Jun 032024
 

Today we revisit the Dutch band Alburnum, whose 2022 debut album Buitenlucht proved to be a multi-faceted, soul-shaking, and intensely memorable first step. The occasion for our reunion with them is their completion of a follow-up album, The Withered Roots of Reality, which is now set for release on July 20th.

As you will know if you encountered Buitenlucht, Alburnum infuse their black metal with folk instrumentation and a reverence for musical traditions far older than the musical evolutions that produced the varying tropes of black metal as we’ve come to know them. They do it again on the new album, but have created even more ambitious and dynamic arrangements, a progression that is still inspiring and intensely moving but even more fascinating — as you shall discover today through our premiere of a song from the new album named “On the Bones of Pilgrims“. Continue reading »

Jun 032024
 

(We are very fortunate to have two wonderful talents reporting on the 2024 edition of NCS-sponsored Northwest Terror Fest — writer Gonzo and photographer John Malley. Together they have made it possible for those who weren’t there to get a sense of the experience, and to remind those of us who were there how great it was. Here’s their report on the first day. Reports on the next two days will follow in the two days ahead.)

Few cities in the US have a relationship with music quite like Seattle does.

Beneath the city’s foreboding skies, seemingly every decade since the early 1900s carries the weight of some musical movement it spawned, and the net it casts is as wide as it is diverse.

Musicians of all backgrounds and ethnicities, playing every type of music imaginable – from jazz and folk to alternative rock and death metal – have left an enduring, tireless mark on the Emerald City, and in so many instances, the ripples that start there would be felt throughout the rest of the world.

Beyond just the music, though, the city has historically been a sanctuary for artists so often met with resentment, rejection, and outright hostility everywhere else. Cities like Seattle are where creative people come to galvanize their thoughts into action while waving a middle finger at the status quo.

When you consider all this, it only makes sense that Seattle is still proudly carrying on this legacy. And to me, no music festival is more emblematic of all this than Northwest Terror Fest.

I’m sure as hell not one to observe many traditions – at least, not in the “widely accepted by the people” sense – but the yearly tradition of coming to this festival and word-vomiting my experience into the void is one I’m more than glad to uphold.

Buckle up, my friends – it’s about to get fucking weird. Continue reading »

Jun 022024
 

After a bit of a festival-induced hiatus in these Sunday columns, I’ve returned, and have had time to pull together a pretty good-sized selection of new blackened sounds today.

I’m leading off with three veteran bands who have managed to withstand the ravaging gales of time, and then I’ll move into newer collectives. I’m not sure there’s any organizing principle in what I chose, other than my own strong positive reactions to each choice. They include advance tracks from five forthcoming albums, some of them accompanied by videos, and one recently released full-length.

HORNED ALMIGHTY (Denmark)

The mighty Horned Almighty are returning to strike fear into the hearts of men, women, beasts, and probably plant life. Their new album, the seventh in a 20+ year career, is Contagion Zero. The first frights from it come in the form of a daunting and extremely dire song named “Ascension of Fever and Plague“. Continue reading »

Jun 012024
 


Oranssi Pazuzu – photo by Rainer Paananen

Look at this, a true rarity: two NCS posts on a Saturday. If you haven’t yet read the first one, Andy‘s Synn Report for the merry month of May, you should do that (here) and then come back for what follows below.

If you had only listened to three new songs this past week it would be easy to choose what to recommend and to explain why. You’d pick three, two, or one of them. Or maybe you’d just keep quiet if they left you lifeless.

But what if you had listened to 20 new songs? How would you choose among then? Maybe you would listen to all 20 several times and then start ranking them. By the time you’d narrowed it down, the day would be gone. Which is why I didn’t do any of that with the 20 new songs I wanted to hear for purposes of this roundup.

What I did instead was to focus on singles from a few bands who have already proved themselves dependable (there were other such bands on that list of 20, so mood and impulse played a role too), and then took one chance on a newcomer to these ears. Continue reading »

Jun 012024
 

Recommended for fans of: LLNN, Amenra, Regarde Les Hommes Tomber

French quartet Demande à la poussière, having formed in 2017 and released their first album in 2018, have spent the last several years defining and refining a sound for themselves which combines the doom-laden density of Sludge and the haunting atmospheric heaviness of Post-Metal with a substantial Black Metal edge.

And with the recent release of their third album, Kintsugi, at the beginning of last month, now felt like the perfect time to take a comprehensive look at their already impressive back-catalogue.

Continue reading »

May 312024
 


Hull of Light

As you may know, the core cadre of NCS slaves (including me) spent chunks of May attending metal festivals in Seattle and Baltimore. In my case, this disrupted my usual efforts to pull together roundups of recommended new music. The backlog of missed opportunities is now gargantuan, leaving me confused about how in the world to pick things for this Saturday’s SEEN AND HEARD column.

Somehow between now and then I’ll figure out what to do, but I decided to get a modest head-start today by writing about two fairly recent EPs. I had thought I might get this done before becoming immersed in festival revels, but alas, I didn’t. Rather than just abandon the idea, however, I’m returning to it now. Continue reading »

May 312024
 

The German symphonic black metal band Suffering Souls first sprang to dark life in the distant year 1994 under the name Dismal, but soon embraced its current name. From the beginning its founder Tobias Micko (aka Lord Esgaroth) has been at the helm, at times accompanied by other participants either in recordings or on stage.

At the end of 2019, after a quarter-century of the band’s existence, Tobias Micko started songwriting for the fifth Suffering Souls album, and it was recorded at the history-making Hertz Studio in Poland. Micko is responsible for everything on the album, other than the session drums, which were performed by Michiel Van Der Plicht (Pestilence).

Today the album is being co-released by Satanath Records (Georgia) and Fetzner Death Records (Germany). Its name is An Iconic Taste Of Demise, and we’re premiering it in full right now. Continue reading »

May 312024
 


photo by Gavin Forster

(Today we present Comrade Aleks‘ interview of Mark Deeks, the man behind the UK doom band Arð (and a member of Winterfylleth). The delay in presenting the interview is entirely our fault, but fortunately it remains a timely and engaging discussion.)

It was in the Pantheist interview… As you probably remember, the band took part in the Organic Doom event together with Arð from Newcastle upon Tyne. It was a live gig where two doom metal bands performed their sets with church organ, and even the BBC was interested and covered this gig. As Pantheist included their live set in the new EP Kings Must Die, so you can find Arð’s set as a bonus to the band’s new album Untouched by Fire, released by Prophecy Productions on April 26th.

The only man who stands now behind this band is Mark Deeks. He performs all instruments and sings, though during the recording he relied on the help of Atavist’s drummer Callum Cox. Untouched by Fire is Arð’s second album in five years, and Mark keeps on exploring Nothumbrian history and culture through this authentic melodic doom metal. I invite you to make a trip to the world of medieval Anglo-Saxon doom together with Mark himself. Continue reading »

May 302024
 

Metal band names, when considered either in isolation or in conjunction with the bands’ music, span a range from terrible to perfect. The name Beaten To Death is damn-near perfect, both in isolation and especially in the context of this Norwegian group’s ferociously brawling brand of grindcore.

The name creates expectations, perhaps especially to someone who’s never encountered the five albums Beaten To Death have put out beginning in 2011. But then such a stranger could take one look at the fantastical cover of their forthcoming sixth album Sunrise Over Rigor Mortis and begin to get the idea that maybe those expectations aren’t going to be entirely accurate, or at least they’re going to be incomplete.

But those of us who have encountered one or more of Beaten To Death‘s previous releases won’t be entirely surprised, because while this band are indeed fully capable of beating their listeners to death, they are equally capable of adventurously turning conventional grind expectations upside-down — and as you’re about to discover, they do it again on this newest album. Continue reading »

May 302024
 

(Andy Synn walks the path of perdition with Vástígr, whose new album is out now)

Let me begin things today with a short aside, if I may?

The subject of this particular review is one of several excellent bands playing Ascension Festival in Iceland in July, which various members of the NCS extended family will be attending again this year.

Unfortunately, the festival is currently struggling with higher-than-usual costs and lower-than-average ticket sales, the combination of which have put the future of the event in serious doubt.

So if you’re still going back-and-forth about whether to pick up a ticket this year, now is the time to do so… and, to help encourage you even more, here’s some fantastic music you can expect to hear from Vástígr at this year’s festival.

Continue reading »