Morrn đ€đ»
Blackened, dissonant one-man death metal. A little more free flowing than his current output "Perdurance".
#NowPlaying #RandomMusickMayhem #Metal #Convulsing
https://convulsing.bandcamp.com/album/errata-19-lp-re-master
Morrn đ€đ»
Blackened, dissonant one-man death metal. A little more free flowing than his current output "Perdurance".
#NowPlaying #RandomMusickMayhem #Metal #Convulsing
https://convulsing.bandcamp.com/album/errata-19-lp-re-master
Carcharodon and Cherdâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Carcharodon
Carcharodon
Iâve been writing here since 2018. This has been the hardest year to date. I feel like I say this every year right around this time but, for whatever reason, Iâve really struggled this year to find the motivation and inspiration to write. Indeed, Iâve often felt that I lacked the passion for the music. Rather than exploring the murkier depths of Bandcamp, I was often to be found in the company of old, non-metal friends like Nick Cave, 16 Horsepower and Tom Waits.
Despite my disappointment with the world, most of which is on literal or metaphorical fire, and my disillusionment with people, whose choices have caused most of that, there were bright glimmers. The phenomenal response to our Gondor-esque call for aid, when Kenstrosityâs life was ripped apart by Hurricane Helene, reassured me there are still a few good people out there, a good number of whom read this blog.
Still, I managed to turn out a few reviews this year, including my first ever 5.0âmore of which belowâwhich was worth it for the Steel Ire it evoked alone. And there was the Fifteenalia, a celebration the like of which we will not see again (for obvious reasons), which I had the honour of steering from questionable inception to creaky delivery.
Ironically, despite my struggles on the writing front, This Place has played a significant part in keeping me sane. Itâs been tolerable to welcome a few new staffersâsome even raised up from the awful Place Belowâto our serried ranks, while the older hands feel almost like family at this point, with everything that that entails. As ever, particular thanks go to Steel Druhm for his tireless intimidation, which just about keeps us honest, while Dolph, Dear Hollow, El Cuervo, Grier, Maddog, Sentynel and Thus Spoke, among others, have proved adequate companions for banter and gigs.
And with that, I wish you all the happiest of Listurnalias.
#ish. Pillar of Light // Caldera â A very late entry to this list, Pillar of Light should be a cautionary tale to bands and labels: release your shit earlier! With more time, the stunning Amenra-meets-Cult of Luna post-misery of Caldera could easily have placed in the top half of this list. While I know this is an album I will come to love and fully expect to regret not placing it higher here, the reality is that other entries have had longer to sink their hooks into me. I will just say that, for me, the apparently divisive vocals are a perfect fit for Pillar of Lightâs style.
#10. Seth // La France des Maudits â Way back when,1 French black metallers Seth snuck onto my list of Honorable Mentions with La Morsure du Christ, a fantastic return to form after a lengthy absence. After a short gap, theyâre back and this yearâs La France des Maudits has cracked the list proper. Melodic, bordering on symphonic with the keys and choral arrangements, but also visceral and feral, Seth dropped an absolute banger. It doesnât hurt that, as Thus Spoke pointed out in her review, itâs âdownright impressive how rich and dynamic this sounds.â
#9. The Vision Bleak // Weird Tales â The Vision Bleak is not, to paraphrase Dr Grier, a band that has ever âgotâ me. Or perhaps, Iâve never got them. But Weird Tales resonated with me enormously. And perhaps thatâs because itâs not really like anything The Vision Bleak has done before. Structuring their gothic black metal (or should that be blackened goth metal?) into a single, flowing song (albeit one broken into parts) got my attention. But they held my attention because they actually managed to pull off this very-hard-to-execute vision. Weird Talesâ Type O Negative / Moonspell-inspired blackened sound clicked into place almost instantly for me and now I need to go back to TVBâs discography with newly-opened eyes.
#8. Necrowretch // Swords of Dajjal â The first 4.0 I delivered in an alarmingly high-scoring year, Necrowretchâs black-death fusion is something that I have returned to again. Hiding beneath the vicious, downright nasty surface of Swords of Dajjal, is a surprisingly subtle and well-crafted concept album. As I said in my review, there is zero bloat or filler on this record, which blazes with intensity, driven as much by the scything, razor-sharp riffs as the rasping, sepulchral vocals. The range of influences cited, both by me and by impressed commenters, shows how many different aspects there are to this killer record.
#7. Panzerfaust // The Suns of Perdition â Chapter IV: To Shadow Zion â After Chapter III: The Astral Drain, I was worried that Panzerfaust were running out of steam and inspiration to close out The Suns of Perdition saga. Thankfully, my concerns were misplaced. To Shadow Zion reeks of doom and destiny. Huge, brooding and intense, it is a captivating listen, with the stunning âThe Damascene Conversionsâ sitting at its heart. From the sulfuric vocals to the masterful drumming, this was a worthy final chapter for The Suns of Perdition, which must go down as one of the best executed, most consistent multi-album concept pieces in metal.
#6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire â Spectral Wound just canât miss. For a band that, superficially at least, plays fairly old school black metal, songwriting chops paired with brilliant execution mean these guys are anything but derivative. My favourite album of theirs to date, Songs of Blood and Mire is just tons of wicked, nasty fun. Itâs hard to say exactly why, but I feel like everything Spectral Wound does has a slight knowing wink to it, which suggests that the band doesnât take itself too seriously. For me, this is a huge positive, as a lot of black metal is so tediously earnest, where this is unflinchingly harsh, surprisingly melodic and drowning in swaggering groove. Great stuff.
#5. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence â Iâm a sucker for death doom. And The Periapt of Absence is some fucking great death doom. Mother of Graves were unknown to me before I stumbled across this album but their blending of old school Opeth (think somewhere between Morningrise and Orchid) with early Katatonia and Paradise Lost, plus a sprinkling of Clouds is stunning. All wrapped up in a pleasingly tight package, Mother of Graves smother the listener in unflinching, heartwrenching misery. And I love every minute of it. Itâs that Peaceville Three sound we love, but feeling fresh, vibrant and vital.
#4. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair â Me and death metal donât always see eye to eye, and the last Devenial Verdict left only a passing impression. But Thus Spokeâs tireless tongue-bathing promotion of Blessing of Despair convinced me to give it a chance. While I enjoy the stomping thuggery of Devenial Verdictâs dissonant death well enough, itâs the sudden mood swings into what TS described as âlethally graceful restraintâ that really hooked me. Although worlds apart stylistically, on Blessing of Despair DV achieved what Chained to the Bottom of the Ocean did on Obsession Destruction: knowing precisely how far to push the suffocating, claustrophobic heaviness, before taking their foot off your throat for a minute. Then stamping on it again.
#3. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of Blood â Maddog predicted that I would lambast him as an underrating bastard for the 3.5 he deigned to award Ms Christmas. And he was quite correct. Heâs a charlatan of the highest order. However, even Iâm surprised by how high Ridiculous and Full of Blood has landed here. But, as someone not given to overly emotional reactions to music, Iâm continually stunned by the reactions JulieâCan I call you Julie? No? Okâextracts from me. Iâm often on the edge of tears by the end of âThe Lighthouse,â just like that cad Maddog, while the likes of âNot Enoughâ and âEnd of the Worldâ (the latter with CoLâs Johannes Persson) have a scary edge to them, with Christmas at her maniacal, crooning, possessed, unpredictable best.
#2. A Swarm of the Sun // An Empire â Speaking of emotional responses, A Swarm of the Sunâs stripped back melancholy is right up there. If I say that An Empire is brighter and more uplifting than previous efforts The Rifts and The Woods, understand that this is a very relative statement. An Empire is drowning in sorrow and misery, and yet there is just a hint of brightness that shimmers and hovers around the edges, like a lunar halo. Slow and deliberate, haunting and cathartic, A Swarm of the Sunâs latest outing is just beautiful. End of. No discussion.2
#1. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe â Yâall know I dropped a 5.0 on Die Urkatastophe, so itâs no surprise to find it here, sitting pretty, atop my list. Thereâs not much more praise that I can heap on Kanonenfieberâs sophomore record than I already did in my review. For me, it has everything and is more than I dared hope for as a follow up to my beloved MenschenmĂŒhle (my album of the year for 2021). It is brutal and vicious (âPanzerhenkerâ and âAusblutingsschlachtâ), anthemic (âDer Maulwurfâ and âMenschenmĂŒhleâ) and more. Craftedâand yes, that is the correct wordâwith huge skill and attention to detail, it is the storytelling, based on original source materials, that elevates this record to the next level for me. And if you donât speak German, or are simply not into narrative in your metal, just go bang your fucking head to âGott mit der Kavallerieâ!
Honorable mentions In alphabetical order by band:
Surprises oâ the Year Ordered by most astounding first:
Disappointment oâ the Year Limited to a single musical disappointment, to avoid submitting a lengthy thesis:
Songs oâ the Year
Cherd
Twenty-twenty-four was certainly a year that followed previous years and will precede still others. When I look back, Iâll likely remember it as the year I discovered the wonders of ADHD medication after decades of non-treatment, the difficult transition my poor Cherdlet experienced from kindergarten to first grade, and the incredible bucket list trip my wife and I took to Toronto to watch our favorite TV franchise filming new content courtesy of my very important Hollywood connections. No, not Robert Downey Jr. Much more important and better-looking. Hmm? Margot Robbie? She wishes. I also had the pleasure of meeting several of my fellow writers in person, and they are all much homelier than they let on with the exception of Madam X, who is a goddamned ray of sunshine.
On the musical front, I was able to check two bands off my âneed to see liveâ list in Judas Priest and Archspire, whereby I discovered that Halford does exactly zero audience banter, and Archspire do nothing but. Fun shows, both. I didnât listen to as much new music by volume this year than I have in previous years when Iâd log between 200 and 400 releases, and that was largely due to my kidâs age and the level of interaction he needs. I have a feeling, however, that 2025 will see an uptick thanks to the new Heavys headphones I got for Christmas this year. As always, I want to thank the editors, particularly Steel Druhm and Doc Grier, for not sending me a mailbomb after all the late reviews I turned in (Iâll work on that in 2025), and the man himself, AMG, for building this community and for agreeing that Deep Space Nine is the best Star Trek show.4
(ish) Chat Pile // Cool World â This is what it sounds like when Chat Pile make a âmatureâ record. As I noted in my October review, some of the most glaring weirdness and black humor the band is known for is missing in Cool World, which is why itâs here on my list instead of matching the lofty heights of my 2022 AOTY Godâs Country. That said, this is consistently bleak in a way I like, and it boasts what are in my opinion the two bestâif not most memorableâsongs the band have written to date in âNew Worldâ and âMasc.â Iâm a sucker for these Oklahomans and look forward to how their sound evolves from here.
#10. Glacial Tomb // Lightless Expanse â Iâve had an up and down journey with Glacial Tombâs sophomore record, but that doesnât mean I donât still view this as one of the best things Iâve listened to this year. To consider a record this closely means you have to listen to it a lot, and I wouldnât be surprised if I logged more hours with Lightless Expanse than with any other album. Iâve made a big deal about the one-three punch of âVoidwomb/Enshrined in Concrete/Abyssal Hostâ, but it bears repeating since itâs my favorite consecutive stretch of death metal in 2024.
#9. Replicant // Infinite Mortality â If you peel back the veneer of disso-death and blackened blasts on Infinite Mortality, youâll find a pounding hardcore heart comprised of equal parts beatdown and Converge. As technical as this music gets, and there is a lot going on here, Replicant never forget their primary duty as a metal band: snapping necks. On their third album, theyâve exquisitely composed a missive to unbridled aggression. I completely missed their previous albums, so Iâm glad our Kenfren wouldnât shut his excitable yap about this one.
#8. Spectral Voice // Sparagmos â âAlright skaters! This is the end of our free skate period. Weâd like to once again thank you for spending your Saturday with us here at Family Fun Roller Rink and Arcade. Itâs time to slow things down, down, way down, and you know what that means. Thatâs right, itâs couplesâ skate. So, find that special someone you want to be interred on a cold stone slab with, gaze into each otherâs empty eye sockets, and make your way around the rink as wave after wave of Spectral Voiceâs death/funeral doom forcefully separates you from any light, hope, or happiness this wretched world might have accidentally given you. Remember, those who survive the next 45 minutes of tectonic plates colliding will get the chance to compete in roller limbo!â
#7. Crypt Sermon // The Stygian Rose â Despite being one of the biggest doom apologists on this site, Crypt Sermon failed to grab me with their highly acclaimed debut nearly ten years ago. I chalk this up to my unfamiliarity with the traditional doom style at the time. In recent years, Iâve binged large amounts of Candlemass, Saint Vitus, Cathedral, Solitude Aeturnus et al., so I finally have the frame of reference to see just how well Crypt Sermonâs third LP captures the swagger, majesty, and grit of a style few contemporary bands seem interested in playing. After the growing pains displayed on The Ruins of Fading Light, these Philly natives have worked out the kinks and delivered an air-tight slab of doomy goodness.
#6. Full of Hell // Coagulated Bliss â I regret waiving my seniority claim to Full of Hell releases, thus allowing Dolph to snap up review duties for Coagulated Bliss. Itâs not that he did a bad job of reviewing the prolific experimental grind outfitâs latest. He did great, and he awarded it a deserved 4.0. But then he had the cheek, the nerve, the gall, the audacity, and the gumption to incorrectly lower his score. To make matters worse, it appeared nowhere on his year-end list. Not even a goll dern honorable mention. Iâve told him to his cetacean face that heâs wrong and Iâm likely to do so again because this is Full of Hellâs best work since Trumpeting Ecstasy. In fact, it might be better.
#5. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God â For most of their existence, Ulcerate was a highly acclaimed band that I just couldnât get into. That changed four years ago with the release of Stare into Death and Be Still. Little changed in their intricate approach to dissonant death metal, but there was something warmer and more human to what I had previously considered a rather detached style. That trend continues with Cutting the Throat of God. I find this record best when taken as a whole, letting the experience unfold over the full runtime, like dream-walking through a hedge maze or being trapped in a velvet sack and discovering itâs much larger on the inside.5
#4. Thou // Umbilical â I waited a long time for a chance to review a new record by Thou, and when it finally came, they did not disappoint. As I said in my June review, âLike their chimerical American metal brethren Inter Arma, it doesnât matter how many influences the band stuff into one album. They are all unified in sound under Thouâs banner. Bryan Funckâs acid-bit vocals are unmistakable and apparently unchangeable after 20 throat-shredding years. Also unchangeable? Thouâs ability to craft the most metallic-sounding guitar tone out there. As the standard bearer forâŠhell, as the entire sum of the second generation of Louisiana sludge, the sound theyâve forged isnât the kind of sloppy muck you may associate with the term. Itâs certainly thick, but it has a quality like two enormous steel I-beams violently striking each other.â If that doesnât sell Umbilical for you, then here is where our paths diverge.
#3. Devenial Verdict // Blessing of Despair â I didnât listen to Blessing of Despair for several weeks after it came out in October despite the fact Devenial Verdictâs previous record, Ash Blind, made my year-end list in 2022. When I finally got around to it earlier in December, it threatened to blow the doors right off my still nebulous list, climbing fast and high until ultimately landing here at number three. There is more immediacy than on Ash Blind, which took me a while to warm up to. That doesnât mean the band skimps on the kind of thoughtful transitions and atmospherics theyâve come to be known for. Itâs just that Blessing of Despair HAZ THE RIFFS, including my favorite death metal riff of the year in âSolus.â
#2. Void Witch // Horripilating Presence â When I revisited Horripilating Presence with the purpose of sorting out this listâs pecking order, I expected death-doomers Void Witch to fall mid-to-late top 10. Obviously, the opposite happened. For the life of me I donât understand how this album didnât gain more traction amongst the other writers and you, the unwashed commentariat. As I said back in July, ââŠthe material on Horripilating Presence is Mohamed Ali levels of confident. The editing of ideas in each song and across the albumâs taut 39 minutes is masterful, especially for a debut. No song hews too closely to any of the others, but all are of a piece, locking comfortably into place like an intricate puzzle box, and Void Witch have such sights to show you.â
#1. Inter Arma // New Heaven â Inter Arma never miss. Aside from being one of the best live acts in metal, every album theyâve released going back to 2013âs Sky Burial has been one successful evolution after another. As a very wise reviewer once said, âTheyâre the same shaggy beast as ever, but beneath that matted, coarse coat is a rippling form mid-shape shift, stretching, pulling, and crossing back on itself constantly over the course of New Heavenâs shockingly concise 42 minutesâŠIf being all over the musical map sounds like a negative, youâve probably never heard an Inter Arma record before. It seems whatever they throw at the wall sticks, and the listening experience across their (usually much longer) records never feels uneven. This is because they play everything with the same smoldering intensity and volatile mean streak.â What a record.
Honorable Mentions:
Songs oâ the Year:
In alphabetical order by band:
#2024 #40WattSun #ASwarmOfTheSun #Anciients #BlogPosts #BlueHeron #CarcharodonAndCherdSTopTenIshOf2024 #ChatPile #Convulsing #CryptSermon #DevenialVerdict #FullOfHell #GlareOfTheSun #GrandMagus #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kanonenfieber #Listurnalia #LordBuffalo #MotherOfGraves #Necrowretch #Nyktophobia #Opeth #Panzerfaust #PillarOfLight #Replicant #Selbst #Seth #Silhouette #SpectralVoice #SpectralWound #Sumac #TheVisionBleak #Thou #Ulcerate #VoidWitch #Vorga #ZealArdor
Doom_et_Alâs and Dear Hollowâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Doom_et_Al
Doom_et_Al
2024 was the year my reviewing fell off a cliff.
I had plenty of good excuses. An infant son (Grayskull) who totally rocks my world but who gobbles up free time and good sleep habits like Pacman on a tear. A new role at the hospital, for which I was initially out of my depth, and that required enormous effort to stay afloat. An exhausting book tour for a memoir I published earlier this year. These are all incredible things for which I am extremely grateful. I just found that at the end of every day, when I should have been critically assessing music, all I wanted to do was sleep.
This significant reduction in free time has forced me to reassess my relationship with metal. In the beforetimes, I would inhale it. I was not picky; the more the merrier. Now, I have to be judicious with what I listen to. I have a lower tolerance for bad music, and less inclination to listen to it multiple times. I sometimes yearned for a time when I could focus on music I wanted to listen to, not music I was being asked to critique. This caused me to wonder if I had any business reviewing music at all.
I canât tell you if 2024 was a good year for metal or not, because the free time I had was focused on music that brought comfort. I therefore spun fewer albums, but those I did spin got a lot of earball time. I do know that despite everything, metal continued to bring me enormous joy and happiness. Part of this is thanks to the incredible AMG team, and AMG Himself, who have created, without question, the best metal site on the planet. Special thanks to the Steely One, who could have fired me many times, but didnât for some reason. Iâd also like to thank my fellow writers who are good, kind, supportive people whose only flaw is their collective questionable taste.
Returning to the question of why Iâm still here: a few weeks ago, I was playing Gaerea softly on the stereo. Grayskull crawled in, heard the music, stood up, and with the biggest grin on his face, began growling and gesticulating. He was loving it, and his unbridled joy reminded me of how glorious good metal can be. It inspired me to try to review more next year. I hope some of that rubs off on you and that you have a beautiful, prosperous and happy 2025
#10. SgĂĄile // Traverse the Bealach â This type of noodly prog isnât usually my thing. But SgĂĄileâs Traverse the Bealach is so damn catchy and epic that it transcends the usual pitfalls of the sub-genre. Importantly, it captures the essence and majesty of the Scottish Highlands (albeit in post-apocalyptic form) in a way matched only, perhaps, by countryman Saor. Itâs also an album that improves the longer you listen to it. An unexpected delight.
#9. Misotheist // Vessels by Which the Devil is Made Flesh â A band that hasnât forgotten that black metal is supposed to feel ugly and dangerous, Vessels picks up where For the Glory of Your Redeemer left off, and is just as remorseless, claustrophobic and scary as its predecessors. Misotheist do their usual thing and knock out 3 dissonant bangers in under 40 minutes. When people complain that black metal has gone soft, point them in the direction of Misotheist
#8. Dissimulator // Lower Form Resistance â Thrash so tasty, even non-thrash fans like myself had to take notice. Complex, technical, ferocious⊠the only thing I donât love is the vocals, and those I can get past because the rest is so good. Loaded with killer riffs from start to finish, this should appease the cave-man in you, while tickling those neurones as well. This one stayed in rotation for me all year. Thrash never does that. Which should tell you all you need to know.
#7. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire â Although not as immediately spectacular as its predecessor, Songs of Blood and Mire is still a ferocious collection of vital and vivid black metal. Melding melodicism with fury, Spectral Wound create music as monstrous as it is catchy. Perhaps because it lacks the outright bangers of A Diabolic Thirst, perhaps because it is even more caustic, this one flew under many a radar. Donât let it fly under yours.
#6. Kanonenfieber // Die Urkatastrophe â Building on the promise exhibited in earlier albums and EPs, Kanonenfieber realize their full potential with Die Urkatastrophe. So aggressive, so confident, so accomplished that I knew after one listen that it would list. The notion that âwar is hellâ is patently clichĂ©d, yet Kanonenfieber subvert the usual trappings by cleverly mixing the faux-sunniness of war propaganda with the brutality of black metal. It works brilliantly.
#5. Selbst // Despondency Chord Progressions â Donât let the hideous AI art turn you off. Selbst have come out of nowhere to create the yearâs most chaotic, yet compelling, collection of tracks. Channelling Suffering Hour, this is music that finds the beauty in the messiness of its composition. Miraculously, the insanity never becomes wearying, only more interesting. By the time the final chords fade, youâll want to throw yourself in all over again.
#4. Dawn Treader // Bloom & Decay â File under âsurprise of the year.â I nearly snapped this one up from the promo sump, and then, like an idiot, passed it by. Jokeâs on me. Capturing the warm, fuzzy side of black metal (a la Deafheaven, or a good version of Ghost Bath), Dawn Treader manages to pack a deep emotional punch despite all the prettiness on display. Alcestâs effort this year was fine⊠but when I wanted that transcendent experience only good black metal can provide, it was to Bloom & Decay that I kept returning.
#3. Gaerea // Coma â Gaerea have always been absolute masters of catharsis. The ability to take music that is baseline intense, and ratchet it up even further, is a rare gift. With Coma, Gaerea dial things back. Their tenderest, most intimate collection benefits from adding a gentler emotional core. This makes Coma less immediate than, say, Mirage,but ultimately more varied. And when it hits, the highs are some of the best of Gaereaâs rock-solid career.
#2. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God â Arguably the best band in metal release another absolute barnstormer. Using every trick learned over the previous albums, Ulcerate deploy a devastating assault of dissonant death metal that captivates as it overwhelms. Insane drumming, complex time shifts, forceful melodies, thematic cohesion⊠Cutting the Throat of God has it all.
#1. Iotunnn // Kinship â First things first. Kinship not Access All Worlds Part 2. Itâs more ambitious. Itâs more sprawling. Itâs shaggier and looser. And truthfully, on my first few listens, I thought it was a bit bloated and ill-disciplined. A 4.5 hiding in a 3.0, if you will. But a weird thing happened. I kept coming back. And every time I came back, I discovered something new. The incredible cymbal work on the chorus of âMistland,â the gorgeous ending of âThe Anguished Eternal.â Soon I realized Kinship, and its songs, are exactly as long as they need to be. Jon Aldaraâs amazing vocal work elevates the stellar material even further, adding emotional complexity and yearning to the spell-binding complexity. The result is ethereal, complex, spiritually satisfying prog-death. Itâs the best album of the year.
Disappointment oâ the Year:
Zeal & Ardor // Greif â I love the band. The live show still rocks. But this is a disappointing misfire.
Songs oâ the Year
Dear Hollow
Welcome to the end of 2024! We at AMG hope the year has been kind to you â that your lives are filled with love, your hearts with joy, and our world with peace. I hope that you have found your people, and have those you can lean on. If we have ever given you a voice, a platform, or just love and support when you need it, then we have done our jobs.
2024 has been a roller coaster for the Hollow household. Our toddler is now a three-year-old encroaching on kidhood, with all the sass and sick burns she can muster.1 Fun news: we will be welcoming another kiddo into the world come summer of 2025! I also finally graduated with my masterâs in secondary education this past year (mainly for the pay raise). While Iâm unsure how much I will use from those classes, I have stepped up my class offerings to science fiction, true crime, and archaeology, alongside myriad others.
My metal reviewing has found a bit of a crossroads in 2024. At the end of 2023, I was diagnosed with anxiety and depression with potential ADHD, with a ton of childhood patterns and religious trauma rooted in my upbringing. As I unpack my need for productivity, I have had to take some steps back and see where my values actually lie as Iâve acclimated to medication, counseling, and just trying to rewire my brain. Iâve been reading and relaxing more, instead of cranking out reviews as religiously as I have. Iâm trying to live without religion â of any kind.
Special shout-outs to those who have been instrumental in my journey this year: the ineffable and tireless Steel Druhm, the genre-confusing Dolphin Whisperer, and those who have been supportive all year (Thus Spoke, Maddog, Carcharadon, Holdeneye, and Mystikus Hugebeard). Couldnât have done it without yâall.
On to the metal!
#ish. Sumac // The Healer â The amorphous and fluid nature of The Healer is exactly what Iâve wanted out of post-metal. Its organicity is its greatest asset, accomplishing rich and trembling tones across its mammoth 76-minute runtime. Improvised material largely fails due to its lack of direction, but direction was never a focus for Sumac; rather, it dwells in its own devastation â the warhead and the fallout. Electronics simmer, noise erupts, sludge riffs hit with the weight of a thousand suns, and vocals command the attack with vitriol and mania alike. The Healer wounds and heals.
#10. Sidewinder // Talon â I never thought a stoner-inclined album would make it to my list, but here we are. I scoffed, but then the first riff of âGuardiansâ hit, and collided with vocalist Jem Tupeâs formidable and rich belts, the pleasure was so immense I threw a table over. The full-bodied, fuzzed-out blues riffs continue into jam seshes that keep me coming back for more, with them bluesy vocals floating like a weed-piloted spaceship atop the seas of psychedelia. The New Zealand act boasts range, zeniths in the low and slow, and cuts loose with southern fried riffage. I havenât been able to shake the riff from âPrisonerâ for months.
#9. Sleepytime Gorilla Museum // Of the Last Human Being â As a recent convert to 2004âs Of Natural History, Sleepytime Gorilla Museum scratches the itch I didnât know I had. In essence, an art rock and jazz foray, Of the Last Human Being goes from snappy blasts of UneXpect-style metal meltdowns, multilayered vocal attacks, wonky and hypnotizing dream sequences,2 to brass drawls, anachronistic industrial electronic, to art-funk, and more! Sleepytime Gorilla Museum is confidently locked into its own stylistic fluidity â Of the Last Being picks up as if seventeen years havenât passed since its predecessor.
#8. Mamaleek // Vida Blue â Taking what made predecessor Diner Coffee so great and blowing it up with a palpable pomp, Vida Blue simultaneously pays homage to member Eric Livingston and the relocation of the Oakland Athletics to Las Vegas. Mamaleek establishes these tracks upon much shiftier sands, free jazz at its core, while jazz- and blues rock, post-punk, prog-rock, and pure experimentalisms are glossed over progressions rotten to the core. From flute and brass explosions to anarchic punk driving, youâd be hard-pressed to find an album as bewildering â and as utterly brilliant â as Vida Blue. Home run or whatever.
#7. Thou // Umbilical â While Thou has always been excellent, Umbilical foregoes the post-metal sensibilities that populated Heathen and Summit in favor of a cutthroat hardcore influence. Blessedly, while it feels harsher than much of their previous material, it doesnât change the core that defines this Baton Rouge collective. Doom and sludge still dominate the pain and smothering that Umbilical represents, with the thick riffs reeking with the putridity of swamp water and vocals haunting with the vitriol of the bayouâs ghosts dominating the ears aplenty, with a vicious hardcore urgency biting through the humidity.
#6. Ataraxie // Le DĂ©clin â The bleak edge of funeral doom has never felt so appealing. Recalling Ingmar Bergmanâs The Seventh Seal in its audio and existential weight, the French collective balances the heft of funeral doom with the punishment of death metal â without the bells and whistles of modern atmospherics. Leads dominate the melodic portions with mobility and competence, death metal collapses regularly imminent, tension and bleakness hanging high in an empty sky. Four tracks of patient starkness greet the ears with overwhelming weight and tortured meditations on devastation.
#5. Ingurgitating Oblivion // Ontology of Nought â Easily my most returned-to album of 2024, the German duo creates a death metal album that embodies the outer extremes of the style. Itâs dissonant beyond what many consider dissonant, punishing beyond whatâs considered punishing, and easily one of the most exploratory albums of the year. Five long-form tracks showcase labyrinthine songwriting, experimental melodic structures, mind-flaying technicality, and a strange sense of catchiness radiating from deep within. Perhaps the most puzzling release of the year that requires and demands your full attention, the unearthed rewards are plenty.
#4. Orgone // Pleroma â Stephen Jarrett emerges from a ten-year hiatus of Orgone for a definitive piece of metal that defies explanation. Featuring a technicality that exists in a league of its own with an adventurousness and organicity that aligns its vast range of influences neatly, with its core landing somewhere among technical death metal and post-hardcore a la Amia Venera Landscape. Riffs and sweeps maintain a certain unhinged and intensely calculated tedium, while stylistic wilderness is explored in real-time. Post-metal, death metal, post-hardcore, and jazz are all tied together with crescendos and organic breadth that sway from lush harmony to scathing dissonance seamlessly. Orgone returns with an opus and pilgrimage of beauty, adventure, and pain.
#3. Ulcerate // Cutting the Throat of God â I was this close to writing off Ulcerateâs newest as too accessible and too forward, lacking the atmospheric prowess of The Destroyers of All or Stare Into Death and Be Still. Then I let Cutting the Throat of God whisper and breath. In between these stormy blusters came the answer, and a sentience emerged. It wasnât about a broad showcase of dissonance and technical prowess, but a holistic cohesion that stitches the music together with the nuance and sinews of being. The vicious and the ethereal blended into unspoken horror, with meditations ranging from the frantic to the morbid. Cutting the Throat of God is the most human of its releases but in the tragedy it becomes and the metamorphosis it undergoes â the murder of God.
#2. Aborted // Vault of Horrors â Iâve never been terribly keen on the Belgian deathgrind legends, but Vault of Horrors curb-stomped a special place in me â namely because it sounds like deathcore. Iâm not willing to banter about that specificity, but all I know is that Vault of Horrors kicks serious ass. Ripping tempos, bludgeoning riffs, and an unhinged technicality align for an album deserving of the actâs reputation, bolstered by a legion of guests.3 Highlight after highlight rolls by with reckless abandon and pulverizing intensity, until your body is so bruised and beaten you have nothing else to offer. I donât care if itâs deathcore; itâs brutal, bouncy, and wicked, and Iâm just happy to have my skull caved in.
#1. Convulsing // Perdurance â Thinking of the meteoric trajectory of Australian one-man project Convulsing and its albums, itâs no wonder that Perdurance has lasting success. Dissonant death metal has a high standard this year with established juggernauts Ulcerate, Gigan, Mitochondrion, Devenial Verdict, Pyrrhon, Replicant, and Ingurgitating Oblivion releasing scathing blight upon the world in monolithic and ruthless fashion. In this way, Perdurance takes the world in a whisper. Encapsulating a sound that is both unforgivingly dense and painfully claustrophobic, while also starkly and lushly atmospheric in its layered crescendos and exploratory songwriting, few artists profess the level of songwriting the way sole member Brendan Sloan utilizes: intricate and gradual evolution of riffs and melodies, achieving a level of organicity and sentience seen by few. Twisting convention with a knife firmly planted in devastation, Perdurance achieves a truly iconic and transcendent voice in the best album of the year.
Honorable Mentions:
Biggest Surprises:
Songs oâ the Year:
#2024 #Aborted #Apes #Ataraxie #CharliXCX #Convulsing #DawnTreader #DefeatedSanity #Dissimulator #DoomEtAlSAndDearHollowSTopTenIshOf2024 #Gaerea #IngurgitatingOblivion #Iotunn #Kanonenfieber #Mamaleek #Misotheist #Orgone #PaysageDHiver #PillarOfLight #Selbst #Sgaile #Sidewinder #SleepytimeGorillaMuseum #SpectralWound #Stenched #Sumac #Thou #Ulcerate #ZealAndArdor
Convulsing â Perdurance [Things You Might Have Missed 2024]
By Dear Hollow
If youâre not familiar with Australiaâs Convulsing, youâve likely been exposed to mastermind Brendan Sloanâs impact on underground extreme metal. Alongside serving as bassist/vocalist of Altars (beginning with 2022âs Ascetic Reflection), guitarist of cinematic post-rock act Dumbsaint, and one-man show behind dissonant death/black distortionist Convulsing, he has contributed in some way or another to acts like Greytomb, Cosmic Putrefaction, Defacement, Gonemage, and Nightmarer. Convulsing remains his flagship project, and after two excellent LPâs Errata (2016) and Grievous (2018) of consecutively higher praise and a fantastic split with Siberian Hell Sounds, we are finally met with a gem of dissonant death metal after a six-year absence, an iconic record and monolithic sound steeped in nuance and imbued with dynamics, contrast, and texture: Perdurance.
What makes Perdurance such a resounding and enduring success is its ability to attack with intensity and dissonance that outdoes the best of its genre-mates. Warped rhythms are graced with staggered riffs and blazing percussion, as Convulsing explores every nook and twist of a rhythm and melody until its inevitable conclusion is happened upon in tragic and fatal fashion. Dissonant leads are the guide of Perdurance, providing scenic vistas to punishingly heavy riffs while reminding listeners of the inevitable doom that awaits. Like this yearâs Ulcerate, the devastation is beautifully nuanced and dynamics are secured, giving a sense of freedom, sentience, and lushness amid the relentless darkness and discordance. Tempo-abusing, blastbeat-wielding, and heavy as mountains, the more immediate offerings (âPentarch,â âFlayed,â âShattered Templesâ) offer this weight in pulverizing chuggy progressions, with a lurking monstrosity and humanity beneath its processions somehow more mammoth than its ten-ton riffs.
Beginning with âInner Oceans,â we are graced with Convulsingâs massive sense of crescendos and atmospherics. A slow burn guided by the leads, the riffs are explored more subtly and incrementally â leading to a sense of immense claustrophobia and suffocation. Beginning delicately and organically, the tracks warp and shift while constantly growing in size and intensity, leading to what feels like cave walls closing in. The organicity suggests a warmth unexpected in this breed of death metal, as lush progressions morph to menacing tones seamlessly (âEnduranceâ), while devastation and grandiosity are the killing blow for natural growths and crescendos (âInner Oceansâ). The episodic nature of closer âEnduranceâ is aptly climactic and cinematic, its different three-minute portions threaded together with lush and yearning progressions slightly twisted to uncanny valleyâs version of the heartfelt, amplified by brief passages of clean vocals and punkish beats.
Perdurance shows that Sloan remains at the top of his game â Convulsing cements itself as one of the best offerings of underground extreme metal and death metal in general. The second you think youâve heard a progression or passage before, Sloan distorts it with the precision of a mathematician and the ambition of a madman. It never neglects punishment or overstays its welcome, and every twist and turn feels beautifully executed and stunningly methodical. Even the cleanly sung bonus track Porcupine Tree cover âA Smart Kidâ feels at home following âEndurance.â Reflected in its evergreen title, Perdurance represents an immortal statement in dissonant death metal and extreme metal in general: ceaselessly brutal, meticulously crafted, and indubitably iconic.
Tracks to Check Out:1 âFlayed,â âInner Oceans,â âEnduranceâ
#2024 #Altars #AustralianMetal #BlackenedDeathMetal #Convulsing #CosmicPutrefaction #DeathMetal #Defacement #DissonantDeathMetal #Gonemage #Greytomb #Nightmarer #Perdurance #PorcupineTree #ProgressiveDeathMetal #SelfRelease #SiberianHellSounds #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2024 #TYMHM #Ulcerate
Conglaciation â Conglaciation Review
By Dolphin Whisperer
In emergence to the full-length foray now ten years ago, Artificial Brain launched into orbit a novel style of knotted and screeching death metal that brought with it a slingshotting mass of a tangible cosmic horror. And though itâs up for debate whether theyâve yet to best that offering, itâs easy to declare that the Artificial Brain attack is one that has largely remained singular, definitive, and pushing adjacent bandsâlike cousin Afterbirthâto corners of space not cast from shadow to light. But as a distant sun shines about the gravity of that modern act, time tells us that eventually, some satellite will drift into its orbit. As such, Conglaciation, in earshot of this pioneering sound has found a reveal along this dissonantly-carved path. However, the stars donât seem to be the destination for this fresh faceâits layers feel equally icy as the vast cavern of galactic emptiness but terrestrial all the same.
So what is it that separates this New York-based trio from both that which paved the way and that which is mostly related?1 That would be none other than a love for the beloved PokĂ©mon game series. What? Was that not what you expected? As it turns out primary composer for these tunes Cotter Champlin (SARMAT, Galactic Empire)2 has a passion for both studied and shredding guitar antics as well as the âgotta catch âem allâ grind of battle monsters. And this matters as the tracks of Conglaciation, by osmosis or intention, each lurch forward with a harmony-edging melody against gurgle-burp vocal hypnotismâequal parts Demilich jagged riff-belching against restrained yet virtuosic fusion-colored solosâmuch in the same way a gameâs incidental background tracks will intensify if you stand around and let them.
Where heavy dissonance use often aims to attract via repulsion, Champlinâs sense of long-form and recursive melody functions, instead, as an anchor that gains weight throughout each piece. Certain numbers open with these kinds of creeping and snaking plays (âAsunder,â âAtrementous,â âCongruencyâ), the pace of which slogs in intentional contrast to frenetic blast beats and percussive grumblings flitter under and through a slowly weaving web. Always upfront in the mix, the frequently shrill and ear-stumping refrains remain more static in primary attack than drifting, allowing additional layers of Champlinâs instrumentation to flourishâterraced bass groans, Holdsworthian scale-bending fretplay, doubled melodic climbs with new accents (âSublimateâ has the largest growth in this regard). Conglaciation sticks to memory much easier than other works of this level of technical acclaim.
Despite Conglaciationâs thoughtful construction, its charm has the appeal of a classical study piece, which conflicts with its true death metal moments in ways that scatter its attack. For an album so absolutely loaded with toothsome and jaw-dropping performances, it feels odd for Conglaciation to drop a seven-minute instrumental piece, âSketchâ,3 smack dab in the middle. Especially after the twisted Neuraxis-force groove that bolts down âConglaciationâ and gnarled, resplendent riffage of âSublimate,â that choice for a tip-toeing, pizzicato imitating intermission, as creative as it may be, stands tall and in the way amongst its peers. In terms of execution and memorability though, âSketchâ still wins accolades in its over-atmospheric approach. Even Champlinâs solos can land this way in the context of how tight songs could be without themâwarm in tone, they rarely soar above the eerie and frozen landscape that surround them.
More Ă©tude than banger, Conglaciation opens this projectâs career to the ears of the curious and dissecting. Too heady on average for the hammer-throwing hooligan, yet riff-loaded enough to incite some scattered pit riots (âConglaciation,â âAmeliorateâ), it flashes brightly enough all the same to catch those who feel the itch for a unique kind of sonic adventure. Nestled away in the relaxing and technical world of tension-masters like Convulsing and Altars, Conglaciation deserves a moment with its head just above the underground. And as they continue to master the craft of chiseling defined peaks in their work, it will be hard for any progressive death metal lover to look away.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 9 | Format Reviewed: PCM4
Label: Liminal Dread Productions | Bandcamp
Websites: conglaciation.bandcamp.com | instagram.com/conglaciation
Releases Worldwide: July 19th, 2024
#2024 #30 #Afterbirth #Altars #AmericanMetal #ArtificialBrain #Conglaciation #Convulsing #DeathMetal #Jul24 #LiminalDreadProductions #Neuraxis #Pokémon #ProgressiveDeathMetal #Review #Reviews #SARMAT #TechnicalDeathMetal
GIGS OF METAL:âïžđŠđșâïž
INTO THE FALL Metal Fest!
SIDE SHOWS have just been added!đ„
BRISBANE - The Brightside, Friday March 17th. @Gatecreeper@twitter.com + @undeathNY@twitter.com + #Convulsing
SYDNEY - Metro Social, Sunday 19th March @RealmofObscura@twitter.com + @Gatecreeper@twitter.com + #Ploughshare @IntoTheFallfest@twitter.com