Random Old Comic: Reboots https://www.toyboxcomix.com/2019/07/03/reboots/ Reboots #Baroness #GIJoe #Geoffrey #Raptor
Random Old Comic: Reboots https://www.toyboxcomix.com/2019/07/03/reboots/ Reboots #Baroness #GIJoe #Geoffrey #Raptor
Random Old Comic: Impostor https://www.toyboxcomix.com/2018/06/08/impostor/ Impostor #Baroness #Chameleon #CobraCommander #Destro #GIJoe #MajorBludd #Raptor
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BARONESS, THE RUINS OF BEVERAST, SUMERLANDS & More Booked For Fire In The Mountains 2026
#BARONESS #THERUINSOFBEVERAST #MoreBookedForFireInTheMountains #MetalInjection #metal #music
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Baroness, The Ruins of Beverast, Sumerlands, and More Added to Fire In The Mountains â26
#Baroness #TheRuins #blackmetal #festival #EP #MetalSucks #metal #music
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BARONESS, THE RUINS OF BEVERAST, SUMERLANDS & More Booked For Fire In The Mountains 2026
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Howling Giant â Crucible & Ruin Review
By Dear Hollow
Howling Giant occupies such an odd place within its scene. The Nashville collective is stoner metal and psych rock to the core in an energetic way that recalls the down-and-dirty acts like High on Fire or Mastodon, but layers of melody and creative chord usage feel progressive a la Intronaut or Baroness and the triple vocal harmonies are catchy yet evasive, not unlike Torche or Helmet. They also donât take things too seriously, with a solid sense of humor and a relatable relationship with fans to bring their formidable technical skill to earth.1 Now a release removed from the formidable debut full-length The Space Between Stars and even more from the Black Hole Space Wizard suite, Howling Giant proves their worth once more.
To address the elephant in the room, Glass Future saw Howling Giantâs progressive tendencies flying their freak flag too much. While attempting to keep the stoner murk and reconcile it with aptly crystalline melody, the band lost what is so great about them: solid songwriting. Itâs completely contrary to what gave them the edge over genre mates Sergeant Thunderhoof in their dueling split â their head-first dabbling in more elusive chord progressions felt like a more stoner-inclined dime-store version of Intronautâs Habitual Levitations. This is what makes third full-length Crucible & Ruin so refreshing:2 itâs everything you love about the Nashville now-quartet â and more. The template of killer riffs, soaring choruses, searing solos, and stoner haze is amplified by new guitarist/synth player Adrian Zambrano â adding layers and textures to Howling Giantâs already winning formula.
Howling Giant feels reinvigorated with Crucible & Ruin. Songwriting prowess on full display, the kitchen sink of riff, solo, melody, and catchiness has never looked so clean. While some remnants of Glass Future hang around in more evasive chord structures and emphasis on melody (instrumental âLesser Godsâ), the tracks shift from the anthemic to the kickass, rounded out by the understated Helmet-esque triple-vocal attack â a potentially divisive element of Howling Giantâs sound â3 and that warm stoner haze. Chunky riffs dominate and add a jolt of energy (âHunterâs Mark,â âBeholder I: Downfallâ), while anthemic choruses and transcendent chord progressions take listeners to a psychedelic heaven (âArchon,â âArchivistâ). Southern fried bluesy vibes a la All Them Witches also grace the vibe with a backwoods atmosphere (âBeholder II: Labyrinth,â âMelchorâs Bonesâ), paying homage to their home state of Tennessee. All assets culminate in the two parts of âBeholder,â the Phrygian key giving them a more epic and grandiose feel.
With the addition of Zambrano, Howling Giant has never felt so fleshed out. Compared to the flashy vocals and melodies of Sergeant Thunderhoof, Howling Giant has always been a meat-and-potatoes type of band, but Crucible & Ruin finds the band building upon this template using more versatility in its musical arsenal. Layers of melodic overlays grace rhythmic punch a purpose and intensity (âCanyons,â âScythe and Scepterâ), the tasteful balance between the melodic and the skronky add intrigue and madness (âHunterâs Mark,â âArchon,â âBeholder I: Downfallâ), and ethereal atmosphere is built atop and duels with more downtuned riffs and bass (âLesser Gods,â âArchivist,â âBeholder II: Labyrinthâ). The dueling guitars add a much-needed and ridiculously tantalizing dimension that takes Howling Giantâs already solid sound to new heights.
Howling Giantâs vocal approach of hyper harmonies will remain a divisive element, the central riff and spoken word of âMelchorâs Bonesâ can get a bit repetitive, and instrumental âLesser Godsâ is a bit questionable, but donât let that distract you from the fact that itâs the bandâs best album to date. Crucible & Ruin distills everything that makes Howling Giant great and beefs it up, weaponizing their already formidable songwriting with Zambranoâs melodic and textural synth and fretwork. Featuring riffs upon riffs with complex songwriting that doesnât fly over listenersâ heads, relatable vocals that donât lose their punch, and new guitar work that takes the band to new heights, across a forty-eight-minute runtime that zips by, itâs hard not to bob your head. While comparisons to Mastodon, Baroness, and Anciients are fair, Howling Giant is its own beast, an intersection of stoner haze, riffy intensity, and melodic taste. Crucible & Ruin caught me by surprise in the best way, and is sure to appear at year-end.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Magnetic Eye Records
Websites: howlinggiant.bandcamp.com | howlinggiant.com | facebook.com/howlinggiant
Releases Worldwide: October 31st, 2025
#2025 #40 #AllThemWitches #AmericanMetal #Anciients #Baroness #CrucibleRuin #CryOfTheAfflicted #Helmet #HighOnFire #HowlingGiant #Intronaut #MagneticEyeRecords #Mastodon #Oct25 #PsychedelicRock #Review #Reviews #SergeantThunderhoof #StonerDoomMetal #StonerMetal #StonerRock #Torche
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Baroness' Singer Challenges Loss of Intimacy With Bigger Venues
https://loudwire.com/baroness-john-baizley-challenges-intimacy-venues-interview/
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Acid Bath Add Even More Shows with Baroness, Obituary, High On Fire, and Others
#AcidBathAddEvenMoreShows #Baroness #sludgemetal #tour #reunion #MetalSucks #metal #music
Insomniac â Om Moksha Ritam Review
By Samguineous Maximus
The terms âpsychedelicâ and âpost-metalâ are usually enough for me to approach any new release with cautionânot because those genres lack excellent music, but because theyâre so often associated with overlong, unfocused songs. For every Cult of Luna or Oranssi Pazuzu, there are fifty bands peddling overlong, riffless dirges that mistake âatmosphereâ for actual songwriting. Atlanta supergroup Insomniac has arrived with their debut record Om Moksha Ritam, with the ominous self-designation of âpost-doom.â The title, loosely translated from Sanskrit as âLiberation through merging with the Universal Rhythm,â1 foregrounds its ambitions as a concept album designed to âguide listeners through an aural and spiritual journey across multiple extreme environments.â Have Insomniac crafted a narrative listening experience that successfully conveys its metaphysical aspirations? Or is their debut the âpost-doomâ equivalent of a bad trip?
On Om Moksha Ritam, Insomniac manages to craft a sound that is immediately recognizable yet distinctly their own. They merge the progressive psychedelia of Elder with the layered, textural approach of REZN, all filtered through the Southern-gothic tinge of fellow Georgians Baroness. The result is a body of songs that draw equally from the contemplative exploration of â70s prog, Americana-dipped blues rock, and the anthemic heft of post-metalâs sludgier, power-chord-driven moments. What makes this combination work is not just the intuitive chemistry of the instrumentalists, but the commanding presence of vocalist Van Bassman. Each track is surprisingly vocal-driven, and Bassman conjures a sound somewhere between a bluesier Dax Riggs and a John Baizley whoâs actually capable of singing. His baritone sits front and center for much of Om Moksha Ritam, often accompanied by vocal layers and effects, creating a kaleidoscopic swirl that amplifies the ebb and flow of the music as it moves between peaks and valleys.
It helps that Om Moksha Ritamâs tracklist is dynamic and well-paced, with each of its 7 songs offering subtle differentiation on Insomniacâs core formula. Much of this can be attributed to the interplay between guitarists Alex Avedissian and Mike Morris,2 whose willingness to balance acoustic and effects-laden electric timbres gives the record a versatile and interesting palette. The guitars ferry the songs between quiet reflection and crushing grandeur. Whether itâs weaving intricate folky arpeggios together with tripped-out leads (âDesertâ), harmonizing across doomy atmospheres (âMountainâ) or using post-rock tremolos to punctuate a well-earned climax (âMeditation), the guitar work on Om Moksha Ritam is consistently engaging and varied. Of course, this would be for naught without a strong rhythm section, but Insomniac has that as well. Drummer Amos Rifkin brings a loose, delicate touch to softer tracks like âSeaâ and âForest,â but escalates with thunderous weight when the music demands greater intensity. Meanwhile, bassist Juan Garcia provides a warm, full-bodied tone that both supports and embellishes the melodic core, keeping the songs anchored amid the dense layering of guitars and vocals, which is important on a track like the expansive and sprawling âSnow and Ice.â
Only a few minor inconsistencies keep Om Moksha Ritam from reaching the apex of Insomniacâs sound. The B-side leans away from emphatic âHell yesâ moments in favor of slower, navel-gazing jams. These tracks reward repeat listens but arenât as immediately gripping. Closer âAwakeningâ falls just shy of the monumental highs of the opening salvo, with a climactic chorus that doesnât land as powerfully as it could. For the most part, the record sounds fantastic and balances its many intricate layers, though there are moments (the refrains of âMountainâ and âSeaâ) where Bassmanâs voice overpowers the rest of the band in a psychedelic spiral. These issues donât detract too heavily from the recordâs overall impact, but they are worth noting.
Om Moksha Ritam takes you on a hallucinogenic trek across the desert, riffs shimmering like heat mirages, the atmosphere thick enough to choke a camel. Insomniac has delivered an album that takes listeners on a true musical journey, drenched in smoke-filled vibes, yet immediately rewarding. Their unique, psychedelic strain of âpost-doomâ metal blends familiar elements from beloved bands into something greater than the sum of its parts. If Insomniac invite me on another spiritual vision quest through the wastelands of sound, Iâll happily lace up my sandals, pack my water skin, and follow them straight into the void.
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: PCM
Label: Blues Funeral Recording
Websites: insomniacvibes.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/insomniacatl
Releases Worldwide: September 1st, 2025
#2025 #35 #AmeircanMetal #Baroness #BluesFuneralRecording #BluesRock #CultOfLuna #DoomMetal #Elder #Insomniac #OmMokshaRitam #OranssiPazuzu #PostRock #PostMetal #ProgressiveMetal #PsychedelicMetal #PsychedelicRock #Review #Reviews #REZN #Sep25
Listening to Baroness âYellow & Greenâ.
Warmer temperatures where I live means I can open my window⊠and the neighbours can listen to âYellow & Greenâ too.
Random Old Comic: Words Mean Things https://www.toyboxcomix.com/2018/05/15/words-mean-things/ Words Mean Things #Baroness #CobraCommander #GIJoe #Raptor
Allen Blickle, Original Baroness Drummer, Dies at 42
Allen Blickle, the original drummer of the Grammy-nominated sludge metal band Baroness, passed away at the age of 42. The news was shared by Baroness frontman John Baizley, who expressed his grief over the loss of a dear friend and creative partner. Blickle co-founded the band in 2003 and was part o... [More info]
Baroness issue statement on the passing of Allen Blickle:
#Baroness #AllenBlickleRIP #AllenBlickle
Link: https://metalinsider.net/news/baroness-issue-statement-on-the-passing-of-allen-blickle
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Baronessâ John Baizley âIn Shockâ Over Death of Founding Drummer Allen Blickle
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BARONESS Confirms Original Drummer ALLEN BLICKLE Has Died
#BARONESS #ALLENBLICKLE #ConfirmsOriginalDrummer #HasDied #drummer #MetalInjection #metal #music
Former Baroness drummer Allen Blickle has died:
#AllenBlickle #Baroness #SadNews
Link: https://metalinsider.net/sad-news/former-baroness-drummer-allen-blickle-has-died
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ACID BATH Announce 2026 New Jersey Show With BARONESS & THE SKULL
#ACIDBATH #BARONESS #Announce #NewJerseyShowWith #announcement #MetalInjection #metal #music
My review of an incredible debut album from Igarka. Think Kayo Dot meets The Crest - yep, that good!
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#music #musicreview #newmusic #avantgarde #baroness #darkwell #deftones #depechemode #duranduran #dynamic #folk #garynuman #goth #gothic #grunge #igarka #italy #jamesbond #kayodot #lacrimosal #LeavesEyes #mathcore #metal #posthardcore #shoegaze #silvery #sinsofthybeloved #society #thecrest #TheatreOfTragedy