Author Archive
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Wednesday, June 1st, 2016
Swiss quintet Colossus Fall have been kicking around since 2011, releasing an EP, single and 7” to date. Hidden Into Details is the band’s first exploration into the long-player format and the band’s frantic, constantly changing sound makes for an engaging ear rape workout with numerous fluxes in style, sonics and subversive audio violence throughout. […]
Tags: 2016, Colossus Fall, Jay S, Review, Sigma Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Friday, May 27th, 2016
From the fertile, fly-infested breeding grounds of Florida that have delivered unto the Earth the sludge majesty of Cavity, Railsplitter, Dove, Floor, House of Lightning, Consular, Shroud Eater and so many more iron-forgers of the riff hails Hollow Leg. I’m fuckin’ red with embarrassment on one cheek and am deservedly wearing egg on the other, […]
Tags: 2016, Argonauta Records, Hollow Leg, Jay S, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Wednesday, May 25th, 2016
Multi-instrumentalist hero Tim Schmidt from godly old school doom/classic metallurgists Seamount returns with his latest project Naked Star; a gritty, riff-spitting monstrosity with dirty demonic grooves, the Marlboro burnt vocals of Jim Grant and a generally roughhewn yet melodic pummel that would have been right at home on the supreme doom label Hellhound back in […]
Tags: 2016, Jay S, Naked Star, Review, Voice of Azram
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › E on Thursday, May 19th, 2016
With short and sweet songs Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania quartet Eternal Sleep work up a lardy, greasy metallic chunk n’ chug on their debut EP, The Emptiness Of… There’s a stocking stuffed full of various human appendages and entrails to be found here, making the band’s sound a bit harder to pin down on any one particular […]
Tags: 2016, Closed Casket Recordings, Eternal Sleep, Jay S, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Wednesday, May 4th, 2016
When it comes to death dealin’ doom metal and steroid pumped 70s riffs, never turn your back on the Steel City of Pittsburgh, man. Spawning some of my favorite riff welders of all-time including Dream Death, Penance, Argus, Molasses Barge, Satanic Bat, Iron Crown, Vulture and many, many more past and present; there’s a tight […]
Tags: 2016, Blackseed Records, Horehound, Jay S, Review, Self-Released
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Tuesday, April 12th, 2016
Since 1997, Stockholm d-beat masters Victims have carved themselves an immovable position in the crust punk underground and for me to sit here and tell you the history of the band I’d be wasting my time. They do a better job of it on their very own websites, so why should some schmuck like me […]
Tags: 2016, Jay S, Review, Tankcrimes, Victims
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › G on Thursday, April 7th, 2016
Portland, Oregon’s Graves at Sea and I go way, way back. I reviewed their Documents of Grief outing before it was an official press; at the time just a handmade CD-R that the fellas put together on the fly. Directly after its release I had the distinct honor of interviewing the band (Nate and Nick) […]
Tags: 2016, Graves at Sea, Relapse Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Tuesday, March 15th, 2016
I’ve heard some damn good doom-y, riff-y stuff from Austria; nightmare vomit sludgers Cyruss, killer psyched-out heavy rockers Savanah, etc. I know I’m forgetting more than a couple in this quick brainstorm session but the point is that there’s a damn good scene over in Austria that gets overlooked when viewing the international arena at […]
Tags: 2016, Jay S, Review, Self-Released, Throes
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › B on Tuesday, March 8th, 2016
German duo Beehoover is comprised of bassist/vocalist Ingmar Petersen and drummer/vocalist Claus-Peter Hamisch. The gruesome twosome toyed around with the idea of having a guitar player early on in their career but based on the serpentine progressive shades, full-force riff rocking and kraut-rock prog/psychedelia heard on their underground classics The Sun Behind the Dustbin, […]
Tags: Unundeux Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Tuesday, March 1st, 2016
Chicago trio Snow Burial presents their first full-length Victory in Ruin after a pair of EPs. The band’s history is something I can jive with as the fellas formed the band after attending a Shiner reunion show. I’m a huge Shiner fan and Snow Burial has that same kind of effervescent, ever-changing sound that never […]
Tags: 2016, Jay S, Review, Self-Released, Snow Burial
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Thursday, February 25th, 2016
Festering, Norwegian rot is the slophouse gruel served from four-piece skullfuckers The Sickening. The overall attack is a slaughterhouse explosion with cattle guts, pig snouts and delectable innards flying in every direction. Catchy, thrash metal viruses escape from the contamination ward while sloppy, sluggard death metal chug is laid to fecal waste thanks to guttural […]
Tags: Jay S, Review, The Sickening, Transcending Obscurity Records, Xtreem Music
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Tuesday, February 23rd, 2016
I got to Savannah, Georgia’s Niche just a little bit late because if I was quicker on the draw this would have easily been one of my favorite records of 2015. On Kylesa’s respectable Retro Futurist label, the quartet is accomplished musicians with striking chops, superb songwriting and soaring harmonies that suck you in like […]
Tags: 2016, Jay S, Niche, Retro Futurist, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Tuesday, February 16th, 2016
It’s like label boss Kunal and his magnificent imprint Transcending Obscurity has a never-ending well of awesome artists to draw from. Next in a long storybook of metal gems come the Indian-founded, aggressive, symphonic black metal band Diabolus Arcanium and their debut LP, Path of Ascension. Truth be told, I’m probably the wrong guy for […]
Tags: 2016, Diabolus Arcanium, Jay S, Review, Transcending Obscurity Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, February 8th, 2016
As a longtime fan of these digitized, Maryland filth-grinders, I’m used to Agoraphobic Nosebleed slowing down with big, tumbling dirge riffs and back breaking weight. They’ve showcased the tactic as early as The Poacher Diaries (split with Converge) and even back in the Honky Reduction days Scott Hull had a knack for busting his knuckles […]
Tags: 2016, Agoraphobic Nosebleed, Jay S, Relapse Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Wednesday, February 3rd, 2016
Londoners HAG work up a twitchy, Ritalin necessitating din on their debut full-length Fear of Man. Though I knew virtually nothing of the trio going into this review, it’s without question that I came out as a fan. The highly melodic, walls n’ waves of My Bloody Valentine-esque guitar squalor that runs lockstep with the […]
Tags: 2015, Dnawot Records, Hag, Jay S, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Thursday, January 28th, 2016
The multi-instrumentalist Kris Force and her spacey juggernaut, vapor trail institution Amber Asylum has over 20 years in the music world and stints on known labels such as Relapse, Neurot and Profound Lore for a reason. Never once in the group’s career have they compromised their vision. While the “band’s” line-up is often changing, […]
Tags: 2015, Amber Asylum, Jay S, Prophecy Productions, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › B on Thursday, January 21st, 2016
If Volume I era Sleep was signed to Am-Rep in the 90s and recorded Sleep’s Holy Mountain under Haze’s supervision, you’d probably have something like Connecticut’s Bedroom Rehab Corporation. Simply a duo comprised of Adam Wujtewicz on bass and drummer Meghan Killimade, the band’s second studio slab Fortunate Some is full of hypnotic groove meditations […]
Tags: 2015, Bedroom Rehab Corporation, Jay S, Review, Self-Released
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, January 11th, 2016
Beginning with a warped, psychedelic drug manifesto in the form of instrumental phasing and back-masking, Colorado doom metallers Dead Temple make their intent clear from the very first notes on opener “Shadow of a Thousand Faces.” The band’s deadly twin guitar attack creates some elements of old school metal akin to Maiden, Priest, Lizzy and […]
Tags: 2015, Dead Temple, Jay S, PRC Music, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Thursday, January 7th, 2016
Canada’s a good place to make black metal. Some of my bandmates are from Canada, and I know the cold up there is dogging and leads some folks to produce music that reckons of the endlessly lashing frost that befalls every inch of the country. Murderous death/black quintet Vile Insignia are a good representation of […]
Tags: 2015, Jay S, Review, Self-Released, Vile Insignia
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › R on Monday, January 4th, 2016
The always reliable Transcending Obscurity label seems to dish out a never ending arsenal of extreme metal releases from all over the world with no boundary on style or genre. I personally admire Kunal’s ethic and dedication to underground heaviness and more often than not enjoy the bands he brings to the table. Fresh on […]
Tags: 2015, Jay S, Rectified Spirit, Review, Transcending Obscurity Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Tuesday, December 22nd, 2015
Good fuckin’ lord, here is some goddamn bonkers grind from Australia. Tanned Christ are a quartet with an anxiety-ridden attack that sounds like they’re on the verge of a musical heart attack and hernia that could kill off the entire band without a moment’s notice. This is not traditional grind, no fuckin’ way Jose […]
Tags: 2015, Grindhead Records, Jay S, Review, Tanned Christ
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › W on Tuesday, December 15th, 2015
Holy shit, this is the same French Wheelfall that concocted the heady, stoner/psyche brew Interzone in 2012. While there’s still riff-y churns and doom-addled debauchery to be found here, suddenly this band has went from a Dozer/Colour Haze psilocybin pomp n’ circumstance to a groove-laden industrial pummel that’s like a mixture of early Fear Factory, […]
Tags: 2015, Jay S, Review, Sunruin Records, Wheelfall
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Wednesday, December 9th, 2015
Transcending Obscurity delivers again with this compilation release from pox-stricken, West Bengal black metal lunatics Heathen Beast. Trident collects the band’s three EP releases into a full-length serving that’s easily some of the sickest, rawest black metal I’ve heard in a quite bit. Fans that worship the rotten side of the style like Darkthrone, Burzum, […]
Tags: 2015, Heathen Beast, Jay S, Review, Transcending Obscurity Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Tuesday, December 1st, 2015
After a few demo releases and that killer split with Epi-Demic, Canadian punk thrashers Solanum are back with their first full-length altar offering. Into the Sinner Circle is an album with no let-up, its 7 focused musical lacerations ignore the “stun” setting and fire every shot to kill. This is stuff meant to be […]
Tags: 2015, Horror Pain Gore Death Productions, Jay S, Review, Solanum
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Tuesday, November 24th, 2015
I’ve only had a few tastes of Seattle quartet He Whose Ox is Gored and their rising tide, wall of noise musical inclinations, but every single one has been fuckin’ delicious. After a few EP releases I find myself hung on the horns of the band’s debut long-player The Camel, The Lion, The Child. From […]
Tags: 2015, Bleeding Light Records, He Whose Ox Is Gored, Jay S, Review