#Farseer

Dustinalopix
2025-09-30

Finished reading the trilogy by Robin Hobb. Really loved it. What great world building. Hope the rest of the books are similar great! 📚

app.thestorygraph.com/series/5

2025-09-01

Record(s) o’ the Month – August 2025

By Angry Metal Guy

I said last month (well, last week, but who’s counting) that everything had been leading to that point. That’s true, because I was so stoked to make Calva Louise the Record o’ the Month for July in a somewhat relevant fashion that I did a mad dash to get that out before they were off to their tour in the USA. And then I was left there, feeling empty. I had worked so hard. I had come so far. But in the end, I wondered if it really even mattered.1 In my malaise, I turned to August releases. And realized something: «No, Doctor Metalero Enojado», me dije, «aĂșn no todo estĂĄ perdido. Ahora puedes subir el/los Disco(s) del Mes a tiempo. Y asĂ­ les cierras la boca a todos esos progres llorones de los comentarios para que sepan quiĂ©n manda.»2 Said differently


WE DID IT! WE’RE #1! WE’RE #1! USA! USA! USA! USA! BOOORTLES!!!

Angry Metal Guy didn’t yet exist when I got into In Mourning. In 2008, I got caught in the hype machine for a little record called Shrouded Divine. Following its release in 2008, the band went through a period when it felt like they were still establishing an identity, but in recent years, In Mourning has been on a low-key tear. While both 2019’s Garden of Storms and 2021’s The Bleeding Veil were very good records, In Mourning has outdone themselves on The Immortal [Bandcamp], which was released August 29th, 2025, from Supreme Chaos Records. Without mincing words, The Immortal is clearly the band’s best record since its debut, and I would submit that it’s the best melodeath record since Insomnium’s Winter’s Gate.

When faced with an exceptional record, it can sometimes be difficult to explain exactly why it’s exceptional.3 The melodies are beautiful and rich, hitting you right in the feels whether carried by voice (“Silver Crescent”) or on trem-picked guitars (“As Long as the Twilight Stays”). The riffs are punishing with a good balance of chug (“The Sojourner”) and trem (“Staghorn”), resulting in something that alternates between death and black in feel, if not in orthodoxy. These slight evolutions of sound help to keep In Mourning’s approach fresh, but it’s here that the dark matter of composition can be deduced, but not directly observed. None of this is totally novel in the band’s sound. But sometimes shit just works. There’s a lot of work that goes into writing. And no matter how good you are, not every minor key melody you write is going to be a tear-jerker, not every chunky riff is going to be quite as hooky or head-bangable as others, not every closer is going to be a Song o’ the Year candidate like “The Hounding”. But sometimes, you just keep rolling natural 20s.

The Immortal feels like one of those records blessed by the Metal Gods. Things that aren’t so different from what has gone before, but it all just hits a little harder. This makes The Immortal unquestionably one of the best records released in 2025, and everyone around here agrees with Kenstrosity’s eminently reasonable—arguably even understated—take that “with The Immortal, In Mourning further solidifies its status as an elite act in the melodeath pantheon.” The Immortal is on par with the best records in the genre,4 and “you owe it to yourself to hear it.” I think he underrated it.

Runner(s) Up:

Blackbraid // Blackbraid III [August 8th, 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] — Black metal is not an easy genre to make vital in the Year of Angry Metal Overlord 2025. But Blackbraid has a sound that feels vital. There’s a no bullshit intensity that Sgah’gahsowáh brings with III’s blast beats, croaks, and the trem-picked wall of sound that brings me back to falling in love with Emperor. Like the very best black metal, however, Blackbraid is not afraid of dropping into groove and synchronized-guitar-swing-friendly riffing that makes the blasts hit harder. There’s also something undeniably slick about Blackbraid. Digging through the potential standout albums from August, I kept coming back to III, because it gives me the things that I love about black metal: the intensity, the feel, the Ulveresque atmosphere without the obvious plagiarism. And it accomplishes this while avoiding the traps of so many modern black metal bands. As Doom_et_al so aptly summed it up: “Blackbraid III is everything a fan of either the band or this style of music could want. Like the land that inspires it, it is infused with violence and beauty and complexity. But it’s the ability to combine these disparate concepts with epic scope and intense vulnerability that sets it apart.” Say what you will, Blackbraid III is a real accomplishment.

Farseer // Portals to Cosmic Womb [August 22nd 2025 | Self-release | Bandcamp] — Farseer has its roots in stoner and sludge, and my eyes just shut of their own accord while I wrote that. So, it should come as no surprise to you that a self-released stoner/sludge release didn’t exactly jump off the page at me when reading about it. But thanks to some fine writing by Tyme and a well-placed bundle of cash in my freezer, I gave Portals to Cosmic Womb another listen. And another listen. And another listen. Turns out, these cats have some riffs in them. When their soupy riffs hit, they hit with the kind of splat that kills. Portals to Cosmic Womb has a drive that adds life to the thick guitar sound and the not-particularly-complex riffs, and for 39 minutes, it holds the listener in its grip without breaking a sweat. Our very own Tyme waxed poetic about Portals to Cosmic Womb, writing, “Farseer basting in their creative juices over the past six years has resulted in a vastly improved product, as Portals to Cosmic Womb shatters any notions of a sophomore slump. As if constructed from a blueprint of Opethic design, Farseer crafted Portals to Cosmic Womb with a near effortless flow. Its six songs—spanning a very manageable forty minutes—find Farseer merging the best parts of meandering instrumentals into rock-solid compositions that, like spring and neap tides, rise and fall with dramatic intensity.” Yeah, he’s saying it’s really good, y’all. Keep up!

Anchorite // Realm of Ruin [August 1st, 2025 | Personal Records | Bandcamp] — Anchorite is one of those bands that I shouldn’t be expected to like. The blues-infused doom roots here are strong, and yet, Realm of Ruin makes a surprisingly convincing case for itself. As is often the case when working with doom metal, the vocalist tends to drive whether a band is good or bad. In this case, Leo Stivala does a great job of balancing the aesthetics of Metal Voiceℱ and actually being able to sing with power. He’s got a pretty keen sense for melody, and his performance stands out. With that in place, Anchorite’s riffmeisters get to work writing a solid post-Candlemass doom that hits a place in my sadboi soul when I listen to it. And yet, part of what makes Realm of Ruin work is that it’s also surprisingly immediate at times. There’s a vibe like US power metal or thrash metal that suffuses the whole album, and with its unique production—that snare drum actually feels punchy, guys, so that’s weird—and its idiosyncratic songwriting, it all starts to feel special. Serial overrater and all-around softy Steely D put it like this: “Realm of Ruin is one of those albums you enjoy on the first go-through, and with each spin, it reveals more of itself until you’re fully submerged in the band’s craftwork. Anchorite has writing chops, and Realm of Ruin is an immersive stroll through the ruins with moments of genuine brilliance and grandeur.” So, there’s that.

#2025 #Anchorite #Aug25 #Blackbraid #BlackbraidIII #BlogPosts #Farseer #GardenOfStorms #InMourning #Insomnium #PortalsToCosmicWomb #RealmOfRuin #RecordOTheMonth #RecordSOTheMonth #RecordsOfTheMonth #TheBleedingVeil #TheImmortal #WinterSGate

2025-08-22

Farseer – Portals To Cosmic Womb Review

By Tyme

Growing up together in the Chicago suburb of Cary, Farseer’s Brendan McCarthy (guitars/vocals), Ted Ballantine (guitar), George Burrows (bass), and Kyle Curtis (drums) have been playing music together since the 8th grade. It wasn’t until they returned to the Chicago area after college, the four intent on applying their years of collaboration to a single, focused project, that Farseer formed in 2016. Their 2019 self-titled debut constituted forty-six minutes of progressively psychedelic stoner sludge, setting a solid foundation for Farseer to build from. Now six years on, stalwart line-up intact, Farseer prepare to release their second record, Portals To Cosmic Womb. With some very Burke-ish cover art courtesy of Ryan T. Hancock, a matured, less stoner logo, and a FFO rap sheet including Mastodon, Opeth, and Elder, I sensed Farseer had ascended to a higher level of seriousness, and I was excited to hear what Portals To Cosmic Womb would birth.

Culling most of the psychedelic and stoner-rock elements, Farseer’s sound has evolved, now rooted in deathly progressive sludge and post-metallic atmospheres. Notably absent from Portals to Cosmic Womb are the meandering instrumental tracks that dominated Farseer, along with McCarthy’s occasional flirtation with clean vocals. Here, he sticks solely to his powerfully effective growls, which sound like a slightly raspier Mikael Åkerfeldt. McCarthy’s and Ballantine’s guitar heroics either ebb with crushing, Mastodonically substantial riffs (“The Supreme Note of Suffering”) or flow in rivulets of delicately strummed chords and gently plucked leads that build, Wayfarer-like (“The Abomination Renders the Poor Man Speechless”) to crescendo. Creeping below these intricate melodies, captured beautifully by Brad Boatright’s master, are Burrows’ weighty, winding bass lines and Curtis’ thunderous drums, which pound forth when riffs command, and retreat as atmospheres demand. Farseer guides us through the cosmic bog, a place lyrically steeped in pools of altered reality that bubble with existential dread, populated by the anxiety-inducing absurdities of societal modernity lurking within the Cthulhuian shadows.

Portals to Cosmic Womb is dripping with highlights. Like “Endless Waves of Obliteration,” which, true to its namesake, undulates between massively heavy riffs intertwined with cavernously snarling vocals, a passage of driving, Gojira-like chugs, then on to a bass- and drum-heavy interlude laced with delicate, Eastern-tinged leads. Its chorus is still living rent-free in my head. Then there’s my personal favorite, “Gentleman’s Bookshelf,”1 that begins with pulsating drums and propelling riffs sluiced by a deluge of glistening, post-metal tremolos before going full-on Leviathan mode for McCarthy’s verse work. Then, the track plunges into an interlude fat with intricate drum fills, noodling bass lines, and subtly mournful leads, before building back in intensity to finish with Mastodon-like majesty. Having spent time with their debut, this Farseer seems well-matured, and their ability to write meaningful yet memorable songs has improved markedly, casting Portals to Cosmic Womb as a dark mistress, whose mysteries continue to unravel with subsequent spins.

As if constructed from a blueprint of Opethic design, Farseer crafted Portals to Cosmic Womb with a near effortless flow. It’s six songs, spanning a very manageable forty minutes, find Farseer merging the best parts of those meandering instrumentals into rock-solid compositions that, like spring and neap tides, rise and fall with dramatic intensity. There is one ripple in the water, though, and that’s the album closer “The Daneri House.” While there’s nothing inherently wrong with the track, I rather enjoyed the last sixty seconds’ flanger modulation on the guitars, which gave the ending a spacy, almost Pink Floydian texture. It is the album’s most progressive song, with its growling vocal first beginning and complex time signatures that, as the final track took me out of the experience Farseer had provided and would have been better placed after “Gentleman’s Bookshelf,” leaving “The Abomination Renders the Poor Man Speechless” to bring the album to a resounding close.

Farseer basting in their creative juices over the past six years has resulted in a vastly improved product, as Portals to Cosmic Womb shatters any notions of a sophomore slump. Should Farseer continue along the path they’ve set here, I anticipate a record deal soon. With Portals to Cosmic Womb, Farseer now enters the pantheon of great Chicago artists as a genuine contender, and one you should definitely take note of. And while September looks to be shaping up as one of the better release months this year, Farseer will undoubtedly stand as one of the brighter spots in not only August, but 2025 for sure.

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: ALAC
Label: Self-Released
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: August 22nd, 2025

#2025 #35 #AmericanMetal #Aug25 #DeathMetal #Farseer #Gojira #Mastodon #Opeth #PortalsToCosmicWomb #ProgressiveMetal #Reviews #SelfReleased #SludgeMetal #Wayfarer

El Pregoner del Metallpregonermetall
2025-08-22
2025-08-20

420 of 445 hours of audiobook listening in to the entirety of #RobinHobb's Realm Of The Elderlings Trilogies.

(Farseer, Live Ship Traders, Tawny Man, Rainwild Chonicles, Fitz and The Fool)

The narrator for the Fitz and The Fool trilogy has consistently said 'Live Ship' as 'liv ship' not 'lIve ship' over a hundred times.

If I had taken a shot a time in the last 5 chapters alone I'd be dead.

If you can be correct with 'Aslevjal' you can manage Live Ship. It's not like it makes sense the other way.

Aside from that, great narration work all round, I love the series and it's as fun listening as it was reading.
Passing character accent notes between trilogies would have been cool, but trad pub doesn't have a handle on narrator consistency yet (still?), and a pronunciation guide.

And giving the narrator a pronunciation guide.
<fx:mutter grumble>

@bookstodon
#amreading #amlistening #farseer

Ocktavoocktavo
2025-07-20

The Farseer saw it coming! 💀 Witness the Necron's epic return in my latest 40k edit, crafted from Dawn of War: Dark Crusade cutscenes. This game = peak RTS nostalgia! ✹

youtu.be/ziojfHGf17A

2025-06-25

Never apologise for asking questions, young seers Our race stopped asking questions once before and our complacency all but destroyed us This must never happen again #Farseer Marauth

Still from End of Luetin video  War In  Heaven 2 with sci fi background behind text:

Never apologise for asking questions, young seers

Our race stopped asking questions once before and our complacency all but destroyed us

This must never happen again

Farseer Marauth
2025-04-29

Aktualnoƛci:
»65 urodziny Roberta Jamesa Sawyera«

Szeƛćdziesiąt pięć lat temu (29.04.1960 r.) w Ottawie przyszedƂ na Ć›wiat kanadyjski pisarz science fiction Robert James Sawyer.

fahrenheit.net.pl/aktualnosci/

#Fahrenheit_zin #Wolnoƛć #Hybrydy #Wonder #pisarz #FarSeer #RobertJamesSawyer #FossilHunter #GoldenFleece #Foreigner #Neandertalskaparalaksa #TheQuintaglioAscension #TheNeanderthalParallax #Hominidzi #Hominids #Ludzie #Humans #Hybrids #Wiedza #Wake #Wzrok #Watch

ĆčrĂłdƂo: facebook.com/robertjsawyer
2025-02-02

This months Combat Patrol delivered me the first of the Aeldari units in this Farseer, so I decided to crack on and paint him tonight

Pretty happy with how he turned out, not bad for a few hours work

#Warmongers #WarhammerCommunity #PaintSalm25 #Warhammer40k #Warhammer40000 #Aeldari #Farseer #CombatPatrol #AeldariFarseer #PaintingWarhammer #PaintingWarhammer2025

2024-12-08

Today's purchase is Assassin's Apprentice, volume 2 of the @darkhorse.com #GraphicNovels of @robinhobb.bsky.social's Farseer trilogy. 😍 I'm about to read both volumes. This is one of my favourite #book series. 💙📚 #Farseer #RobinHobb #BookSky #FantasyBooks #books #avidreader #bookworm

Óli Gneisti (English)oligneisti@social.linux.pizza
2024-07-04

I am rereading the #RealmOfTheElderlings series by #RobinHobb. It is of course one the greatest #Fantasy series ever written. I finished the #Farseer trilogy and am on #LiveshipTraders.

This is mostly spoiler free.

There is a character named Kyle Haven who is quite unlikable. Hobb does a good job of making us understand his motivations. We know how he sees himself as the hero of his own story but that does not really make me emphasize with him.

Kyle Haven is a mundane villain but somehow that makes him even worse. He is the sort of person who bullies the people around him to make himself feel more important and convinces himself that he is actually doing them a favor. I think we've all known people like that.

#books

2024-06-04

After 20-something years and 16 books, I finally reached the end of #RobinHobb's #Farseer books. They're easily my favourite fantasy series, and one that should be more well-known (TV adaptations can be superfluous, but I'd love to see one made from these books, just so I can revisit the story again).

Pro tip: don't read the ending in public, unless you want everyone to see you reduced to a blubbering mess. 😭 đŸș🃏đŸČđŸ—ĄïžđŸ

Assassin's Fate - Robin Hobb

share.libbyapp.com/title/30437

2024-05-10

Episode Alert: Zach is dropping his thoughts on The Farseer Trilogy (Robin Hobb), a spoiler-lite reaction episode. Will he convince Jim that it's a worthy read? Come see! #Farseer #Fantasy #SFF youtu.be/IzUewPGZEiw

2023-12-23

Doodled this absolute lewdity.

Some other artist (juliapw I think) drew the idea long ago. I just felt like doodling it today.

#warhammer40k #eldar #aeldari #farseer #lewd #myart #art #MastoArt

Aeldari farseer lifting her robes to show ankles
Creature from the Blue Nagoonbluenagoon@synthwave.social
2023-10-20

I've been absolutely obsessed with Robin Hobb's Farseer books lately. I'm halfway through book 2. Fantastic worldbuilding and character development. The main character is a very realistic young person, with all the frustrations, heartbreak, and possible unreliable narrator that comes with that.

I've heard people complain these books are slow but I'm not feeling that, I'm loving every minute spent with these characters & world.

#books #RobinHobb #fantasy #Farseer

2023-07-04

Hab es jetzt endlich geschafft, den letzten Teil von Robin Hobb's #Farseer #Trilogie zu lesen. Der war ziemlich zÀh.

Fitz, der Hauptcharakter, hatte im ersten Teil zu sehr wie ein Gary Stu gewirkt. Generell fand ich ihn die restlichen zwei BĂŒcher auch ziemlich unsympathisch. Könnte jetzt auch keinen Charakter als Lieblingscharakter benennen, außer vielleicht den Fool.

Von der QualitÀt her war die #LiveshipTrader Trilogie besser, das Niveau dort konstant hoch.

Nyr đŸ––đŸ»Nyr@paquita.masto.host
2023-05-31

Robin Hobb deserves more love. ❀
Much much more love.
#greatauthors #dragons #farseer #Nighteyes #Fitz #theFool

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