#FrozenCrown

2025-10-27

Stuck in the Filter: August 2025’s Angry Misses

By Kenstrosity

The heat persists, but now the humidity comes in full force as storm systems wreak havoc upon the coasts. I hide in my cramped closet of an office, lest I be washed out once again by an unsuspecting deluge. However, I still send my minions out into the facility, bound by duty to search for those metallic scraps on which we feast.

Fortuitously, most all of those imps I sent out came back alive, and with wares! BEHOLD!

Kenstrosity’s Galactic Gremlin

Silent Millenia // Celestial Twilight: Beyond the Crimson Veil [August 26th, 2025 – Self-Release]

Have you ever seen such a delightfully cheesy cover? Probably, but it’s been a while for me. I bought Celestial Twilight: Beyond the Crimson Veil, the second raw symphonic black metal opus from Finnish one-man act Silent Millenia, on the strength of the artwork alone. Little did I know that what lay beyond this crimson veil was some of the most fun melodic black metal this side of Moonlight Sorcery. The same low-fi roughness that personifies Old Nick’s work grounds Silent Millenia’s starbound songwriting as it traverses the universe with an energetic punch reminiscent of Emperor or Stormkeep (“Awaken the Celestial Spell,” “Daemonic Mastery”). To help differentiate Silent Millenia’s sound from that of their peers, a gothic atmosphere ensorcells much of this material to great effect, merging eerie Victorian melodies with galactic adventurism in an unlikely pair (“Enthrone the Spectral”). Swirling synths and sparkling twinkles abound as well, creating blissful moments of interest as frosty tremolos and piercing blasts take full advantage of the false sense of security those entrancing clouds of synthetic instrumentation create (“Benighted Path to Darkness Mysterium,” “Reign in Cosmic Majesty”). Simply put, Celestial Twilight is an unexpected gem of a symphonic black metal record, bursting with killer ideas and infinite levels of raw, unabashed fun. You should hear it!

Kronos’ Unexpected Unearthments

Street Sects // Dry Drunk [August 15th, 2025 – Self Release]

Dry Drunk sticks to your inner surfaces, draining down like cigarette tar along paralyzed cilia to pool in your lungs until the cells themselves foment rebellion. Once it’s in you, you feel paranoid, wretched, and alone. So it’s the proper follow-up to Street Sects’ visionary debut, End Position. Like that record, Dry Drunk plumbs the most mundane and unsavory gutters of America for a cast of protagonists that it dwells in or dispatches with a mixture of pity and disgust, with vocalist Leo Ashline narrating their violent crimes and self-hatred in a mixture of croons, shrieks, and snarls that cook the air before the speakers into the scent of booze and rotten teeth. And like that record, Shaun Ringsmuth (Glassing) dresses the sets with a fractal litter of snaps, squeals, crashes, gunshots, and grinding electronics, caked in tar and collapsing just as soon as it is swept into a structure. And like End Position, Dry Drunk is a masterpiece. The impeccable six-song stretch from “Love Makes You Fat” through “Riding the Clock” ties you to the bumper and drags you along some of the duo’s most creative side-roads, through the simmering, straightjacketed sludge of “Baker Act” to the chopped-up, smirking electronica of “Eject Button.” Swerving between addled, unintelligible agony and unforgettable anthems, Dry Drunk, like End Position before it is nothing less than the life of a junkie scraped together, heated on a spoon, and injected into your head. Once you’ve taken a hit, you will never be quite the same.

Thus Spoke’s Frightening Fragments

Defacement // Doomed [August 22nd, 2025 – Self Release]

There’s music for every vibe.1 The one Defacement fits is an exclusively extreme metal flavor of moody that is only appreciable by genre fans, made tangibly more eerie by their persistent idiosyncratic use of dark ambient interludes amidst the viciously distorted blackened death. Audiences—and reviewers—tend to disparage these electronic segments, but I’ve always felt their crackling presence increases the analog horror of it all, and rather than being a breather from the intensity, they prolong the nausea, the sense of emptiness, and the abject fearfulness of head-based trauma. This latter concept grows more metaphorical still on Doomed, where the violence is inside the mind, purpose-erasing, and emotionally-detaching. The ambience might be the most sadly beautiful so far (“Mournful,” and “Clouded” especially), and the transitions into nightmarish heaviness arguably the most fluid. And the metal is undoubtedly the most ambitious, dynamic, and magnificent of Defacement’s career, combining their most gruesome dissonance (“Portrait”) with their most bizarrely exuberant guitar melodies (“Unexplainable,” “Unrecognised”). Solos drip tangibly with (emotional) resonance (“Unexplainable,” “Absent”) and there’s not a breath or a moment of wasted space. Yes, the band’s heavier side can suffer from a nagging sense of homogeneous mass, but it remains transporting. While I can appreciate why others do not appreciate Defacement, this is the first of their outings I can truthfully say mesmerised me on first listen.

ClarkKent’s Heated Hymns

Phantom Fire // Phantom Fire [August 8th, 2025 – Edged Circle Productions]

While I waded through the murky depths of the August promo sump, Steel implored me to take the eponymous third album from Phantom Fire. “The AMG commentariat love blackened heavy metal,” he said. I disregarded his advice at my peril, and while I ended up enjoying what I grabbed, it turns out this would have been solid too. Featuring members from Enslaved, Kraków. Hellbutcher, and Aeternus, Phantom Fire play old school speed metal that harks back to the likes of Motörhead and Iron Maiden’s Killers. Thanks to healthy doses of bass and production values that allow the instruments to shine, each song is infused with energetic grooves. The music sounds fresh, crisp, and clear, from the booming drums to Eld’s “blackened” snarls. Early tracks “Eternal Void” and “All For None” show off the catchy blend of simple guitar riffs and a hoppin’ bass accompanied by energetic kit work. While placing a somewhat lengthy instrumental track in the middle of a record usually slows it down, “Fatal Attraction” turns out to be a highlight. It tells a tragic love story involving a motorcycle with nothing but instruments, an engine revving, and some police sirens. The second half of Phantom Fire gets a bit on the weirder side, turning to some stoner and psychedelia. There’s a push and pull between the stoner and Motörhead speed stuff on songs like “Malphas” and “Submersible Pt. 2,” and this blend actually works pretty well. It turns out that they aren’t phantom after all—these guys are truly fire.

Burning Witches // Inquisition [August 22nd, 2025 – Napalm Records]

With six albums in eight years, Swiss quintet Burning Witches has really been burning rubber. While such prolific output in such a short time frame generally spells trouble, Inquisition is a solid piece of heavy/power metal. Burning Witches dabbles in a mix of speedy power metal and mid-tempo heavy metal, often sounding like ’80s stalwarts Judas Priest and Def Leppard. With Laura Guldemond’s gruff voice, they produce a more weighty, less happy version of power metal than the likes of Fellowship or Frozen Crown. While the songs stick to formulaic structures, tempo shifts from song to song help keep things from growing stale. We see this variety right from the get-go, where “Soul Eater” takes a high-energy approach before moving into the more mellow “Shame.” There’s even a pretty solid ballad, “Release Me,” that grounds the back half of the record. Songs of the sort that Burning Witches write need catchy choruses, and fortunately, they deliver. “High Priestess of the Night” is a particular standout, delivering a knock-out punch in its delivery. It helps that the instrumental parts are well-executed, from crunchy riffs to subdued solos to booming blast beats. Anyone looking for a solid bit of power metal that’s not too heavy on the cheese will find this worth a listen.

Deathhammer // Crimson Dawn [August 29th, 2025 – Hells Headbangers Records]

Celebrating 20 years of blackened speed, Deathhammer drop LP number six with the kind of energy that exhausted parents dread to see in their children at bedtime. This is my first foray with the band, and I am in awe of the relentless level of manic energy they keep throughout Crimson Dawn’s 39 minutes. If science could learn how to harness their energy, we’d have an endless source of renewables. The two-piece out of Norway channels classic Slayer on crack and even has moments reminiscent of Painkiller-era Judas Priest. They play non-stop thrash cranked to 11, with persistent blast beats and some dual guitar parts that leave your head spinning from the rapid-fire directions the riffs fire off in. The heart of the mania is singer Sergeant Salsten. His crazed vocals are amazing—snarling, shouting, and shrieking in a way that took me back to the manic pitch Judge Doom could reach in Who Framed Roger Rabbit? He sings so fast that on the chorus of “Crimson Dawn,” it sounds like he says “Griffindor,” which had me searching confusedly for the Harry Potter tag. This was probably my favorite song, not just because of the Griffindor thing, but because that chorus is so catchy. Either way, it’s tough to pick a standout track because they all grip you by the throat and don’t let go. Crimson Dawn is a ton of fun and a must listen if you like your music fast.

Grin Reaper’s Bountiful Blight

Kallias // Digital Plague [August 14th, 2025 – Self Release]

Machine gun drumming, spacey synths, Morbid Angel-meets-Meshuggah riffing, Turian-esque barking and Voyager-reminiscent vocal melodies…what the fuck is going on here? The only thing more surprising than someone having the moxie to blend all these things together is how well they work in concert. Kallias doesn’t hold back on sophomore album Digital Plague, and the result is a rocket-fueled blast through forty-four minutes of eclectic, addictive prog. The mishmash of styles keeps the album fresh and unpredictable while never dipping its toes in inconsistent waters, and staccato rhythms propel listeners through eight tracks without losing steam. As with any prog metal worth its salt, Kallias brandishes technical prowess, and their cohesion belies the relatively short time they’ve been putting out music.2 The mix is well-suited to spotlight whoever needs it at a given time, whether the bass is purring (“Exogíini Kyriarchía”), the drums are being annihilated (“Pyrrhic Victory”), or a guitar solo nears Pettrucian wankery (“Phenomenal in Theory”). The end result is three-quarters of an hour filled with myriad influences that fuse into a sound all Kallias’s own, and it’s one I’ve returned to several times since discovering (also, credit to MontDoom for his stunning artwork, which helped initially draw my attention). Check it out—you’ll be sick if you avoid this one like the Plague.

Luke’s Kaleidoscopic Kicks

Giant Haze // Cosmic Mother [August 22nd, 2025 – Tonzonen Records]

Whereas many of my colleagues are bracing themselves for cooler conditions and harsh winters to come, in my neck of the woods, things are warming up. While my own wintry August filter proved scarce, there was one particular summery gem to lift moods with burly riffs and fat stoner grooves. Unheralded German act Giant Haze seemingly emerged out of nowhere during a random Bandcamp deep dive. Debut LP Cosmic Mother channels the good old days of ’90s-inspired desert rock, featuring grungy, doomy vibes via a groovy batch of riff-centric, hard-rocking and uplifting jams, evoking the nostalgic spirit of Kyuss, Fu Manchu, Clutch and perhaps even a dash of Danzig. Punching out raucous, groove-soaked hard rockers with skyscraping hooks (“Geographic Gardens Suck,” “King of Tomorrow,” “Panic to Ride”), summery, funk–psych jams (“Sunrise”), and bluesy, punk-infused fireballs (“Crank in Public,” “Shrink Age”) Giant Haze get a lot of things right on this assured debut. The songwriting is deceptively diverse and punchy, bolstered by solid production, tight musicianship, and the swaggering, ever so slightly goofy vocal charms and powerful hooks of frontman Christoph Wollmann. Inevitably, a few rough spots appear, but overall Cosmic Mother showcases oodles of budding potential, an impactful delivery, cheeky sense of humor, and infectious, feel-good songcraft.

Spicie Forrest’s Foraged Fruit

Bask // The Turning [August 22nd, 2025 – Season of Mist]

Last seen in 2019, Bask returns with fourth LP, The Turning, a concept album following The Rider as she and The Traveler traverse the stars. They still peddle the unique blend of stoner rock and Americana Kenstrosity reviewed favorably in 2019, but 2025 sees them looking up for inspiration. The Turning incorporates a distinct cosmic bent (“The Traveler,” “The Turning”) and post-rock structures (“Dig My Heels,” “Unwound”). These augmentations to Bask’s core sound are enhanced by the masterful pedal steel of new official member Jed Willis. Whether floating through the firmament or tilling earthly pastures, Willis creates textures both fresh and intensely nostalgic. The infinite shifting vistas of The Turning’s front half coalesce into singular timeless visions on the back half, supporting its conceptual nature in both content and form. Like a combination of Huntsmen and Somali Yacht Club, Bask weaves riffs and melodies heard across the plains and through the void above with an unguarded authenticity felt in your soul.

Dolphin Whisperer’s Disseminating Discharge

Plasmodulated // An Ocean ov Putrid, Stinky, Vile, Disgusting Hell [August 1st, 2025 – Personal Records]

Stinky, sticky, slimy—all adjectives that define the ideal death metal platter. Myk Colby has been trying to chase this perfect balance in a reverb-wonky package with projects like the d-beaten Hot Graves and extra hazy Wharflurch, but vile death metal balance is hard to achieve. However, An Ocean ov Putrid, Stinky, Vile, Disgusting Hell contains a recklessly pinched Demilichian riffage, classic piercing whammy bombs, and spook-minded synth ambience that places Plasmodulated with an odor more pungent than its peers. With an infected ear that festers equally with doom-loaded, Incantation-indebted drags (“Gelatinous Mutation ov Brewed Origin,” “Trapped in the Plasmovoid”) and Voivod-on-jenkem cutaways to foul-throated extravagence (“The Final Fuckening”). An air of intelligent tempo design keeps An Ocean from never feeling trapped in a maze of its own fumes, with Colby’s lush and bubbling synth design seguing tumbles into hammering deathly tremolo runs (“Such Rapid Sphacelation”) and Celtic Frosted riff tumbles (“Drowning in Sputum”) alike, all before swirling about his own tattered, trailing vocal sputters. Steady but slippery, elegant yet effluvial, An Ocean ov Putrid, Stinky, Vile, Disgusting Hell provides the necessary noxious pressure to corrode death metal-loving denizens into pure gloops of stained-denim pit worship. Delivered as labeled, Plasmodulated earns its hazardous declaration. We here at AMG are not liable for any OSHA violations that occur as a result of Plasmodulated consumption on the job, though.

#2025 #Aeternus #AmericanMetal #Americana #AnOceanOvPutridStinkyVileDisgustingHell #Aug25 #Bask #BlackMetal #BlackenedDeathMetal #BurningWitches #CelestialTwilightBeyondTheCrimsonVeil #CelticFrost #Clutch #CosmicMother #CrimsonDawn #Danzig #DarkAmbient #DeathMetal #Deathhammer #DefLeppard #Defacement #Demilich #DigitalPlague #Doomed #DryDrunk #DutchMetal #EdgedCircleProductions #Emperor #Enslaved #Fellship #FinnishMetal #FrozenCrown #FuManchu #GermanMetal #GiantHaze #Glassing #Hardcore #HeavyMetal #Hellbutcher #HellsHeadbangersRecords #HotGraves #Huntsmen #Incantation #Inquisition #IronMaiden #JudasPriest #Kallias #Kraków #Kyuss #MelodicBlackMetal #Meshuggah #MoonlightSorcery #MorbidAngel #Motörhead #NapalmRecords #NorwegianMetal #OldNick #PersonalRecords #PhantomFire #Plasmodulated #PowerMetal #ProgressiveDeathMetal #RawBlackMetal #Review #Reviews #SelfRelease #SilentMillenia #Slayer #Sludge #SludgeMetal #SomaliYachtClub #SpeedMetal #StonerRock #Stormkeep #StreetSects #StuckInTheFilter #StuckInTheFilter2025 #SwissMetal #SymphonicBlackMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheTurning #TonzonenRecords #Turian #Voivod #Voyager #Wharflurch

2025-10-26

Elettra Storm – Evertale Review

By ClarkKent

Italy has a well-established power metal scene, particularly the ostentatious Rhapsody of Fire and the dazzling Frozen Crown. Looking to make a foothold in this scene is Elettra Storm with the release of their sophomore album, Evertale. While it may look like a strange word for those not fluent in Italian, Elettra comes from the Greek mythological figure, Electra/Elektra. It also serves as a root word for electricity, which helps explain both the odd-sounding band name and the storm surrounding the head of the woman on the cover. This quintet isn’t looking to reinvent the cheese wheel; they just want to write some catchy songs and give their lead singer, Crystal Emiliani, a chance to show off her pipes. Do they have that spark to set the power metal world on fire?

While people like to tease that Wilderun is Disney metal, if Disney were to actually sign a metal artist, they would likely sound like Elettra Storm. They straddle the line between power metal and hard rock mixed with some pop. They don’t quite bring the dance vibes like Battle Beast, but their power metal also isn’t as aggressive or hard-hitting as Frozen Crown. Guitar riffs and drum beats are relatively muted, though not without a lively energy, as Elettra Storm largely plays it safe instrumentally. Instead, they rely on the strength of their frontwoman, and Emiliani delivers. She channels a mix of Disney-friendly pop artists from Idina Menzel to Celine Dion. On “Blue Phoenix,” I half-expected Emiliani to break out into “Let it go” when she buoyantly sings the refrain “And rise again,” while “Secrets of the Universe” has a moment where her voice briefly brought me back to that titanic hit from decades ago.

For power metal of this caliber to work, the choruses need to be catchy, but on this score, Evertale is a mixed bag. It’s not that the choruses are a miss, but that they’re often forgettable. It doesn’t help that the lyrics tend to be convoluted. On “Hero Among Heroes,” Emiliani sings “Hero among heroes / Rise the sword up in the sky / Strong of arm and mind”—this ESL tendency hampers catchiness. Evertale also suffers a general lack of hooks. For the most part, riffs are bland, standard rock fare, and melodies are nil. Opener “Endgame” has some hooky synths, but Elettra Storm rarely returns to them on the rest of the record. “Master of Fairytales” also shows potential when it opens with energetic blast beats and a decent chorus, but the song drops that energy the rest of the way. “Blue Phoenix,” on the other hand, is proof they have the capability of writing really good power metal. It has Evertale’s most creative riffs, a consistent level of energy, and a chorus that soars in a dazzling display like the mythological bird. In the end, Elettra Storm could learn a lot from studying stalwarts of catchy power metal like Unleash the Archers.

Elettra Storm actually feels most at home on the lone track that’s geared more towards pop than metal: “One Last Ray of Light.” This tune eschews the usual power metal trappings of noodly riffs and high energy. It features a piano and what sounds like a mandolin playing a lovely melody.1 Then the chorus hits and the real magic happens. Emiliani’s voice rises to a beautiful lilt as she belts out the catchiest chorus on Evertale. The song is a certifiable banger, and it is also where Elettra Storm sounds most comfortable. Between this and “Blue Phoenix,” Elettra Storm have it in them to write some great power metal—if only they could apply these successes to the rest of Evertale.

The end result is an album that is pleasantly bland, with tracks ranging from forgettable to slightly above average, as well as a couple that are quite good. I won’t deny that I sometimes find myself whistling a random tune like “Judgment Time” while I’m out and about. Evertale hits that sweet spot between power metal and adult pop/rock where it could find an audience in either genre. Elettra Storm provides an electric vocalist, a little bit of guitar noodling, and radio rock song structures that make it a pleasant in-the-moment listen. But the record fails to take many risks or hit many of the highs the genre is capable of. Instead, it plays things a little too safe and doesn’t quite live up to its elettra-fying name.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 256 kbps mp3
Label: Scarlet Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: October 24th, 2025

#25 #2025 #BattleBeast #CelineDion #ElettraStorm #Evertale #FrozenCrown #HardRock #IdinaMenzel #ItalianMetal #Oct25 #PowerMetal #Review #Reviews #RhapsodyOfFire #ScarletRecords #UnleashTheArchers #Wilderun

2025-10-15

Catch Your Breath, Solance, Nothing More und Ankor
22.11.2025 Stuttgart / LKA Longhorn

Fiddler's Green
28.12.2025 Stuttgart / LKA Longhorn
01.05.2026 T?bingen / Sudhaus

Frozen Crown, Beast In Black und Sonata Arctica
07.11.2026 Ludwigsburg / MHP Arena

Van Canto
08.11.2025 Stuttgart / Im Wizemann

#CatchYourBreath #FiddlerSGreen #FrozenCrown #ImWizemann #LKALonghorn #Ludwigsburg #MHPArena #Stuttgart #Sudhaus #Tubingen #VanCanto #SteelFeed

2025-10-15

Black Spikes, Infected Rain und Butcher Babies
18.04.2026 M?nchen / Backstage

Catch Your Breath, Solance, Nothing More und Ankor
21.11.2025 M?nchen / Backstage

Fiddler's Green
18.12.2025 M?nchen / Backstage

Frozen Crown, Beast In Black und Sonata Arctica
20.11.2026 M?nchen / Zenith

Infected Rain, Butcher Babies und Black Spikes
18.04.2026 M?nchen / Backstage

The New Roses
24.10.2025 Ingolstadt / Eventhalle Westpark

Tulip, Ad Infinitum und Seven Spires
29.10.2025 M?nchen / Backstage

Vader, Blood Red Throne und Kataklysm
11.03.2026 M?nchen / Backstage

Vulvarine
05.12.2025 M?nchen / Backstage

#Backstage #BlackSpikes #CatchYourBreath #EventhalleWestpark #FiddlerSGreen #FrozenCrown #InfectedRain #Ingolstadt #Munchen #TheNewRoses #Tulip #Vader #Vulvarine #Zenith #SteelFeed

2025-10-15

Fiddler's Green
25.04.2026 Hameln / Sumpfblume

Frozen Crown, Beast In Black und Sonata Arctica
06.11.2026 Hannover / Swiss Life Hall

Iron Maiden
02.06.2026 Hannover / Heinz von Heiden Arena

Tulip, Ad Infinitum und Seven Spires
04.11.2025 Herford / Kulturwerk

Vader, Blood Red Throne und Kataklysm
25.03.2026 Braunschweig / Westand

Van Canto
07.11.2025 Herford / Kulturwerk

#Braunschweig #FiddlerSGreen #FrozenCrown #Hameln #Hannover #HeinzVonHeidenArena #Herford #IronMaiden #Kulturwerk #Sumpfblume #SwissLifeHall #Tulip #Vader #VanCanto #Westand #SteelFeed

2025-10-15

Ananda Mida
25.10.2025 Berlin / Urban Spree

Fiddler's Green
29.11.2025 Berlin / Columbia Theater
09.05.2026 Potsdam / Lindenpark

Frozen Crown, Beast In Black und Sonata Arctica
05.11.2026 Berlin / Columbiahalle

Tulip, Ad Infinitum und Seven Spires
02.11.2025 Berlin / Lido

Vader, Blood Red Throne und Kataklysm
20.03.2026 Berlin / Festsaal Kreuzberg

#An #Berlin #ColumbiaTheater #Columbiahalle #FestsaalKreuzberg #FiddlerSGreen #FrozenCrown #Lido #Lindenpark #Potsdam #Tulip #UrbanSpree #Vader #SteelFeed

2025-05-09

#FrozenCrown - Angels in Disguise
song.link/y/cCekuyjatPw

Kind of surprised this song wasn't released as a single. It's one of the best tracks of the album.

I guess Mastodon doesn't pull anything from song.link so I'll start including album art for these too, I guess.
@metal #music #metal #MetalMusic #PowerMetal #CleanVocals #FemaleVocals

Album cover of Winterbane by Frozen crown.  An image of a moonlight battle field, a woman stands in the center, her palms upward with a blue flame in her right hand and an orange flam in her left.  To her side are two women wearing skull -shaped helmets, holding swords, and kneeling.
2025-05-03

Estoy hecha polvo entre la resaca de concierto (que es algo que se tiene aunque no bebas) y la tormenta que me cayó encima ayer, pero quería mostrar un poco las bandas powerosas que vi ayer en Vicálvaro :D
(además, mañana me voy a ver a Michael Schenker tocando UFO, ese conci es más de relax para gente mayor, espero sobrevivir xD)

Las fotos me salieron movidas la mayoría porque, si no lo sabéis os lo digo, yo con una cámara no saco nada bueno, pero si no documento un concierto al que voy, no me quedo agusto xD Así que hay una foto de cada banda y otra más del bonito botín que me llevé de recuerdo :D

Lutharo 🇨🇦 tocan melodeath poweroso, como lo llamo yo. Mucha gente dice que el melodeath es basicamente power metal pero con guturales a la voz. Yo no estoy de acuerdo, pero esta gente suena muy bien. Solo tienen 2 albumes, pero progresan muy bien. Os dejo un enlace a youtube para que veais como suenan apropiadamente:
youtube.com/watch?v=Wl5SfC-oTM

Fellowship 🇬🇧 son power casi sinfónico y son lo más wholesome que te puedan echar en cara. Yo los pondría de gira con Freedom Call para ponernos a todos a producir serotonina, en serio. A pesar de las pintas, no son otra de esas bandas con gimmick, sus letras hablan mucho de salud mental y se te pegan las melodías sin darte cuenta :D
youtube.com/watch?v=QYyxnpordV (no os perdais los kekos del video xD)

Frozen Crown 🇮🇹 hacen power metal clásico Y SE LO CURRAN. Llevan... 8 años juntos? Y ya tienen 5 discos. Y les llamaban la promesa del power italiano, y ahora por fin han tenido su primera gira como headliners. Me alegro mucho por ellos, aunque ahora tienen 3 guitarristas, ahí a lo Iron Maiden y yo preferiría que hubieran incluido teclista, pero quién soy yo. Además, sí, lo veis bien, son 3 tíos y 3 tías, no se ve mucho en el metal, pero vaya jefismo llevan :D
youtube.com/watch?v=dQnD0KbWis

Espero que os gusten :)

#metal #powermetal #frozencrown #lutharo #fellowship

Lutharo desde Canadá, melodeath poweroso, diría yoFellowship desde Inglaterra, power melodico casi sinfónico y lo más wholesome que te puedan echar en caraFrozen Crown desde Italia, power metal más clásico, con 3 guitarristas a lo Maiden
2025-01-22

Dragonknight – Legions Review

By Eldritch Elitist

A not-insignificant number of my favorite power metal acts are “noun noun” bands. Power Quest. Twilight Force. Fellow Ship. There’s something about smashing two overwrought people, places, and/or things together that perfectly fits power metal’s prerequisite for excess, and Dragonknight is one of my favorite band names to come out of the genre in recent memory. I’m a little less enthused that their identities are hidden behind their confusingly uniform, copy-paste Slipknot masks1, but between their ludicrously opulent logo and Legions’ hilariously literal cover art, Dragonknight is one of the more immediately striking power metal acts to debut on Scarlet Records. Of course, with Frozen Crown and Fellowship being alums from the same label, the bar is set in the stratosphere; as Legions shows, that bar is not easily reached.

Explaining what DragonKnight sounds like would be markedly less expeditious than describing who they sound like, as Legions sees the band feasting upon a veritable buffet of inspirations. A bespoke influence seemingly accompanies each track; Gloryhammer (“Dead Kings in the Grave”), Beast in Black (“Sword of the Northern Lights”), and mercifully not Alestorm but rather Running Wild (“Pirates, Bloody Pirates!”) serve as some of Legions’ more obvious sources of inspiration. While DragonKnight’s aesthetic varies widely across this album, it’s all tied together with an overarching symphonic flair that keeps the proceedings from sounding overly disjointed. Moreover, Legions sounds technically competent and professional, traits which should be a given but are too often scarce in the genre. For many power metal fans, the level of execution alone may be satisfying.

Dragonknight may presently be more concerned with emulating the successes of modern power metal than innovating the game. Still, I also get the sense that the band had a ton of fun making Legions, so it manages not to tip my cynicism meter to the red. I do, however, find myself increasingly annoyed with this album for a potentially more damning reason: It’s just kinda bland. There are certainly highlights between “The Imperator”‘s Dream Evil-goes-symphonic march and “The Revelation2“‘s condensed galloping rush, but much of Legions lacks urgency and excitement. Instrumental flair is absent outside of the frequently excellent guitar solos, and while the melodies are generally pleasant, Dragonknight fails to capitalize on their solid foundation with the giant melodic swings that define the genre. Legions isn’t forgettable, per se, but it fails to make an impression where it matters most.

Legions hits me with all the force of a lukewarm bucket of water at least in part due to its production choices. The album sounds quite nice from a technical perspective, carrying a meatier low-end presence than most power metal records allow which effectively balances the symphonic bombast. The instruments themselves, however, lack tonal character, their generic metallic edge failing to cut through the swaths of synths. Singer and sole named member Lord Salo Khan (Mikael Salo, Everfrost3) also lacks power in many scenarios, with his voice failing to deliver a convincing presence of power in Legions’ most melodic tracks, namely “Storm Bringer.” At other times, however, he excels; the conviction with which he delivers the lyric “Sailing ships with great dexterity!” goes a long way in making “Pirates Bloody Pirates!” another early highlight of Dragonknight’s career.

I reference Dragonknight in context with a hypothetical future as it’s one that I hope comes to fruition. Their debut left me with a stronger first impression than this review and its score implies, but I ultimately found Legions lacking in staying power, my mind struggling not to wander towards the dozens of better records it reminds me of as I ventured past my first couple of spins. Dragonknight has the talent and songwriting chops to excel on future outings, but they need to work on identifying and honing their strengths rather than spreading themselves thin with an overly ambitious scope. If Dragonknight can succeed in this regard, they may well find themselves on equal footing with their peers. As it stands today, they are a decent imitation of their influences, but sincere flattery can only carry them so far.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 256 kbps mp3
Label: Scarlet Records
Websites: scarletrecords.bandcamp.com/album/legions | dragonknightband.com | facebook.com/dragonknightband
Releases Worldwide: January 17th, 2025

#25 #2025 #Alestorm #BeastInBlack #Dragonknight #DreamEvil #Everfrost #Fellowship #FinnishMetal #FrozenCrown #Galneryus #Gloryhammer #Jan25 #Legions #PowerMetal #PowerQuest #Review #Reviews #RunningWild #ScarletRecords #Slipknot #TwilightForce

2024-10-21

Vendredi c'est #concert de métal symphonique : Ad Infinitum, Kamelot, Blackbriar, et Frozen Crown ! :blobcheerbounce:
Merci @slhproductions !
:shibasmile: 🤘

#AdInfinitum #Kamelot #Blackbriar #FrozenCrown #Lyon

2024-10-18

Frozen Crown – War Hearts Review

By Eldritch Elitist

In recent months I’ve been mulling over the virtues of concise songwriting. Thanks to its inherent pop appeal, power metal benefits most from diligent self-editing. The style’s inclinations towards grandeur and virtuosity mean that short-form power metal is uncommon, yet tasteful restraint can lead to breathtaking gut punches of concentrated genre excess. On their fifth LP, War Hearts, Frozen Crown seems to agree. Their preceding effort, Call of the North, was defined by extended track lengths that accommodated its adventurous and dynamic songwriting. In contrast, War Hearts feels like a throwback to the band’s earliest efforts, its streamlined compositions’ average length barely breaching the four-minute mark. The sense of scale feels narrowed, but this is still unmistakably a Frozen Crown record, with all the joy a Frozen Crown record entails.

War Hearts’ brisk pacing might be its greatest asset, resulting in the most addictively replayable Frozen Crown release since The Fallen King. Its tracks race by in DragonForce-esque swirls of melody and adrenaline, making it both the catchiest—and likely fastest—record in the band’s rapidly expanding discography. “War Hearts,” “Edge of Reality,” and (my personal favorite) “On Silver Wings” in particular are defined by protracted guitar lines and explosive vocal moments that exude unbridled power metal instinct. Even outside these songs, War Hearts is distinguished by the most purely power metal entry in the Frozen Crown canon. Where Call of the North opted to exclude harsh vocals entirely, War Hearts sees the band further (yet not entirely) reigning in their melodeath leanings. This is a leaner Frozen Crown in multiple respects, yet one that impressively feels as distinct as its meaner predecessor.

As infectiously propulsive as War Hearts can be, it is a notably less ambitious Frozen Crown offering by design. Slashing the average track length has led to more traditional song structuring, meaning that the condensed epics and unexpected compositional twists from the preceding record are more or less absent. I expect some fans may take issue with this shift, but I do not see the simplified songwriting as a net negative. This is merely a different flavor of Frozen Crown, standing out from past efforts through bespoke strengths and weaknesses. That being said, certain tracks weather this streamlining worse than others. “Night of the Wolf” is too straightforwardly fast to the point where its hooks fail to properly take hold. Conversely, “I Am the Wind” feels obligatory as the sole mid-paced number; enjoyable, yet ultimately unremarkable. Though very good in its own right, extra jolts of flair or complexity during War Hearts’ sporadic periods of monotony may have elevated it to excellence.

Frozen Crown’s gambit on a simplified experience has also diminished the progressive leanings often imbued into their riffs. While I miss those brain-tickling curveballs, War Hearts makes it up by filling their absence with brow-moistening fire bursts of technicality. The guitar work here is unquestionably the most impressive of the band’s efforts, with leads and solos that regularly recall Fraser Edward’s (Ascension) technicolor noodling. Recruiting a new guitarist in Alessia Lanzone (joining Sheena Bellomo and founding member Federico Mondelli) has surely contributed towards broadening the definition of the Frozen Crown sound. The guitars, paired with Giada Etro’s powerful yet naturalistic vocal timbre, make for one of the most colorful shredscapes in the genre today. It’s a shame that the performances feel crowded in the mix, an issue carried over from War Hearts’ predecessor, but its lush symphonic leanings sound pleasantly distinct in the band’s catalog all the same.

I love what Frozen Crown has accomplished with War Hearts, which is firmly my second favorite of their records. Frozen Crown has never failed in iterating from one album to the next; where their first three records felt like a band figuring itself out, War Hearts (as Call of the North before it) exemplifies a confident group comfortably experimenting within their broadly defined boundaries. I am all but certain that we will eventually be treated to Frozen Crown records that feel more complex and aggressive than War Hearts, as well as records that successfully iterate on its more accessible, power metal-forward approach. I’m at a point with Frozen Crown where I never quite know what I’ll experience with each new album, aside from confidence that what I hear will likely be very, very good. Any band that enkindles such a feeling of assurance is to be protected at all costs.

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: ¯\_(ツ)_/¯ | Format Reviewed: Haulix Stream (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: frozencrown.bandcamp.com/music | frozencrown.net | facebook.com/frozencrownofficial
Releases Worldwide: October 18th, 2024

#2024 #35 #Ascension #DragonForce #FrozenCrown #ItalianMetal #NapalmRecords #Oct24 #PowerMetal #Review #Reviews #WarHearts

S.L.R. Magazineslrmagazine
2024-10-17

Power Metal Band FROZEN CROWN Releases Guitar-Driven Banger “I Am The Wind” and Official Music Video. @FrozenCrownBand

slrmagazine.com/2024/10/16/pow

2024-09-25

NEW INTERVIEW

Recently, I had the privilege of sitting down with the incredibly talented vocalist #GiadaJadeEtro and the versatile guitarist/vocalist #FedericoMondelli of the Italian #powermetal band #FrozenCrown. Our conversation revolved around their highly-anticipated fifth #album, #WarHearts, scheduled for release in October on #NapalmRecords

#HeavyMetal #MusicJournalism #Blog #Blogger #FreelanceJournalism #independantwriting

mickbirchallreview.blogspot.co

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