another thing, the music is described as having an “idiosyncratic personality”, one steeped in aspects of traditional doom but also branching out in unexpected directions — such as closing the record with a cover of The Stooges’ “I Wanna Be Your Dog”.

And then there’s this: Continue reading »

Jun 022026
 

(Once more we dig into DGR’s pre-festival archive of writings and today bring forth his review of a new album by the Sweden death metal band Absurdeity, which was released in February.)

This part of the year is one of our great opportunities to play catch-up with all the releases that we had absorbed into our collections over the years. The rivers are always overflowing on that front so it can seem a bit random, but the grab bag and shotgun approach has led to some wild weeks in terms of what we post around here. This one in particular is likely no different, and thus we take advantage of the time afforded to us to catch up with Sweden’s Absurdeity and their new album We Came, We Sawed, We Conquered.

Absurdeity is the project of Project Hate mainman Lord K. Philipson and long-running conspirator Jörgen Sandström, an exercise in creating straightforward and brutally focused death metal – in stark comparison to the expansive and humongous works that’ve taken place within the bounds of The Project Hate.

It is a wonder that K. Philipson has anything left in the tank after the multitude of year-over-year releases and ten-plus-minute songs that’ve been the hallmarks of his other project. But, there is something to be said to setting boundaries for yourself, and in the case of Absurdeity the goal was to create something raw and violent, and that is how we approach the aforementioned new album — as a collection of nine raw and violent songs that thankfully keep things concise and impactful, never straying anywhere over the four-minute mark. Continue reading »

Jun 012026
 

(written by Islander)

No one in their right mind would leap headfirst into a broad pool of water without knowing whether the landing spot is shallow or deep, toxic or pure, devoid of swimming creatures or loaded with toothsome things that would attack out of sheer vicious reflex.

But that’s what we invite you to do now, without a moment’s careful reflection — to leap headfirst into a song off Atavistic Unraveling, the second album by Costa Rica’s Astriferous that’s now set for co-release by Me Saco Un Ojo and Pulverised Records on June 26th. Continue reading »

Jun 012026
 

(written by Islander)

You might see the band whose music is the subject of this premiere identified as Conflux. But the complete name is The Conflux Collective, so-named mainly because the two musicians who initiated the project wanted to bring in a diverse group of extreme vocalists to accompany their compositions.

Those two musicians — drummer, composer, and producer Tommy McKinnon (Derelict, Akurion, ex‑Neuraxis, ex‑Augury) and guitarist Chase Fraser (Continuum, ex‑Decrepit Birth, ex‑Animosity) — conceived the band after a chance reunion in a Montreal fast‑food joint following a King Diamond show on 2016. In fairly short order they wrote and recorded a debut EP named The Inception, which included a different well-known Canadian death metal vocalist on each song, utilizing the talents of Cryptopsy vocalist Matt McGachy, Beneath The Massacre vocalist Elliot Desgagnés, and Mike Disalvo of Coma Cluster Void, Akurion, and ex-Cryptopsy.

The Inception received an enthusiastic response around various corners of the web (including here at NCS), but various life circumstances led to a long period of dormancy for the project. However, Tommy McKinnon made the wise decision to revive it, the results now encompassed on a debut album titled In the Wake of Saturn that’s set for release on June 19th.

As press materials describe it: “Armed with unreleased material from Fraser and a determination to finish what they started, [McKinnon] rebuilt the album from the ground up, writing new songs, reconstructing arrangements, recording all bass tracks by ear, and crafting lyrics drawn from deeply personal turmoil, transformation, and catharsis.”

And of course McKinnon also revived the idea of including different vocalists on the songs. It’s a hell of a collective: Continue reading »

Jun 012026
 

Recommended for fans of: Celeste, This Gift Is A Curse, LLNN

Call them what you will… Sludge, Post-Metal, “Negative Hardcore”… there’s no question that this band, by any other name, would still sound just as dark and heavy.

That name, by the way, is Erdve, and the band in question hail from the balmy Baltic shores of Lithuania, a country which – despite its relatively small stature on the global metal stage – has also given us the likes of SisypheanAortesJuodvarnis, Luctus, Awakening Sun, and many more.

And with the recent release of their thrilling third album, Epigrama, last week now seemed like the perfect time to take a deep dive into their discography courtesy of The Synn Report!

Continue reading »

May 312026
 

(written by Islander)

This is the final edition of SHADES OF BLACK.

The final edition of May 2026! (Sorry if I made you gasp – but I hope I did.)

The last day of May marks the end of Spring in the northern hemisphere, at least if you use the common meteorological definition of the season. In astronomical terms, it won’t until June 20th this year, the day before the summer solstice.

Today is also the 151st day of the year in the Gregorian calendar, which means that 41.37% of this year is over. Not exactly a memorable percentage, and not really far enough along for us to be taking stock of anything. We won’t reach the halfway point until noon on July 2nd.

And that’s nearly all I have to say by way of introducing this column today, other than this: Continue reading »

May 302026
 

(written by Islander)

Here we are again, another day of difficult decisions. Even after the modest head-start I got a couple of days ago, I still found myself staring at dozens of links on my list of new songs and videos.

DGR compounded the problem by popping up two days ago with another half-dozen I hadn’t yet noticed. My fellow writers around here don’t often suggest things for this roundup (maybe they take pity on me), so when they do, I try to pay attention. Hence, half the songs in today’s collection were among DGR’s suggestions.

Two of the songs he proposed include (gasp) singing, but I knew from past experience with the bands that it would be good, even if I didn’t foresee that it would vary from what I thought I’d be hearing.

As a counterweight, I’ve filled out the post with sounds from beastly and blowtorch throats. I also made the usual effort to include a genre-variety of songs (though I pushed off a lot of the black metal to tomorrow’s column), because no one but me likes everything, do they? Continue reading »

May 292026
 

(written by Islander)

The worst years of the covid pandemic were in many ways a truly terrible time, although it often seems like for many people it has already become a distant memory. But that’s often the way memory works, when forgetting bad times becomes a survival mechanism, or at least eases the way forward.

But it’s equally true that the pandemic years yielded unexpected opportunities for creative activity that otherwise wouldn’t have existed, or would have existed in very different forms. The band we’re focused on in this article is one such example of that.

Temple ov Ahriman is a one-man black metal band hailing from Austin, Texas that was conceived during the Covid-19 pandemic. Its mastermind Thornicator explains what happened: Continue reading »

May 292026
 

(written by Islander)

For the second year in a row we’re premiering a song by Ka’aper, a collective of musicians who now call Cyprus their home. It is happening for a second year in a row because Ka’aper have quickly followed their 2025 debut album While Flows the Nile with a second album titled When Gods Walked the Earth that’s set for release on June 12th by Satanath Records.

As described by the label, the new album encompasses “ten heavy and melodic stories about life and death, love and betrayal, the fleeting and the eternal,” moving “between visions of ancient mythology and reflections on the present day seen through its prism.”

For those visitors here who are familiar with While Flows the Nile, the new album includes similar musical ingredients, but with further variations and iterations. Some might call it melodic death metal, some might use the more amorphous term “dark metal”, but it’s probably better for us to use the song we’re premiering today as a more concrete representation of Ka’aper’s musical proclivities. Continue reading »