Dec 302025
 

(Here we present our Comrade Aleks’ interview with Saїmon Ramov, frontman of the Siberian black metal band ILLA, whose new albnum Dialogue was released this past September.)

Born in Novosibirsk two years ago, ILLA claimed to be quite an active project as it took just one year to give a birth to the first full-length, Sarva-Saktan (2024), and one more year was spent on finishing the sophomore work Dialogue, released on September 16th by SoundAge Productions and Svarenne Music.

One of ILLA’s main features is their sheer interest in Hindu mythology and culture. Thus their (mostly “post-“) black metal has its atmospheric and epic charm. As Saїmon Ramov, the band’s frontman, states: “Each track is a journey into unexplored corners of consciousness, where culture, tradition, and music intersect. We strive to convey to listeners not only sound, but also the significance of stories shrouded in mystery”. Continue reading »

Dec 292025
 


L-R: Thomas Ohlsson, Rogga Johansson

(On December 19th Emanzipation Productions released This Life Is A Grave, the latest album by Rogga Johansson’s long-running melodic death metal band Dead Sun. And that event led Zoltar to contact Rogga for the interview you’ll find below. We’ve stitched in some of Dead Sun’s new music too, which is well worth your time.)

Oh yeah. Rogga Johansson. Like again. I know what you’re thinking: with no less than 48 (!) bands/projects listed as ‘active’ on his metal archives page, and don’t get me started on those considered ‘inactive’ as there are as many, it may be hard sometimes from an outsider point of view to take the man seriously. I mean, who does have 48 bloody different aliases, especially since in most cases it more or less is to do the same kind of chuggin, old-school and full of ‘ugh!’ style of death metal whose foundations were laid out by his main band PAGANIZER back in 1998? Isn’t it all the same all over again?

Well, as one of the few psychos who own, if not all, say, most of his works (give or take, over 120 + albums dude), I (slighty) beg to differ. Yep, you need first of all to be a sucker like me for this brand of Swedish mid-tempo rudeness but believe me when I tell you you’ll find different flavors here and there, that is if you know where to look.

Case in point being DEAD SUN: next to his solo albums or EYE OF PURGATORY, this is probably as close as ‘melodic death metal’ goes, Rogga Johansson-style. Meaning: catchy as fuck, because let’s face it, the man knows a thing or two about coming up with instantly memorable in-your-face crusty riffs. Yes, This Life Is A Grave is their (his?) official ninth full-length, but next to the criminally overlooked 2019 Night Terrors one of their best under that moniker. Plus it’s DEAD SUN’s first under the banner of Emanzipation Productions, who already has a long history of partnership with Mr. Johansson thanks to STASS or THORIUM.

So come on, don’t be shy, come on and have a taste! Continue reading »

Dec 292025
 

(This marks the 12th time in our history when our ornery old friend SurgicalBrute has weighed in with a year-end list of favorite albums and/or EPs. As expected, his list (in alphabetical order) adds many names that haven’t appeared before in our 2025 Listmania series, and this year there’s a lot of variety on offer, though the prose is just as curmudgeonly as ever.)

It’s been about three years since I last did one of these lists for No Clean Singing. Since then, hardcore kids have taken over old school death metal, black metal has become a meme on TikTok, slam metal continues to exist, and for some reason there are still people convinced Deafheaven is a black metal band.

What the hell, people!? I step away for five minutes, and all hell breaks loose! Continue reading »

Dec 292025
 

(written by Islander)

The first two parts of our year-end LISTMANIA festivities are nearing conclusion — our sharing of lists from sites and zines with much bigger audiences than our own (but often, audiences who aren’t as devoted to metal as ours) and lists compiled by our own writers and old friends. In this post we’re again including Rolling Stone magazine’s list of the year’s best metal albums because it has become a tradition, a largely comical tradition at this point which dates back to the halcyon days of 2013 when a commenter somehow just skipped past all our introductory text, looked at Rolling Stone‘s list, and chastised us for not naming Gorguts as AOTY instead of Deafheaven.

Of course, Rolling Stone hands-down qualifies as the kind of “big platform” site or zine that we pull from in this part of our LISTMANIA orgy, as a way of getting a glimpse into what the top-side world perceives as great metal.

This year, Rolling Stone compiled a Top 15 list (the number seems to vary from year to year). Ususally their list displays a lot of “scatter”, for want of a better term. Often, it includes albums you wouldn’t be surprised to see on one of the lists assembled by our own writers, and often it includes others that makes us cringe. By our lights, the rankings themselves are often eye-rolling. Continue reading »

Dec 282025
 

(written by Islander)

We’ve arrived at the last SHADES OF BLACK column for 2025.

If you read yesterday’s column (and surely you did, and no I’m not calling you Shirley) then you’ll know I’m flying the coop mid-morning today to watch a football game at the local sports bar (there’s only one), accompanied by my spouse and a good old friend. Despite that plan I did not wake up extra early (it is a Sunday, after all) to finish today’s column, and I wasn’t able to make much of a head start yesterday due to watching a very long movie set on a planet where the indigenous peoples have tails (watching in 3D, no less), followed by dinner at the very same sports bar where we’ll be returning in a couple of hours.

Given my limited time, I had to make some hard choices, but also some extremely impulsive ones. How impulsive? Well, despite the fact that I had my own very long list of candidates from which to select, I chose one thing I didn’t know about until this morning. However, the first thing below has been on my radar for a while. Continue reading »

Dec 272025
 

(written by Islander)

We all made it through Christmas week more or less intact, not just those of us who toil here at NCS but you too, or you wouldn’t be reading this. Taking some deep breaths, we now look ahead to the final five days of 2025. We have a few more year-end lists to share from friends of our site, although I think one or two of those won’t appear until on or after New Year’s Day. And somewhere around the first day of 2026 I’ll start rolling out the last part of our year-end LISTMANIA celebration, the only one I’m responsible for — our list of 2025’s Most Infectious Extreme Metal Songs.

In the meantime, here’s one last 2025 edition of SEEN AND HEARD, and tomorrow I hope to bring you the year’s last edition of SHADES OF BLACK (it’s more hope than promise because there’s a mid-morning start on Sunday to an NFL football game that will rivet my attention; one does not live by metal alone).

As usually happens, the flood of new music diminished during Christmas week, although there was plenty of actual flooding out here on the U.S. West Coast. However, the diminished music stream still included some very good offerings, on top of what had breached the levees in the weeks before that. As you try to recover from the week just ended and begin peering ahead toward 2026 with some combination of fear, loathing, and maybe glimmers of hope, I hope you’ll enjoy what follows. Continue reading »

Dec 262025
 

(2025 marks the 10th year Todd Manning has been writing with us, and we’re grateful he has stayed with NCS for so long. Below you’ll find his un-ranked list of this year’s best albums (12 of them), plus lists of EPs, “metal adjacent” records, and reissue spotlights.)

Every year I am lucky enough to do this year-end round-up, I typically lament the state of the world, drawing some sort of parallel between the bleak state of affairs and the content of the music consumed. While all that remains true, I’m going to start on a more positive note.

This year, I’ve been able to more deeply engage with all the music that I love, to take refuge in these wonderful music scenes. I got to join a band I was already a fan of (Blasted Heath), do a short tour, and release some material from my noise project (Towers Burning Water). I also just got to hear so much more new music this year than I had in the past couple of years. It was a challenge to narrow this list down and to keep this article at something resembling a reasonable length. I always write this round-up the way I like to consume similar lists of others, a way to gorge on music I missed. Please enjoy…

Continue reading »

Dec 262025
 

(We have arrived at the fifth and final installment of DGR’s year-end list, which completes the countdown from 10 to 1)

The final ten is always the segment I expect will draw the most opinions because it is something so highly personal. After a near-week of exploring the vast reaches of heavy metal we get down to the last ten albums, wherein there’s usually a surprise or two, with a few unexpected turns, and at least one twist of the knife for somebody out there who was waiting to see if their favorite release would make the cut. It probably did not, to tell you the truth.

The final ten here and whatever ramblings that leak out of my brain by the end of this is a snapshot of releases from multiple categories: the straightforward “ones I listened to the most”, the ones I feel are truly important, the ones that – yes, I am a fan of the band – I was overly stoked to hear because it felt good to hear quality from a long-running group, and those I will truly wave the flag for that I feel some of our more tasteful and critique-obsessed fandom are missing out on.

What is usually amusing is that I am in stark contrast to the bigger world of heavy metal writer-dom and I can also understand why. I’m still a mainstream baby at times and I do believe that just because a band is a big name does not disqualify them from putting out an awesome release, they just have to work harder to prove that the music is not just product to move shirts – though to be fair, in the age of professional clothing and accessories salesmen I can’t fault many bands for becoming that because, hey, it’s a livin’. Continue reading »

Dec 252025
 

(Around our generally putrid, poisonous, and devastatingly dark halls Christmas isn’t a special day, certainly not a day we honor by going silent. Like on every other holiday, and all the days in between, we commemorate it noisily. And to do that today we present the fourth installment of DGR’s five-part year-end list countdown)

I think that if we have timed this out correctly and things work out properly this entry is going to be that one that runs on Christmas Day, in which case “haha, holy shit”. Talk about a hell of a tour to have to walk through when you’re having your family gatherings – or if you’re a lounger like me, enjoying some now day-old leftovers or whatever chinese food you could score.

While I pored over this year-end list again and again to make sure that only the finest releases made the cut I found that I had created – save one moment of reserved beauty – quite the dense block of both suffocating death metal, blindingly violent black metal, excessive on all fronts metal, and outright depressing metal. This is the segment I’ve often joked is the one that could be most folks’ critical list because there’s a lot of names on here you may have crossed paths with on other sites. For some reason, this always lands about my top twenty with my final ten being some obscura gathering of death and grind bands for people to roll their eyes to and give me a good “how dare he” with some of the nominations. I know for sure I’ve got one on this segment that’ll likely get my car spraypainted.

If, however, this entry does wind up running on the holidays – and likely one of the only posts – then enjoy your time with your family if you’ve got em and appreciate them, if not, tell them to pound sand and hit the play button here. The music will always be here, either way. Continue reading »

Dec 242025
 

(written by Islander)

On this Christmas Eve don’t worry that your stocking (mental or physical) will be filled with lumps of coal come the dawn. Worry instead that it will be filled with Black Mold. Although, depending on your tastes, that might be one of the best gifts you could hope for.

To be clear, we’re not talking about Stachybotrys chartarum, the fungus whose musty spores can cause mycosis or trigger illness or even death among those allergic to its spores. Instead, our subject today is a new outgrowth of punk-infused black metal by the Portuguese band Black Mold — seven poisonous new songs collected on an EP named Antinomy that’s set for tape release by Helldprod Records on Christmas Day, December 25th. Continue reading »