#FINNTROLL

2025-11-23

Morbikon – Lost Within the Astral Crypts

By Owlswald

When he’s not dealing in the Slime and Punishment of Municipal Waste or pissing off the neighbors with Iron Reagan, axe-wielder Phil “Landphil” Hall channels his focus into Morbikon. Formed in 2020, Hall’s black metal side-project earned recognition from AMG Industries when Ferox highlighted the supergroup’s debut, Ov Mournful Twilight, as his surprise record of 2022. Rooted in all things kvlt and trve, the album’s second wave frostbitten anthems plunged into the remnants of burned churches and stale corpse paint, resulting in “eight meloblack rippers calibrated to bring winter to your soul and whiplash to your neck.” Now, Morbikon’s sophomore LP finds Hall honing his homage to the black arts, promising to descend his creation into a deeper, more sepulchral state. Ignite your torch and prepare the Necronomicon—it’s time to get Lost Within the Astral Crypts.

Lost Within the Astral Crypts forges the scorched spirit of Ov Mournful Twilight into a leaner, more technical and overwhelmingly black entity. Drawing on the lineup’s pedigree, Morbikon’s collective talent coalesces into an authoritative, and at times downright impressive, synthesis of 90s-influenced blackened thrash. Vocalist Mathias “Vreth” Lillmåns (Finntroll, …And Oceans) returns with his characteristic throat-ripping vocals, as furious down-picked riffs and swarming, lightning-quick tremolodic scales consistently anchor the material firmly in the black. Complementing Hall’s stylish fretwork, drummer Pierce Williams (Ænigmatum, ex-Skeletal Remains)—who replaces Dave Witte—adds raw, destructive rhythms with tight rolls and syncopations that are both refreshing and sophisticated. Tracks like “Unending Legions of Baal,” “Masters of Eternal Night” and “Flames that Bind and Shadows Cast” evoke a full-on black metal assault reminiscent of Satyricon or Emperor, complete with pounding double bass and subtle synths, while “Ghoul Infested Mausoleum” and “Heavens that Burn and Eons Divided” push the envelope with airy Wintersun melodicism peppered with thrash savagery.

The necrotic might of Lost Within the Astral Crypts rests in Morbikon’s technical excellence, elevating the album’s eight tracks beyond the seminal Scandinavian sound. Worshipping at the altar of the almighty riff, Hall and company immediately demonstrate their capabilities on “Heavens that Burn and Eons Divided”—an energetic, fun and melodic banger driven by a potent layered tremolo attack, fantasy-toned leads and Williams’ tomb-raiding blasts that promptly underscore Morbikon’s technical ambition. “Ghoul Infested Mausoleum” features the record’s best tremolo riff: a spectral high/low scale progression imbued with nocturnal gravity, bolstered by Williams’ accented beats and Lillmåns’ gnarly shrieks. Shreddy, virtuosic solos on the title track, “Flames that Bind and Shadows Cast” and “Numeric Portal Ascendency” push Lost Within the Astral Crypts past the point of a stereotypical tremolo-fest, while strategic thrash and death explorations (such as the opening passage of “Flames that Bind and Shadows Cast”) help maintain listener interest before regrounding the album’s dark, aggressive roots.

Given Morbikon’s stellar execution and the album’s efficient 43-minute runtime—with little bloat to be found—any criticism must instead focus on Lost Within the Astral Crypts’ songwriting. “Masters of Eternal Night” is a serviceable track, but often clings too tightly to classic Scandinavian conventions (even adopting a familiar Mayhem-like conclusion), rendering it less engaging than the album’s superior cuts. “Sworn to the Beheaded King” briefly adopts a more aggressive, in-your-face death metal spirit at its midpoint, including a tasteful guitar solo. Yet, these highlights can’t mask the track’s conventionality as it quickly retreats to familiar black metal terrain. Although the monolithic presence of Lost Within the Astral Crypts occasionally falters in favor of genre conventions, stagnant sections (“Ghoul Infested Mausoleum,” “Flames that Bind and Shadows Cast”) and even some superfluous wankery (“Lost Within the Astral Crypts”), the underlying songwriting remains solid, with engaging riffs and hooks that are strong enough to largely sustain the album’s momentum.

Lost Within the Astral Crypts is a worthy reinvention of a well-trodden sound. While the album is certainly not groundbreaking—nor is it trying to be—it demonstrates top-notch musical dexterity and delivers exceptionally well-executed material that is aggressive, dark and steeped in 90s nostalgia. At its weakest, Lost Within the Astral Crypts serves as a grim invitation to exhume those second-wave classics from your collection; at its strongest, it stands as a fun, rock-solid blackened thrash record that advances and validates Hall’s creative vision, confirming Morbikon’s vast potential.

Rating: Good
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Tankcrimes
Websites: instagram.com/morbikon | facebook.com/morbikon
Releases Worldwide: November 21st, 2025

#andOceans #2025 #30 #aenigmatum #americanMetal #blackMetal #emperor #finntroll #ironReagan #lostWithinTheAstralCrypts #mayhem #morbikon #municipalWaste #nov25 #review #reviews #satyricon #skeletalRemains #tankcrimes #wintersun

Sid's Photographysiddebona@gram.social
2025-11-15
Stomp! I love this picture cause it captures the chaos of being almost smushed to edge of the stage. Taken at a Finntroll concert. (Bonus points for the accidental bi color scheme!)

Album: https://sid-debona.blogspot.com/2013/09/finntroll-at-daos-club-timisoara.html

I don't really come on here so if you want to contact me or keep up with what I post you can find me on Mastodon: https://mementomori.social/@sid

#concertphotography #finntroll
The boot of one of the musicians is in the foreground, resting on the speaker, uncomfortably close to the camera. Behind the rest of the band is performing. The photo is very hazy, captured in blue light with some pink accents.
2025-08-21

Månegarm – Edsvuren Review

By Angry Metal Guy

Once upon a time, Månegarm was an apex predator of the blackened folk metal scene that took metal by storm (er, Storm) in the early-to-mid-2000s. For a brief moment, as Heathenfests proliferated and white guys from Wisconsin,1 fell in love with songs about Vikings and runes, the Viking metal/folk metal subgenre was the Next Big Thing, fueled by a surprisingly liquid supply of fiddles, jaw harps, gallops, and flask-swinging choruses. Yet, time wasn’t kind. Turisas ghosted us after leaving us a weird note, Finntroll got lost in the woods and returned changed, and even Thyrfing and Moonsorrow have slowed to a crawl. But Månegarm has never stopped.2 With the impending release of Edsvuren (Oathbound or Sworn), their thirteenth full-length and fifth since signing with Napalm Records, this Swedish trio stands as one of the last standard-bearers of this once-ferocious scene.

Månegarm’s arc explains how we got here. From Havets vargar (2000) to Nattväsen (2009), Månegarm was among the hardest-hitting of the folk metal vanguard. They blended black metal’s blasting intensity with violin counterpoint (and solos), and Erik Grawsiö’s gravel-throated roar. But following Nattväsen, Månegarm underwent a serious change. With the departure of their violinist and bassist, Grawsiö moved to bass, but more importantly, they emerged with a retooled sound. By 2013’s Legions of the North, Månegarm had begun shaping themselves towards something more akin to Amon Amarth’s mid-paced crunch than the blastful abandon of their black metal roots. Edsvuren continues the same trajectory, letting the flames burn low rather than trying to rekindle the blaze; content to let the embers glow.

When the wind blows right, however, Månegarm’s fire burns bright. When these Swedes go heavy, the results are still vital—some of the best metal they’ve released in years. The opening trifecta demonstrates this: “I skogfruns famn” brims with trem-picked harmonies, fiddle, and melodies and pacing that evoke Isengard or Lumsk. “Lögrinns värn” picks up the pace and builds on Amon Amarthian heft, while “En Blodvittneskrans”—one of the album’s standout tracks—crackles with surprisingly punk-inflected drumming and tremelos that transport me to Bjoergvin. On the album’s back half, we again find heavy tracks that brim with harmonic minor riffing, fantastic vocal harmonies, and creative songwriting. “Skild från hugen” stretches into a seven-minute epic, weaving gallops, fiddle, and a doomy interlude where Elinor Videfors’ smoky alto helps to elevate the song. While “Likgökens fest” follows with another blast of urgency. In these moments, Månegarm is vibrant and confident, with a powerful sound and presence.

Much of Edsvuren, however, lives in the embers. Acoustic folk tracks like “Rodhins hav,” “Till gudars följe,” and “I runor ristades orden” aren’t filler; they’re beautiful. The production places each acoustic strum and hand drum with care, and Videfors’ voice adds a crystalline, haunting quality. Ancient and evocative, these songs are built on droning harmonies and modal folk melodies. And they sound great. In listening to these, I’m reminded of Panopticon’s Laurentian Blue, folk music with fiddle and a deep melancholy.3 The problem is proportion. Nearly half the record lives in this slower, acoustic, or mid-paced heavy space. And when stacked back-to-back (“Rodhins hav” through “Hör mitt kall,” and then again in the closing pair of songs), the album sputters. At 51 minutes, Edsvuren isn’t overlong, but there are moments when the pacing lengthens the album.

The vocals provide the oxygen that keeps Edsvuren burning, showcasing some of the finest arrangements Månegarm has ever recorded. Grawsiö’s extreme vocals remain commanding, but it’s his cleans—gravelly and full,4 at times evoking throat singing—that unite Edsvuren. The interplay with the guest vocalists—Elinor Videfors, Grawsiö’s daughter Lea on “I skogfruns famn”—is well balanced. And at its best, the record gives the impression that you’re sitting around the campfire and listening to them sing. Choruses bloom into layers of voices that feel almost ritualistic—but at least communal—and are balanced expertly in the mix (“Till gudars följe”). There’s an almost Finntrollian playfulness in the vocal arrangements at times (again, “Till gudars följe”), while at other times the harmonies are clinically tight like harmonic minor Bad Religion or early Soen. Even when the riffs tread familiar ground—or the album feels like it’s slowing down too much—the vocals continually elevate compositions and keep me hooked.

Edsvuren is an album that’s easy to like, but tricky to love. But I can say with confidence that it’s my favorite Månegarm since the Napalm run began in 2013. The heavy material is vital, energetic, and it reminds me of why I fell in love with these Swedish wolves to begin with. The folk songs and feel are brittle and beautiful, and give the album character and variety. Unfortunately, the overall balance of the record leans a little too hard into mid-tempo riffs, rock feels rather than blastbeats, and acoustic folk music—resulting in pacing that makes it feel less than the sum of its Very-Good!-to-Great! parts. I enjoy the songs, I admire the craft, but taken as a whole, they leave Edsvuren a little low on bite. Edsvuren may not spark anew Månegarm’s flames, but it tends the embers—keeping them warm enough for fellowship, beer, and song.

Rating: Good!
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream5
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: linktr.ee/manegarmofficial | manegarm.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: August 29th, 2025

#2025 #30 #AmonAmarth #Aug25 #BadReligion #Edsvuren #Finntroll #FolkMetal #HavetsVargar #Isengard #LaurentianBlue #Lumsk #Månegarm #MelodicBlackMetal #MelodicDeathMetal #Moonsorrow #NapalmRecords #Nattväsen #Panopticon #Review #Reviews #Soen #Storm #Thyrfing #Turisas #VikingMetal

2025-06-28

I somehow forgot how #Finntroll is actually one of the best bands in the world 🤘🏽🥹

2025-02-26

Demnächst: ...And Oceans veröffentlicht am 23.05.2025 „The Regeneration Itinerary“.
YouTube-Clip zu ‚Inertiae‘: youtube.com/watch?v=08IBcTO-jR

🔗 gloomr.de/#1522

#Finntroll #CosmicBlackMetal #NeuesAlbum

2024-08-18

Eisregen – Abart Review

By GardensTale

Some bands have history. Eisregen has lore. Terrorizing Germany for almost 30 years, core members Yantit and M.Roth have managed to get 2 of their albums restricted and 2 more outright banned in their home country. The BzKJ1 brought down the hammer on account of the sheer fucked-up-ness of their lyrics, which feature graphic gore, necrophilia, incest, and more. I think the German government has never heard of slam, or that list would be a whole lot longer. Though I had caught Eisregen’s moniker floating about the web a few times, it wasn’t until now that I got to sample their proprietary brand of perversion. How does Abart stack up against its 15(!) predecessors?

No one has time to listen to a discography that size for reviewing a single album, but a brief perusal suggests that Eisregen is very much in the camp that won’t fix what ain’t broken. Three parts gothic metal, two parts black metal and one part death metal, the music is kept smaller than the uninitiated like myself might have expected, contrasting the amount of hoo-hah the band seems to have drawn. In hoarse, breathy rasps, the band sketches nightmarish stories like Mary Shelley turned to 11, without overt aggression or grandeur. Demure piano and violin supply a measure of haunting atmosphere and the necessary hooks to keep the tracks interesting beyond the disturbing lyrics. This is vital, as you need to speak German to understand them in the first place.

But whilst my expectations were tempered, I’ve found myself pleasantly taken with Abart. The songwriting is simple and not particularly dynamic, sticking to basic structures without significant evolution in pacing or mood, but Eisregen shows itself capable of engaging on many different levels across the well-varied tracklist. Wistful melancholy outlines “Im blutroten Raum,” yet the rambunctious “Hinterland” is suffused with a Finntroll-like sense of mischief. “Schöner sterben” is straight-up gothic doom in the vein of Paradise Lost, but “Lebendköder” hews closer to the theatrical gothic black of Cradle of Filth or Carach Angren. M.Roth’s rasp is suitably over the top, hamming up the evil characters he embodies with highly entertaining relish and over-pronunciation, but he can be surprisingly sonorous with his cleans which evoke Till Lindeman (Rammstein).

It can be hard to escape the autopilot altogether when you average an album every other year for three decades, though, and Eisregen doesn’t entirely escape a vibe of formulaic composition. The vocals are great, but clean asides aside, they have one tone and one intensity across the majority of the album. Verse-chorus structures are fine, but with the tempo and intra-track variety on display, the music can get predictable at times. The attempt at an epic closer, “Totkörperkunst,”2 doesn’t have enough going for it to fill its 10-minute duration. It results in an album that is enjoyable while it’s playing but lacks the zest to outgrow itself beyond that.

Still, with the law of diminishing records in mind, Abart finds Eisregen in finer form than most bands with a discography well into double digits can lay claim to. Despite the overlong finale, there are no real duds on here, with both atmosphere and hooks plentiful and very entertaining. Even the production is well above industry standard despite the vocals sitting too far forward in the mix. As for the lyrics, the ones I’ve translated are very entertaining self-contained horror stories, such as a bolt gun serial killer and a murder-suicide by embalming, so the German audience might get more out of this one. But monolinguals, don’t let that scare you off, because Abart is a fun yet undemanding little slasher anthology that will make for a great Halloween soundtrack in a couple of months.

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Massacre Records
Websites: kkth.de | facebook.com/eisregen.official
Releases Worldwide: August 16th, 2024

#2024 #30 #Abart #Aug24 #BlackMetal #CarachAngren #CradleOfFilth #DeathMetal #Eisregen #Finntroll #GermanMetal #GothicMeta #MassacreRecords #ParadiseLost #Rammstein #Review #Reviews

2024-07-25

A pak jsou prostě dny, kdy potřebuješ nějakou vzpruhu.

#legendy
#Finntroll
#TomandJerry

youtube.com/watch?v=2IqIC7vQBB

   🎵 Now Playing: Trollhammaren by Finntroll 🎶
💽 Album: Nattfödd
▶️ Listen: [Song link]


#NowPlaying #Finntroll #Music #LovedTrack
2024-04-25

Ook Finntroll maakt er een feestje van. Zo'n lieve, maar toch pittige pit, heb ik al een tijdje niet gezien.
Wel jammer dat er bandje meeloopt voor de fluiten en violen.

Trollhammaren!

#doornroosjepas #doornroosje #finntroll

2024-01-19

It has been long time since I was listening #Finntroll last time. So tonight it's #TrollTime! youtube.com/watch?v=o5XNwAU8cJ #folkmetal #metal #nowlistening

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