May 092024
 

(We present Christopher Luedtke‘s review of a new release from the Canadian noise grinders Holy Grinder, which is set for release tomorrow.)

The fourth full-length from Toronto, Ontario’s Holy Grinder is an ugly, mangled, heavy, spattering of noise, grind, sludge, and chaos packed into thirteen minutes. Though one lucky person is gonna get all that on cassette in a vat of piss. See their Instagram for further details, but that’s beside the point for the rest of us.

Holy Grinder has been at it for the better part of eight years and has a fair few releases under their belts since their 2016 inception. They have done splits with the likes of Christian Lovers, Agathocles, Sete Star Sept, Fetus Deletus, and more in addition to singles. Now almost four years to the day after Divine Extinction, the band is unleashing their latest full-length, 10 Desecrations. Continue reading »

May 092024
 

(Andy Synn beats the drum for the upcoming new album from Tzompantli, out next week)

A great many people have spent a lot of time arguing, both online and off, about the answer to one of life’s most fundamental questions.

Namely, “what is heavy?”

Some people say it’s chunky chugginess or pounding, pneumatic rhythms, while others will point to chordal density, or claustrophobic atmosphere, or even pure emotion, as the true source of “heaviness”.

But, as it turns out, the answer is far, far simpler than that – the answer is Tzompantli.

Tzompantli are heavy.

Continue reading »

May 082024
 

(Our Denver-based friend Gonzo has turned in the following review of the debut album from the French metallic hardcore band Sorceror, which is out now on Delivrance Records.)

Don’t look now, but something big is happening in France.

And no, this time it’s not protesters burning down half of Paris after the government tried to raise the retirement age, but the big thing I’m referencing might as well be the soundtrack to exactly that. Continue reading »

May 082024
 

(DGR has detoured off most of our well-beaten paths to bring us his review of the latest offering from the Norwegian band Gothminister, which was released late last week by AFM Records.)

I recently crossed the twenty-year mark of following Norway’s Gothminister, the result of an initial missing of the musical bus years ago and then a hurricane-force tour through their specific music scene way back in 2004 – courtesy of a gentleman I used to play Twisted Metal 2 PC online with. Having been sent “The Holy One”, it was difficult to not get hooked on Gothminister‘s hybrid of dancy-electronics and industrial metal.

It’s a hybrid that has held on strong too, even throughout a good-sized handful of lineup shifts over the course of the band’s career. They’ve become a comfort-food band for me, the music not overwhelmingly challenging and metal enough to scare the ‘normies’ among us but otherwise digestible near-pop in its assault. Sing-song worthy with a march to them, Gothminister have been a group that – for me anyway – are a tremendous amount of fun in their embrace of camp and caricature.

Since we have a little bit of free space in the release calender there was a goblin-esque part of me that declared ‘what if you did manage to get them on to the front of the site?’, knowing full well they’d likely be spaced in between death metal heavy enough to collapse buildings or black metal sharp enough to scrape concrete smooth. “What if…,” said goblin proclaimed, “we just reviewed the group’s most recent release even though there’s been little to no mention of them before on the site?”

“But it’s a sequel album,” I said. “We’ve never even covered the first Pandemonium“. “Even more funny,” stated goblin-DGR, “because now people have to wrap their heads around the idea of Pandemonium II: Battle Of The Underworlds with little to no explanation or context of what preeeded it”

And alas, here we are. Continue reading »

May 072024
 

“Not all black metal must be about Satan. There’s plenty of bands who can be obscure and straight-to-the-point with a peculiar image and, of course, very powerful music.”

That is how the Dusktone label announced the debut album from the Swiss black metal band Vígljós, and indeed, it is not about Satan. As signified by the album’s title itself — Tome I: apidæ — it’s about… bees.  But there aren’t many bands who could have made an album like this one. Continue reading »

May 072024
 

(Andy Synn presents four albums from April which you may well have overlooked)

Depending on when you’re reading this there’s a pretty good chance I’ll be several thousand feet in the air, on my way to link up with the rest of the NCS crew for this year’s edition of Northwest Terror Fest.

As a result of this we’re probably going to have a quieter week than normal, posting-wise, but should still be able to get a few reviews, interviews, and assorted round-ups published to keep you all entertained (assuming you’re not also at the festival with us).

For my part, as well as a review of the new Tzompantli (which I’ll probably be working on during the flight) I’ve chosen four more artists/albums from last month – taken from a not-so-short-list that also included the likes of Antichrist Siege Machine, Carrion VaelExistFull of HellInter Arma, and Karst – for another edition of “Things You May Have Missed”.

And, hey, if you didn’t miss them… why not check out some of the other names I just mentioned instead?

Continue reading »

May 062024
 

The phraseology of “diving into” a record is intended to capture the idea of an auditory experience in which your mind is quickly surrounded by the music.

Sometimes you want to get out of the stream and towel off as quickly as possible, left cold or, worse yet, finding the waters skin-temperature and drab. Or you might get pulled deep by heavy undercurrents, making it difficult to get even your head to the surface.

Or you might experience the thrill of discovering that the waters are shark-infested, and a leg that was once attached to you has just been chewed off, leaving the waters red and frothing as the horde of other predators begin joining the feast.

That’s the kind of dive you should prepare for in Submit Or Death, the EP from New Zealand’s Just One Fix that we’re premiering today in advance of its May 10 release. Continue reading »

May 062024
 

(We start a new week at our site with DGR‘s enthusiastic review of the new album by the Anglo-Finnish prog metal band Wheel, released late last week by InsideOut Music.)

Normally we try to keep the veil up when we cover a group, to keep the author’s personality out of the writing but in this case I feel that I have to place my neck on the chopping block in order to justify this one. If you’ll indulge more of my wanderings out of the metal world for a bit, let’s take a journey with the band Wheel.

Our history with this progressive rock/metal group is a long one. The Finnish/English combination have been hanging around the rafters of the NoCleanSinging halls for a bit now, largely due to my own fandom for their album Moving Backwards. Since then, I’ve tried to get a post or two up about them whenever they have something new to offer and in that time we’ve covered their album Resident Human – one of two albums to reference Heinlein’s writings that year – and their recent-ish EP Rumination, which was released upon them signing to major progressive rock label InsideOut.

The group’s combination of heavier metallic sounds, progressive rock, and yes, even some heftier guitar bending of the djent variety at times, is one that has allowed the band to create both short songs verging on radio rock with plenty of hooks and longer progressive numbers that have many times pulled back the curtain on shared similarities with the band Tool. Even with this in place there has always been room for Wheel to surprise, and that is still the case when it comes to the group’s newest album Charismatic Leaders. Continue reading »

May 052024
 

I don’t have as many different things to share with you in this week’s edition of SHADES OF BLACK as I usually do, mainly because I’ve devoted most of my time to expressing detailed thoughts about a forthcoming record which I’ve found to be one of the most gripping black metal albums I’ve encountered so far this year.

After that, I’ve included a couple of recent singles that I also hope you’ll enjoy, both of which are fore-runners to eagerly anticipated albums that I haven’t yet heard in full.

DØDSFERD (Greece)

We’ll begin with the first two songs you can now hear from Wrath, the forthcoming 12th album by Dødsferd. The album’s title shares the name of the band’s founder and also describes the emotional energy that fuels much of the music. Continue reading »

May 022024
 

(Andy Synn descends into the depths of the new album from Germany’s Naxen, out tomorrow)

As I’ve said before, the Black Metal scene today – in all its myriad forms – is in such rude health that it seems like you can’t go more than a day without stumbling over a fantastic new artist or album to fall in love with.

The downside of this, however, is that with so much quality material on offer – from the rawest to the proggiest, and everything in between – it’s getting harder and harder for bands to stand out and make themselves heard.

But it’s clear that Naxen have been hard at work themselves over the last few years, carving out their own particular niche – somewhere between the hypnotic intensity of Mgła, the infectious energy of Woe, and the gloomy despondency of Ultha – where they can plant their seeds, nurture them, and watch them grow.

And the fruit of their labours – which we have the distinct pleasure of premiering for you all today – is their new album, Descending Into a Deeper Darkness.

Continue reading »