Posts Tagged ‘Napalm Records’
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Thursday, March 4th, 2010
You just need to take one look at the some of this German band’s promotional shots of the band smeared in stylistic blood on front of fiery battle scene to guess the style this band play and their primary influences. Look no further than the likes of Turisas, Ensiferum, Falchion and such, though Varg is [...]
Tags: 2010, Erik Thomas, Napalm Records, Review, Varg
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Friday, February 5th, 2010
After being particularly impressed by Elis’ Catharsis recently, I was anxious to check out the latest from Siegfried, Nibelung, featuring vocalist Sandra Schleret from the Elis record. It also didn’t hurt that I happen to be a fan of Wagner, the original metal musician, so I was intrigued by the theme of the record.
This record [...]
Tags: 2009, Fred Phillips, Napalm Records, Review, Siegfried
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Friday, January 29th, 2010
Talk about black sheep. While the rest of their countrymates are content to make a clattery, blastbeating black metal racket, this Bergen, Norway-based act crunch out a mix of groovy doom and gravelly 90s Swedish death. Call it Entombed in ice.
Although A Dark Burial is only Syrach’s third full-length in thirteen years (there was a [...]
Tags: 2010, Jordan Itkowitz, Napalm Records, Review, Syrach
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › E on Monday, January 25th, 2010
Any package that includes releases from Napalm Records always gives me mixed feelings. On the one hand, I’m pretty sure that I’ll enjoy most of them, on the other, I know I’ll have to deal with voiceovers on at least half the songs. (Come on, guys, the watermark is sufficient for most everyone these days). [...]
Tags: 2010, Elis, Fred Phillips, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Monday, January 4th, 2010
An interesting fact about trolls: besides lurking under bridges, in forests and on message boards, they’re also able to change their form at will – usually to trick the humans they like to torment. I mention this only because Troll, the Norwegian black metal band started by Nagash (Covenant/The Kovenant, ex-Dimmu Borgir) in 1992, has [...]
Tags: 2009, Jordan Itkowitz, Napalm Records, Review, Troll
Posted in Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › A on Monday, November 2nd, 2009
It is not often I’m totally smitten with a doom band, much less a funeral doom act, but Germany’s Ahab has shocked and awed me ever since I reviewed The Call of the Wretched Sea, the act’s second release (after The Oath EP) in a trilogy (the “Nantucket Saga”) of sea-based tales, based upon stories [...]
Tags: 2009, Ahab, interview, Napalm Records, Scott Alisoglu
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › L on Thursday, October 22nd, 2009
One could argue that in the space of just three full length albums , Liv Kristine and her spectacular cleavage , err I mean voice, have become Gothic metal’s premier act. The formula they ply has been done amply by the likes of Nighwish, Epica, Stream of Passion and a host of other boobie fronted [...]
Tags: 2009, Leave's Eyes, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Wednesday, September 2nd, 2009
My introduction to Tyr came a few years back when I was asked to take on Eric the Red. I’d read rave reviews about it all over the Web, but personally, I was unimpressed. In all honesty, I found the record fairly boring. It’s been a while since that review, and I really hadn’t thought [...]
Tags: 2009, Fred Phillips, Napalm Records, Review, Tyr
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › G on Friday, July 10th, 2009
I’ve admitted before that I’m a sing-along sort of guy, and I sometimes have a problem with records that are not in English for that reason. On the other hand, I can’t complain about weak lyrics when I don’t understand any of them. So maybe it all comes out in the wash.
So, I’m faced with [...]
Tags: 2009, Fred Phillips, Glittertind, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Features, Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › J on Wednesday, June 17th, 2009
There is no secret formula to the death metal performed by Wisconsin’s Jungle Rot. It’s about a riff, a groove, and a growl. It is what it is; always has been and always will be. Themes of battlefield horror are spat out over tight, rumbling rhythms and choruses into which you can sink your teeth. Label troubles be damned, Jungle Rot soldiers on with a new album in What Horrors Await that is even tighter, better produced, and just as memorable as anything they’ve released thus far. With the firm backing of yet another label in Napalm Records guitarist/vocalist/founder Dave Matrise brings us up to date on the war-torn world of Jungle Rot.
Tags: interview, Jungle Rot, Napalm Records, Scott Alisoglu
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Friday, June 12th, 2009
With thier 3rd release for Austria’s Napalm label, French Symphonic Metallers Fairyland have delivered an absolutely fantastic album. Score To A New Beginning is loaded down with soaring, melodic vocals, epic keyboard/string layers, huge choirs, speedy drumming and ripping, virtuouso guitars.
Led by keyboardist and sole composer Phillippe Giordana, Fairyland hold high the flame of Symphonic [...]
Tags: 2009, Fairyland, Napalm Records, Review, Shawn Pelata
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › J on Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009
Before hearing What Horrors Await, I was only vaguely familiar with Jungle Rot. I knew they had been around for awhile and had heard bits and pieces of their stuff, enough to know they had a very groove based, old school death metal sound, so I pretty much knew what to expect and that’s exactly [...]
Tags: 2009, Jungle Rot, Larry "Staylow" Owens, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, June 1st, 2009
In 2008, Scotland’s Alestorm took the international metal world by storm with their brand of likeable ‘Pirate Metal’ that mixed NWBHM, folk metal, Pirate shanty tunes and Running Wild imagery, even resulting in a US run with the Pagan Knights tour earlier this year.
Well, here is the follow up, and though I feel a tad [...]
Tags: 2009, Alestorm, Erik Thomas, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Features, Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › A on Monday, June 1st, 2009
Only 2 albums into their career, Scotland’s purveyors of “True Scottish Pirate Metal”, Alestorm hardly need any introduction. Their debut, the raucous, Captain Morgan’s Revenge, put the fun back into metal, and with the follow up, Black Sails at Midnight, the band have further upped the Pirate-y goodness. Chock full of brazen metal seas shanties of rum, women and plunder, the band seems destined to truly blow up on an international level, aided by the bands recent tour of the US. I caught up with the pleasant and portly pirate who plays guitars, Dani Evans to find out a little more about this group of amicable musical privateers….
Tags: Alestorm, Erik Thomas, interview, Napalm Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Friday, May 8th, 2009
Unless it’s a play on Hellhammer, Hellsaw has to be one of the most unoriginal, ‘scary’ black metal band names I think I’ve ever heard. And then to call the album Cold, well, I wasn’t expecting this be a very inspiring listen. But surprise surprise, these Austrians have delivered a really solid, enjoyable example of [...]
Tags: 2009, Hellsaw, Jordan Itkowitz, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Thursday, April 30th, 2009
Sweden’s Isole play a stellar brand of Epic Doom Metal akin to the likes of Candlemass, Revelation & early Solitude Aeturnus. Yeah, once again I find it best to get right to the point. This new release finds the band at, I believe, it’s pinnacle of monolithic mastery. One will find loads of booming, Doom-filled [...]
Tags: 2009, Isole, Napalm Records, Review, Shawn Pelata
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Wednesday, April 29th, 2009
The marriage of traditional folk music (from many countries) with metal has become more than just an exotic sub-genre. The two united seems almost perfect at times and there is a rabid following of fans. However, when the band goes complete folk and abandons all metal ideals (Eluveitie’s Evocation I: The Arcane Dominion), it’s a [...]
Tags: 2009, Fejd, Napalm Records, Review, Shane Wolfensberger
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Wednesday, April 8th, 2009
When among some other promo discs to be reviewed I caught sight of To The Grave, the new album by Danish Power Metal five-piece Iron Fire, I didn’t feel deliriously happy at the thought I had to look into this doing. Honestly, I had never had a high regard for this band’s previous attempts and [...]
Tags: 2009, Igor Stakh, Iron Fire, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Tuesday, April 7th, 2009
I’m usually all for labels signed bands and releasing stuff outside of their usual fare, but Italian deathcore on Napalm Records?
Fail.
It’s not even very good deathcore at that, making Damned to Blindness an even bigger failure.
Sounding like every teenage middle tier American myspace death metal band that’s listened to The Black Dahlia Murder and Cannibal [...]
Tags: 2008, Erik Thomas, Napalm Records, Review, The Modern Age Slavery
Posted in Features, Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › C on Wednesday, March 11th, 2009
Hailing from Finland, Folk three-piece (with the aid of some noteworthy session members) Crimfall entered the folk metal fray back in 2008 with their Burning Winds demo. And now with their Napalm Records debut, As the Path Unfolds, those demo tracks as well as eight brand new tracks deliver exactly what you’d expect from a Finnish Folk/Viking band-and more. With the luscious Helena Haaparanta providing an operatic gloss to the expectedly up beat, typically Finnish, blackened yet epic and bouncy fare, Crimfall, like the recent release by Kivimentsan Druidi, Arkona and country mates Battlelore, have given folk/Viking metal some elegance amid the grime and chain mail driven throes typically associated with the genre. From the bombastic chorus of “The Crown of Treason” through the ethnic chants of “Wildfire Season” and Middle Eastern Aura of “Sun Orphaned” to ballad “Aubade” the album covers all of Folk Metal bases with confidence, gusto and an orchestral grandeur. I visited with guitarist Jakke Viitala to find out a little more about one of Finnish folk metal’s newest additions…
Tags: 2009, Crimfall, Erik Thomas, interview, Napalm Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Thursday, March 5th, 2009
Hot on the heels on Century Media’s Kivimetsan Druidi, come another female fronted, dirt, fur and paint covered folk metal band infusing classical/orchestral elements into the tried and true Finnish take on folk/pagan/Viking metal as plied by the likes of Ensiferum, Turisas and such.
The results are largely successful, mostly due to Helena Haaparanta who has [...]
Tags: 2009, Crimfall, Erik Thomas, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › G on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2009
Nurtured by bands like Iron Maiden, Judas Priest, Black Sabbath, Saxon, Accept and Helloween, I don’t remember being much of a Grave Digger fan in my early years of metalhood. Yet, these Germans have been around since 1980 and have a lot of experience under their belt, which is thoroughly proven by the thirteen studio [...]
Tags: 2009, Grave Digger, Igor Stakh, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Wednesday, February 11th, 2009
So to coincide with the band’s current US Pagan Knights run with Suidakra and Tyr, Scotland’s purveyors of Pirate metal have given us a 4 song EP to tide us over until the next album, slated for a 2009 release.
The EP consists of 1 new song (the 6 minute title track), a reworked track from [...]
Tags: 2009, Alestorm, Erik Thomas, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Tuesday, January 13th, 2009
Norwegian viking folk metal band Ásmegin has been in existence since 1998 yet Arv is just their second full length release. I have known of their existence for some eight years, ever since Marius tried to set up a multiple language interview between me and a band on his label. The positive that came out [...]
Tags: 2009, Ásmegin, Grimulfr, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › K on Wednesday, November 12th, 2008
Pop this disk in and it takes only about twenty seconds to suspect it is Kampfar and less than a minute to be sure it could be no one else. All pervasive is the Kampfar sound and if you don’t know what that is by now expect to be turned into a frog by the [...]
Tags: 2008, Grimulfr, Kampfar, Napalm Records, Review