Islander

Oct 302024
 

(We present Didrik Mešiček‘s review of the newest album by Psychonaut 4, which was released on October 25th by Immortal Frost Productions.)

Georgia (or Sakartvelo as the Georgians call it) is the country you may know as the birthplace of Stalin or as the country that invented wine. You win some, you lose some, I suppose.

Personally, I’m not a fan of either but it is a country I’m definitely going to at some point, as it looks absolutely beautiful with its lovely mix of high Caucasus mountains and the shores of the Black sea. But because that makes Georgian life look too positive here’s another Georgian export – the depressive suicidal black metal band, Psychonaut 4, whose new album was released on the 25th of October. Continue reading »

Oct 292024
 

(written by Islander)

Let’s dive right into the video and song we’re premiering today from Descent Into Lunacy, the debut album of the Swedish death metal band Cryptorium, and then come back to fill in the details.

Horrid Exultation” is the name of the song, and that title is the epitome of truth-in-advertising: There is not one thing about the song that’s sane, not one thing amenable to reason or mercy, only the kind of demented and frenzied viciousness that spawns ghastly visions — and a finale that brings horrors of a different kind. Continue reading »

Oct 292024
 

(written by Islander)

Our beloved Metal-Archives (well, beloved by many, despised by others) still calls the music of Pennsylvania-based  Veilburner “Black/Death Metal”, even after a run of six albums released so far, culminating in 2022’s VLBRNR, that throws bombs in the midst of such genre conventions, coupled with lyrical formulations that are no more conventional than the music.

M-A is to be forgiven for so rudely simplifying the band’s musical eclecticism in their expressions of fury and disgust over humanity’s self-mangling. Especially after VLBRNR, we’d drown in hyphens and slashes trying to incorporate all the musical ingredients the band have so freely thrown into the mix in musically rendering the recurrent absurdities of human existence.

M-A is also to be forgiven because Veilburner‘s eclecticism isn’t scattershot. They do have their anchor-points in death and black metal, like the bolts that connect a swaying bridge to its rocky endpoints above a chasm, the bridge they race across in ways both dizzying and dazzling (and frightening) without pitching headlong into a flailing descent with no good end.

The history built by those first six albums makes the impending release of a seventh one a signal event, with intrigue being a chief part of the anticipation: What have they done now? We already have signs, because two album tracks have surfaced so far, and now we bring a third one to your attention. Continue reading »

Oct 292024
 

(We present DGR‘s review of the new album by Gaerea, released on October 25th by Season of Mist.)

Portugal’s Gaerea are a smart band. Early on in the group’s inception someone within the band’s lineup recognized the value of both visual aesthetics and theatricality in their music. The group existed as part of a mid-aughts wave of black metal and doom metal groups that quickly took to the anonymization of masks and robes – so that even though the band could claim that the focus was to be put more on the music, you were more than likely drawn to the visual spectacle as well.

Gaerea have been perfectly positioned to both react to and become part of current trends within the heavy metal sphere. You could say there’s luck involved but many of their movements have been remarkably shrewd as well. They could be treated from an “every second tells a story” perspective, as both musically and visually there is always some sort of bombastic movement happening, the hand dancing and wild contortions befitting a Microsoft Kinect Game slowly evolving to hold just as much importance as the music itself.

And, while many bands can and have gotten by on just sheer spectacle and imagery – and have done so fairly well – it helps that Gaerea‘s music has long matched the lunatic puppetry taking place onstage. Continue reading »

Oct 282024
 

(written by Islander)

“The Australian band Tyrannic have already established themselves as a weird and wild force to be reckoned with, harnessing together elements of classic doom and savage black metal, but not really beholden to any genre constraints in their haunting and harrowing explorations of Death and what lies beyond.”

That’s how we began our premiere of a song from Tyrannic‘s second album Mortuus Decadence almost exactly three years ago, an album we called “a fierce and frightening leap forward from what they’ve done before.”

And now, three years later, we return to Tyrannic with another song premiere, this one the title track to their new album Tyrannic Desolation that will arrive on November 22nd via Iron Bonehead Productions. Have they made another leap forward? Well, as today’s song will clue you in, concepts like “forward” and “backward” may be inapplicable to the current music of Tyrannic, which instead often seems to leap way off any mapping of directional coordinates.

But “weird” and “wild” are adjectives that definitely still apply — in spades — and you definitely won’t forget that “desolation” is right there in the song’s name. Continue reading »

Oct 282024
 

The attractions of gore to the modern human mind are deep and abiding. Visual representations of disembowelment and dismemberment long pre-date the advent of moving pictures, but of course film provided a vivid and still-thriving new medium for the rendition of disgusting torture and unhinged slaughter. Representations of gore in greater and lesser degrees of specificity have also fueled both fiction and non-fiction writing, as well as photography and the graphic arts.

And of course fixations on the degradation of the human body in other ways have gone hand-in-hand with depictions of gore, both real and imagined — degradations such as those caused by disease and post-mortem decay, implemented by the array of tiny creatures for whom our flesh grudgingly provides host-bodies and nourishment.

And of course, as lovers of extreme metal well know, our collective fascination with gore and bodily degradation extends beyond the art-forms mentioned above. It extends to and inspires the making of music, the more frightening and repulsive the better.

Undoubtedly, scholars of various stripes have attempted to explain why human beings are so morbidly fascinated by these subjects. We can’t be bothered to verify this, or investigate the theories, at least not today, because today we celebrate the fact of it, as represented by the music of a death metal band from Staten Island, New York whose name leaves no doubt about their inspirations: Festergore. Continue reading »

Oct 272024
 

(written by Islander)

I guess it’s obvious from the size of this weekend’s two-part Saturday roundup that I had more than the usual amount of NCS time yesterday and this morning, and therefore kind of lost my mind.

I have only a small amount of mind and time left at this point, so today’s SHADES OF BLACK is so brief it could be labeled a token effort. But I didn’t want to skip it altogether, especially because, although the recommendations are few in number, they still loom large in the remnants of my head. Continue reading »

Oct 272024
 

(written by Islander)

Moving on from yesterday’s Part I of the usual weekend roundup, I’m starting with the next letter of the band-name alphabet and continuing through W (no X, Y, or Z bands in this collection).

I mentioned yesterday that I had a few complete releases in this collection, in addition to all the singles, but I realized that one I thought had come out on Friday isn’t actually out yet, so I’ll push that one to a subsequent weekend.

But the first band today does have a complete release to their name, and it’s an interesting one. Continue reading »

Oct 262024
 

(written by Islander)

We’re creeping toward the end of 2024, not too far away from the time when the denizens of our miserable site and the visitors who come slumming here will begin focusing on year-end lists. But there’s still more than two months to go before we ring in 2025, and a lot of new music is still coming out, and will come out.

I was brutally reminded of that fact when trying to sort out what to recommend today, especially because a short vacation prevented me from making as big a compilation last week as I usually do. By the time I had sorted out what I thought would be worth exploring with you today, I had 16 picks, far too many to cram into a single column.

So, I divided this giant collection into two parts. Rather than try to figure out what kind of musical flow might make sense, I took the easy road and alphabetized everything. This post is roughly the first half. Roughly the second half will arrive tomorrow, barring some personal catastrophe. And I have ambitions to bring forth another SHADES OF BLACK collection tomorrow as well, but we’ll see. Might be a case of biting off more than I can chew.

In the meantime, chew on these choices. Most of them in this two-parter are singles, but with a few complete releases in the mix. Continue reading »

Oct 252024
 

(written by Islander)

The black metal band Nigrum was born in 2015 in Cuernavaca, the lush capital of the Mexican state of Morelos, but eventually found its way to a new home in the south of Sweden. The years that followed ultimately culminated in Nigrum‘s 2022 debut album Elevenfold Tail, and now they’re following that with a second full-length, appropriately titled Blood Worship Extremism, which will be released next month by Iron Bonehead Productions.

Nigrum‘s music, as it now stands represented through the new album, is as viscerally electrifying as anything you’re likely to find this year. The songs often provide tremendous surging power, barbarically unhinged vocals, and fleet-fingered, fire-bright fretwork that’s devilishly elaborate and ecstatic. But they also spin listeners through changes that strengthen the music’s iron-clawed grip.

You’ll see what we’re trying to get at when you hear the relentlessly dazzling song we’re premiering today — “Ineffable Empire“. Continue reading »