Islander

Aug 092025
 

(written by Islander)

It’s unlikely I will be able to write a SHADES OF BLACK column for tomorrow, due to conflicting weekend plans with my wife. So I’ve made this Saturday roundup a big one, and I’ve included a greater-than-usual number of black metal bands.

I decided to put a shiny bauble at the top of the group, hoping that it might lure some people to dig deeper into the pile before realizing they’ll get cut up by all the sharp objects underneath. Which is to say, there’s really nothing like Amorphis waiting for you later on. Continue reading »

Aug 082025
 

(written by Islander)

Gaze upon the cover art for Henere‘s new album The Chosen Path and you’ll begin to get a sense of the music, through the artwork’s portrayal of ice and snow, of ancient battle-death and looming peaks, of dark clouds and strange spiraling brilliance. The music itself conjures those same visions, and more, as you’ll discover today through our premiere of a song from the album named “Winds of Eldritch North” in advance of the record’s co-release by Void Wanderer Productions (Netherlands) and War Productions (Portugal) on September 19th.

For the new album (Henere‘s first full-length following a pair of EPs), founder Wretch (vocalist and multi-instrumentalist) was again joined by guitarist Blood clot and bassist Lament. As the labels describe, this U.S. band’s new music “captures the force and mournful grandeur of black metal shaped by cold winds, ancient myth, and the weight of destiny…. Carefully placed synth passages rise like distant signals through the snow, adding atmosphere without overtaking the storm.” Continue reading »

Aug 082025
 

(written by Islander)

For the second time this week I found myself with enough spare time to pull together a week-day roundup of recommended new music and videos, getting a head-start on the usual Saturday collection.

Like the one I sorted out for Wednesday, today’s collection includes some very well-known names but also foists upon you a couple of comparative obscurities to help even things out (and by my lights the most interesting song — and the strangest one — in today’s group comes from one of those lesser lights). Continue reading »

Aug 072025
 

(written by Islander)

Little more than a month ago we had the pleasure of premiering the jaw-dropping first single off Revelation In Purity, the debut album from the U.S. death metal band Imperishable, which is set for an August 29 release by Everlasting Spew Records. Today we’re happy to premiere another high-octane song from the album, this one aptly named “Spewing Retribution“.

If you haven’t already been introduced to these marauders, Imperishable started in 2020 as the brainchild of guitarist/vocalist Brian Kingsland (from Nile and Enthean) and bassist Alex Rush (Olkoth, Enthean). They later completed the recording lineup with the addition of famed drummer Derek Roddy (of Hate Eternal, Malevolent Creation, and too many other bands to name). Continue reading »

Aug 072025
 

(Denver-based NCS writer Gonzo prepared the following extensive report on this year’s edition of the Fire in the Mountains festival. All photos except where noted by Jacob Juno.)

Like more than a few who will read this, the experience of the 2022 Fire in the Mountains festival left an indelible mark on me. That July weekend in the Tetons, now over three years in the rearview mirror, gave more than just a weekend of music in the wilderness to everyone in attendance. It took what easily could’ve been a risky one-off experiment and turned it into something decidedly different. Its success can be measured entirely by the community it built over those three unforgettable days.

Some of it was the incredible lineup, which included Enslaved, YOB, Wolves in the Throne Room, Wayfarer, and many others. Still more of it was the beautiful setting just outside Grand Teton National Park. But so much beyond that felt intangible, as if any human tongue lacked the words necessary to describe how it felt to be there.

I thought about all of this as I finished packing up my Subaru to the brim with camping gear two weeks ago. The wait was over. After three long years of uncertainty, the Fire in the Mountains festival would finally be making its triumphant return in a new place, rife with the potential for new beginnings.

And even though I didn’t know it at the time, the 2025 edition of this festival would not only obliterate every expectation I had for it, but it would signal the dawn of a new kind of heavy ceremony, paving the way for yet another weekend for which I’d struggle to find the words to describe.

The following recap is me trying anyway. Continue reading »

Aug 062025
 


Hooded Menace photo by Pasi Nevalaita

(written by Islander)

Today is another rare day when we have no premieres on our daily calendar, and we only had one on Monday and one on Tuesday. This seems to be just a brief ebb. Next week we have either two track premieres or an album premiere slated for every day. Other premieres are already scattered across the calendar through the rest of August and into September.

But in light of this week’s ebb, I used the free time to pull together the following mid-week roundup of recommended new songs and videos. This one might lean into a greater share of bigger names than usual, but I have also sling-shot a few into the mix that will even out the notoriety scale. Continue reading »

Aug 052025
 

(written by Islander)

Whiz-bang can only carry an extreme metal guitarist so far, especially in a modern era marked by what one of our writers is prone to call the “tech death nuclear arms race,” in which blistering speed and near-inhuman dexterity have become main marks of competition, often leaving actual songwriting melted in the wake of the blast fronts.

And that brings us to the subject of Oregonian Matt Miller. He has earned a reputation as a death metal shredder par excellence, on top of his reputation as an award-winning producer and engineer. He built that reputation in part through a flurry of solo instrumental albums and EPs released from 2021 to 2023.

But with his new album Fiber Tormentum, forthcoming from Exitus Stratagem Records in September, it is entirely fair to say that Miller has reached a pivotal moment in his musical evolution, with new ambitions made evident and new stylistic ingredients impressively melded together. We have vivid signs of this in the song from Fiber Tormentum we’re presenting today through a video premiere. Continue reading »

Aug 042025
 

(written by Islander)

Twelve years after their full-length debut Neverwards, and five years following their Eons of Attrition EP, the Italian black metal band In Corpore Mortis are returning with a second album named Umbræ Ignis that’s now scheduled for co-release next month by Satanath Records and Wine and Fog Productions.

One song from the new album has already debuted, and today we’re premiering a second one. Both of them are representations of supernatural evil, both of them insidiously infectious as well as frightening, and they both reveal other facets of chilling mood, including shades of ghostly gothic horror. Continue reading »

Aug 042025
 

(We present Comrade Aleks‘ interview of Nicolas Miquelon from the Canadian band Norilsk, whose new album Antipole is out now on Hypnotic Dirge Records, accompanied by photos credited to Nick Richer.)

Canadian Norilsk was deliberately named by the band’s ideologist Nicolas Miquelon in honor of the most densely populated city beyond the Arctic Circle. Nicolas, who is familiar with Russian culture firsthand, wanted the name to reflect the harshness of the North. Norilsk initially embodied this idea in death-doom, but over time they enriched the musical landscape with elements of sludge and post-metal.

Let’s take the title track of their new album Antipole: it seems to obtain the spirit of ’90s death-doom, but Norilsk go beyond it, avoiding to step too far into well-known post-metal territory at the same time. “Antipole” is atmospheric doom metal, but there is something strange, atypical, and at the same time naturally revealing the essence of the genre. In “D’ombre et de glace (l’asphyxie)” Norilsk progress further: there is a lot of growling, a lot of thematic transitions.

But “Locus Sanctus” shows that this is not the limit: the rolling riffs are preceded by a dark acoustic intro with clean declamation, and Nicolas continues the story further, replacing the whisper with a growl. Solemn, upset riff cycles alternate with solo guitar interludes and acoustic themes, until a melody of a cosmic scale bursts into the narrative. The aggressive contrast of “Nunataks” seems unusual for Norilsk, but the name comes to the rescue here. “Nunatak” is a rocky peak surrounded by ice in the language of the Inuit, and the stubborn, rebellious melody justifies the name. It helps to get through the death-doom hummocks and the pumping mid-tempo post-doom hit “La fonte”; Norilsk know how to surprise.

Everything ends, however, with the dirge “Un chant pour les morts”, nothing can be done about it – “a song for the dead”. Not everything is clear about the album, and as a good tradition – I offer you this interview with Nicolas Miquelon, another good chat about good music. Continue reading »

Aug 032025
 

(written by Islander)

I have bit off more than I can chew. All five of today’s picks are complete albums or EPs. I have listened to a couple of them a couple of times and others only once. A good reviewer would only write about one or two of them, and do so thoroughly and after considered reflection. You’ll have to go elsewhere for that kind of coherent professionalism. Here, you’ll just find a dude jumping up and down, waving his arms and yelling “Listen to this!

I put them in alphabetical order by band name because I couldn’t figure out a better way to arrange them as step-wise progressions of sound, and because my brain was already overloaded by what I bit off. Continue reading »