Posts Tagged ‘Review’
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Wednesday, October 3rd, 2007
I’m not sure why Metal Blade/Ironclad would release the debut from Buffalo’s Sons Of Azrael only a month or so before The Black Dahlia Murder’s Nocturnal drops, because its liable to steal some of Nocturnal’s thunder. Basically Sons of Azrael ply a form of modern sort of At The Gates based, death//black core that has […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Ironclad Recordings, Metal Blade Records, Review, Sons of Azrael
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007
Hearse is a strange duck. Since Johan “SomberDusk” Liiva’s departure of Arch Enemy some years ago, these Swedes have been rummaging in the scene, pushing out albums, and creating a sound that really is kind of original. Although, they have never really produced that one great album, Hearse is progressing and In These Veins is […]
Tags: 2007, Candlelight Records, Hearse, Review, Shane Wolfensberger
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › O on Tuesday, October 2nd, 2007
One-man projects have exploded in the recent years. I personally am a fan of these type of things whatever genre it maybe. Most of these projects are in the black, doom, or progressive aspects of metal, and will take you on a journey through ones thoughts. Solid Finnish act October Falls is another one of […]
Tags: 2007, Debemur Morti Productions, October Falls, Review, Shane Wolfensberger
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, October 1st, 2007
Taking more than a huge nod from Suffocation as well as the likes of Devourment, Decrepit Birth, Gorgasm and other more brutal, technical US death metal bands, Germany’s Defeated Sanity have delivered a second album of appropriately sick and gore filled technical brutality (brootek death metal?). With ultra deep, almost grindcore core styled burps layered […]
Tags: 2007, Defeated Sanity, E.Thomas, Grindethic Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Monday, October 1st, 2007
Basically mixing the churning heft of Behemoth or Vader with the cyber/industrial assault of say The Amenta, Crionics have unleashed their third album of clinical, futuristic swathe of black/death metal that’s pretty unrelenting, at times repetitively so, but still manages to literally fire on all cylinders. Of course, as with most cyber death metal (Scorngrain, […]
Tags: 2007, Candlelight Records, Crionics, E.Thomas, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Monday, October 1st, 2007
Uh oh. I think this one is going to ruffle a few feathers. Christian metal has slowly but surely elbowing it’s way into extreme metal, but with little success. From the early defining works of Believer to the more modern, often core based sounds of today like Becoming the Archtype and Extol, the Christians have […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Facedown Records, Impending Doom, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, October 1st, 2007
Unlike the recent album by Sweden’s Memfis who decided to deliver a sort of modernized take on Oepth, Canada’s Adytum said ‘fuck it’, and basically wrote an exact clone of Opeth’s mid era work except with harsher black metal vocals. Though that’s pretty much Adytum’s debut in a nutshell, I probably should embellish; this is […]
Tags: 2007, Adytum, E.Thomas, Nothern Storm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › 012 on Sunday, September 30th, 2007
With each successive release, Portland, Oregon’s indie-prog saviors 31 Knots veer further from their point(s) of origin. What began long ago as what seemed like Yes synthesis has become an astonishing insouciance for past influences, as the band capriciously shows their current penchant for odd electronica, loops, and samples. Repeating the EP-preceding-LP pattern for their […]
Tags: 2007, 31 Knots, Chris Ayers, Polyvinyl Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Saturday, September 29th, 2007
Holy. Fucking. Shit. Thank you Willowtip for licensing this gem this from Neurotic Readers, what was the last technical death metal album that truly changed how you viewed and listened to technical death metal? A mind altering, genre smearing album that altered the death metal landscape? For me personally, I have to go back as […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Review, Sickening Horror, Willowtip Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › R on Friday, September 28th, 2007
Ordinarily, I’m not a big fan of the “supergroup” concept. No matter how good the musicians are, I don’t think a month in the studio together can bring the tightness and spirit to a band that playing together for years, busting your ass to make it and living together in a van down by the […]
Tags: 2007, Fred Phillips, Nuclear Blast Records, Review, Ride the Sky
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Friday, September 28th, 2007
Over the years, I’ve probably written about The Feds coming to town a dozen times or more in my regular gig at the local paper, so it seems a little odd that the first time I’m actually hearing them is for a review here. First, I’ll say that there are some good things to be […]
Tags: 2007, Fred Phillips, Review, The Feds, Tribunal Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Wednesday, September 26th, 2007
Albums with expectations are always interesting, and this one has plenty. First, fans have been waiting for it since 1998 when the original trilogy of songs appeared on Something Wicked This Way Comes, regarded by many as the band’s best record. The expectations were boosted over the summer when the band released the first single […]
Tags: 2007, Fred Phillips, Iced Earth, Review, SPV
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Wednesday, September 26th, 2007
Contending with 2005’s Roadrunner United All Star Sessions, Nuclear Blast Records has utilized its 20th anniversary to release a similar set of albums, bringing together different musicians from the label to collaborate on songs and create an orgy of metal. I admire these ideas and I thoroughly enjoyed the Roadrunner release. Although Nuclear Blast has […]
Tags: 2007, Nuclear Blast Records, Review, Shane Wolfensberger
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Wednesday, September 26th, 2007
So the last time the Scorpions tried to reinvent themselves, on 1999’s Eye II Eye, the results weren’t very good. Most fans disliked it, and the attempt to update their sound and capture new fans certainly failed. But when I took a look at this record, I thought perhaps they’d decided to give it another […]
Tags: 2007, Fred Phillips, New Door Records, Review, The Scorpions
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Sunday, September 23rd, 2007
No Candelight. This is not good. This is bad, bad, bad and you are so naughty for putting out this nonsensical drivel alongside the new Obituary record, seriously, shame on you. Funnily enough Hemlock are taking their influence from a time when Obituary were at the peak of their popularity (i.e. the mid 90s). References […]
Tags: 2007, Benjamin DeBlasi, Candlelight Records, Hemlock, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Sunday, September 23rd, 2007
What’s the deal with that cover art? It leaves one wondering whether Full Blown Chaos now desire to be Manowar because with those lions, that ominous Conan clone poised in his throne, it instils that fear…and the record hasn’t even been placed in the CD player yet. Fortunately ‘Fire Fight,’ firmly quashes any fears of […]
Tags: 2007, Benjamin DeBlasi, Ferret Music, Full Blown Chaos, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › B on Saturday, September 22nd, 2007
Alaska was my 2005 album of the year, so suffice to say, the follow up, Colors had some pretty high expectations; expectations that are comfortably reached, but not quite shattered, as Colors is exactly what you’d expect from BTBAM; brilliance. One only need look at the band’s prior cover only album The Anatomy of… to […]
Tags: 2007, Between the Buried and me, E.Thomas, Review, Victory Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › R on Friday, September 21st, 2007
The Mausoleum debut of U.K. band Rise to Addiction, produced by Andy Sneap, has all the hallmarks of a band on the edge of great success. It has guitar riffs that are heavy enough to get the attention of metalheads and hooks that are big enough to stick in the head of mainstream rock fans. […]
Tags: 2007, Fred Phillips, Mausoleum Records, Review, Rise to Addiction
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Tuesday, September 18th, 2007
Hailing from Seattle, Himsa have returned with their fourth full length album, Summon In Thunder, their debut offering with metal giants Century Media. Like a crushing blow to the gut, Summon In Thunder delivers melodic yet heavy as a ton of bricks modern thrash that their prior releases didn’t seem to quite deliver. Johnny Pettibone’s […]
Tags: 2007, Century Media Records, Himsa, Larry "Staylow" Owens, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › K on Monday, September 17th, 2007
Much like the recent Candlelight/SOAR releases Diskreet, Rose Funeral and Whitechapel, Arizona’s Knights of the Abyss ply a form of technical, grindy, breakdowny, modern death metal, that’s to say, and I hate to use the term; deathcore, and they actually should give Job For A Cowboy (who share the same producer) a run for their […]
Tags: 2007, Candlelight Records, E.Thomas, Knights of the Abyss, Review, Siege of Amida Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Monday, September 17th, 2007
Citing influences such as Beherit, Von and Nifelheim, Satanic Funeral is an multinational US/Netherlands based project featuring members of Vrolok, Mord, Misanthropy and Lugubre-and if you are at all familiar with those ultra underground acts, you should enjoy Satanic Funeral and their utterly hideous and nasty raw form of old school black metal. This is […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Non Compos Mentis Records, Review, Satanic Funeral
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Monday, September 17th, 2007
Here is the second album from this Mexican supergroup of sorts featuring members of Impiety and Ravager, and despite some slightly more primal production values than Veganza, Katun is a vitriolic, slightly ethnic tinged slice of blistering Angelcorpse worship, that outdoes the source material’s latest effort. With a slightly muffled rums and more raw guitars, […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Hacavitz, Moribund Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Saturday, September 15th, 2007
2005’s debut offering from Hurtlocker, Fear In a Handful of Dust was among my top ten favorite releases of the year – an excellent entry in the field of death/thrash, they showed a great deal of influence ranging from classic Bay Area and German thrash, to early Swedish death metal, topped off with a hint […]
Tags: 2007, Hurtlocker, Larry "Staylow" Owens, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Thursday, September 13th, 2007
So here is the second (not including their 3 way split) release from metal and magazine entrepreneur Marty Rytkonen (Wormgear) and fellow Metal Maniacs scribe S Craig Zahler, and I’ll admit their first EP The Dark Archives, from the cover art to the music was pretty awful. However, with the creepy artwork gracing The Igneous […]
Tags: 2007, Charnel Valley, E.Thomas, Paragon Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Thursday, September 13th, 2007
With members of Exmortem in its ranks, you’d expect the debut full length from Denmark’s Spectral Mortuary to be lifeless blast fest, but in truth it looks like Mighty Music may have unearthed one of Europe’s hidden death metal gems. This is just damn fine death metal from top to bottom. Much like the recent […]
Tags: 2007, E.Thomas, Mighty Music, Review, Spectral Mortuary