Author Archive
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › P on Friday, March 20th, 2015
Comedy and metal are odd bed fellows and the end results can be very hit or miss. I mean before Dethklok you have to go back to Crotchduster and before that possibly Lawnmower Deth ,Green Jelly and even Spinal Tap to find credible examples. And Arizona’s Psychostick are the very epitome of hit and miss. The balance […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Psychostick, Review, Self-Released
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › O on Tuesday, March 17th, 2015
Considering Daniel Ekeroth is the author of the genre’s bible, ‘Swedish Death Metal’, and expert historian on the genre, the 2012 debut of his band Usurpress , Trenches of the Netherworld was surprisingly mediocre. However, with the band’s second album he appears to have righted the ship, even if taking a little bit of a tangent. Taking […]
Tags: 2015, Doomentia Records, E.Thomas, Review, Usurpress
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, March 16th, 2015
It’s always a bit odd writing a review for something that involves someone who writes for this site, or I have a friendship with. Critiquing their music and life work seems more difficult when you somewhat ‘know’ the person. In the case of Wisconsin’s Ara, a technical death metal band featuring our own Jerry Hauppa, a gentleman […]
Tags: 2015, Ara, E.Thomas, Review, Self-Released
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Friday, March 13th, 2015
Despite being a few weeks into 2015, the late 2014 releases are still rolling in. And while the fourth album from the Czech Republic’s Destroying Divinity (yes , the Monstrosity song), isn’t a game changer, and probably would not have adorned many 2014 year end lists, it is a very good death metal album that […]
Tags: 2015, Destroying Divinity, E.Thomas, Lavadome Productions, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Wednesday, March 11th, 2015
It would be easy for a casual death metal listener or fan to look at Scarab‘s moniker, imagery, song titles like “Calling Forth the Ancient Spirits of Kemet”, “Days of a Burial Mask”, and “Funeral Pharaoh” and long song runtime and instantly assume these guys are a Nile ripoff. And to some extent that’s true, […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Review, Scarab, ViciSolum Productions
Posted in Blog, Frontpage Feature on Monday, March 9th, 2015
So here is the first of our new classics feature that is likely to ruffle a few feathers, just as the album’s initial release did back in 2002. The second album from Arizona’s Vehemence, God Was Created. Released in a bit of a dead era for death metal, the album was released on Metal Blade and was one of Metal Blade’s real gambles, being a new, young death metal band amid the label’s roster that included Vader, Amon Amarth, Vomitory, Bolt Thrower and such, and in a time where US death metal was in a bit of a lull. The band had a self-released album, The Thoughts From Which I Hide under their belt, and followed up God Was Created with 2004’s Helping the World to See, but it was the infamous middle album that divided metal fans and critics.
Tags: E.Thomas, The New Classics, Vehemence
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Monday, March 9th, 2015
Back in 2007, the UKs Sarpanitum released one of the best debuts from a UK death metal band of recent memory, Despoilment of Origin. It was released on Galactic Records, the label owned by Leon Macy the founder of fellow UK death metal act Mithras, who also were making quite a stir in the death metal scene […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Review, Sarpanitum, Willowtip Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Friday, March 6th, 2015
They say imitation is the highest form of flattery. Well, if that’s the case, Lord K Phillipson and his entourage in The Project Hate, should be flattered as fuck by Canadian Robert Kukla and his band, Arbitrator and the debut full length album, Indoctrination of Sacrilege. Now don’t get me wrong-I have no problem with flattery, homage and […]
Tags: 2015, Arbitrator, E.Thomas, Review, Self-Released
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Tuesday, March 3rd, 2015
I’m not sure what is going on on this album cover, but I’m pretty sure what’s going on with the music: bruising modern grindcore with elements of slam, death metal and even deathcore. The 15 tracks short sharp bursts and less than 40 minute time plays into the classic grindcore tropes as do the trifecta of […]
Tags: 2015, Blast Head Records, E.Thomas, Nervous Impulse, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › B on Monday, March 2nd, 2015
There was a time when Belgium’s Shiver Records/The LSP Company were prolific as heck churning out record after record of home grown talent, unusually favoring the chunky, recognizable Belgian sound such as Battalion, Insanity Reigns Supreme, Warbeast Remains, Welkin, Moker, Ordeal, The Seventh and even the odd classic release such as Axamenta’s Ever-Arch-I Tech-Ture. But I had not […]
Tags: 2015, Battalion, E.Thomas, Review, Shiver Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › U on Wednesday, February 25th, 2015
I’m not sure what was going on over at the usually reliable Mighty Music at the end of 2014. After a couple of solid releases in Solbrud, Planet Rain and Herod, the label sent me a slew of hard rock releases; Ruinside, Distance, 23 Acez, Annominus, Estate, Saint Rebel and such. And all of it pretty awful; Not […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Mighty Music, Review, Unfaithful
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › X on Monday, February 23rd, 2015
There are more than likely going to be two camps when it comes to Southern California’s hardcore bruisers Xibalba. One faction will feel their style of super down-tuned chuggtastic hardcore is the heaviest, most punishing sound on the planet and the counterpoint is that they are knuckle dragging simpletons who cant tune guitars or write songs. And while […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Review, Southern Lord Recordings, Xibalba
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Thursday, February 19th, 2015
There are a few similarities between death metal acts Chapel of Disease and Deserted Fear; both German, both of FDA Rekotz, both released solid debuts in 2013 and both recently released their second efforts. The only slight difference is the style of death metal each band plays. While Deserted Fear had a little more modern, chunky […]
Tags: 2015, Chapel of Disease, E.Thomas, FDA Rekotz, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Tuesday, February 17th, 2015
The debut Where Distant Spirits Remain, from Glasgow’s Falloch was an interesting post rock/black metal/grey metal opus with Agalloch-ian hues. However it was the work of a duo, Andy Marshall and Scott Mclean, and Marshall since left the band (creating more atmospheric black/Celtic metal with Saor, which I highly recommend) leaving McLean to rebuild, and rebuild he has […]
Tags: 2014, Candlelight Records, E.Thomas, Falloch, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Friday, February 13th, 2015
I first heard England’s Sylosis when reviewing their 2008 debut, Conclusion of an Age for Metal Maniacs. As I recall is was a pretty average Unearth/All That Remains clone, that left me with fair to middling opinion of the band. Fast forward to 2012 and the band’s third album Monolith (I missed 2011s Edge of the […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Nuclear Blast Records, Review, Sylosis
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Wednesday, February 11th, 2015
I have reviewed both the first and second albums from Finland’s Decaying, both delivering a stout war mongering style of death metal that delivers a mix of Bolt Thrower/Hail of Bullets and Asphyx (particularity the very Van Drunen-ish is shrieks of Matias Nastolin). And the productive Fins keep producing and getting incrementally better with each release, as the […]
Tags: 2015, Decaying, E.Thomas, Hellthrasher Productions, Review
Posted in Features, Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › L on Tuesday, February 10th, 2015
Few bands have elicited as much vitriol from fans as Liturgy and frontman and creator, Hunter Hunt-Hendrix. From the now infamous transcendental black metal interview to black metal manifestos, the guy has been ripped to shred on internet message boards as well as memed to death. And that’s before the guy’s music is even in the picture. 2009’s Renihilation and 2011’s Aesthetica angered black metal pundits as they arguably shaped the current trend of so-called ‘hipster black metal’ that has swatted the hornet’s nest of black metal.
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Interview, Liturgy
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Monday, February 9th, 2015
Much like label and country mates Destroying Divinity, the Czech Republic’s aptly named Heaving Earth make no bones about their primary influences, and any death metal fan can quickly ascertain such simply based on the track names, album name cover art and palette. And then you press play and while the instantly recognizable throes of […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Heaving Earth, Lavadome Productions, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › O on Thursday, February 5th, 2015
From Germany’s creatively named new-ish label, Go Fuck Yourself Productions, comes the debut from Stockholm’s Obscyria a band trying not to completely wear their geographical locale’s sound on their sleeve, being old school death metal, but with a bit of a blackened thrash sneer. This the kind of release that Unspeakable Axe or FDA Rekotz should have released, […]
Tags: 2015, E.Thomas, Go Fuck Yourself Productions, Obscyria, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A, Reviews › M on Wednesday, February 4th, 2015
I’ve been waiting on new material from the Czech Republic’s Morbider since 2009s When Darkness Returns, one of the better, if unheralded examples of Swedish death metal of that year (I actually didn’t hear it until a couple of years later) . And while 5 years is a long time to wait just for 4 songs on […]
Tags: 2015, Ablaze Productions, Abyssus, E., Morbider, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › M on Monday, February 2nd, 2015
As usual, here we are in 2015, and we are unearthing a few 2014 releases worth your time. Amid the many 2014 releases I overlooked is this album I randomly downloaded amid all of the digital promos we get sent having no idea about the band at all. But the internet helped me out… Apparently, despite being […]
Tags: 2014, Black Skull Records, E.Thomas, Misanthropic Might, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › M on Friday, January 30th, 2015
Despite their spikey Satanic imagery and artwork, Portugal’s Martelo Negro (Black Hammer- their former moniker), present a far more varied and catchy sound on their second album than their presentation would have you believe. Rather than lo-fi black thrash, the band’s sound is a curiously addictive take on death n roll or black n roll […]
Tags: 2014, E.Thomas, Hellprod, Martelo Negro, Review
Posted in Features, Frontpage Feature, Interviews, Interviews › D on Tuesday, January 27th, 2015
If you were to collect a bunch of well versed fans of death metal into a cage fight and force them come up with a solution to the following question: Which label is embracing us with some of the best death metal today? What could the answer be? Since it’s only a theoretical situation rather than a study funded by the UN, our best guess for numero uno, after duking it out ourselves, would be DARK DESCENT RECORDS. We shot a few questions at the primus motor Matt Calvert to find out what’s up.
Tags: 2015, Dark Descent Records, Interview
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › W on Tuesday, January 27th, 2015
Here’s a nice little 2014, self released gem of blackened death metal from the depths of Austin, Texas spawned from a few obscure Texas veteran acts like Disfigured, Scattered Remains and Carnal Befoulment.But the group has come together to form a pretty impressive debut album that lies somewhere between Behemoth, Morbid Angel and Goatwhore ( […]
Tags: 2014, E.Thomas, Review, Self-Released, Whore of Bethlehem
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Monday, January 26th, 2015
“Listen here you beautiful bitch, I’m about to fuck you up with some truth”– Kenny Flowers (“I Can’t Believe She Got in the Van with Me”) In 2013 , I reviewed the second album ..The Dissection of Christ, from these Kansas City death metalers, it was a solid hodge-podge of death metal styles that showed some […]
Tags: 2014, E.Thomas, Ossuary Industries, Review, Torn the Fuck Apart