I am now listening to The Blaze by Horrendous #Horrendous
https://www.last.fm/music/Horrendous/_/The+Blaze
I am now listening to The Blaze by Horrendous #Horrendous
https://www.last.fm/music/Horrendous/_/The+Blaze
Oriolesâ clown show continues in horrendous 4-3 loss to Nationals https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/32874/ #Baltimore #BaltimoreOrioles #BaltimoreOriolesScoresStandings #BaltimoreOrioles #Baseball #camden #chat #clown #continues #FrontPage #horrendous #in #loss #MLB #nationals #Orioles #show #to
#ENOUGH IS IS ENOUGH IS FAR TOO GOTDAMN MUCH ALREADY!
....OR WHAT THE FUCK DO YOU THINK YOU DESERVE TOMORROW?!!!!
....OR THAT WE ANY OF US EVEN DESERVE A TOMORROW AFTER ALL OF THIS #HORRENDOUS #DREADFUL #SHAMFUL #UNFORGIVABLE #SHIT?????
#NowPlaying some Horrendous to relax, and then there's also #ThursDeath đ
Link to Ecdysis (album) on bandcamp:
https://horrendous.bandcamp.com/album/ecdysis
Dolphin Whispererâs and Feroxâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Dolphin Whisperer
Dolphin Whisperer
Every year, its end becomes more shocking and swift. Once, some guy told me, simply, âit only gets worse.â Not life thoughâattributing a better or worse or any sort of constant determination of our passage leaves a lot of room for falling into a void of enjoymentâlife is, after all, a constant until its not. But time, or our sense of being in its too ever-present stream, flows at a rate that changes in ways to which we never quite catch up.
As such, thereâs a comfort in knowing how much time an album, particularly one you enjoy will take. For the ten-to-twenty minutes it takes for grindcore proper to slap me silly or the forty-to-eighty minutes that it takes for my deepest progressive loves to wring out a moaning confession, I know where my attention lies, even if itâs only half there and half on a task at hand. Time and tasks, day to night, play to stop, music makes my world a better place. And entering my now third year at Angry Metal Guy, an institution that has been a fixture of my musical journey for even longer, I continue to hold a profound gratitude and excitement for another year of discovery.
2024 has had its challenges professionally and personally. 2025 will be no doubt the same, even if some trials we can see forming in the distance. But you want to know about the music, right? On that end, 2024 has yielded a heaping trove of great albums. Heck, even a Rodeö pick scratched at the rungs of an honorable mention. The below list barely scratches the surface of the breadth that the year has offered. Further down you will see Feroxâs list, which captures a different collection equally rooted in joy. He might be more right than I am. But that matters little. Celebrate with us, your favorite collective of writers on the world wide web! Come hang with some of us on Discord too if youâd like. Most of the people there are certified flea-free. And donât be too upset if 2025 doesnât hit you the same at first. Itâs just another year, and itâll be over before you know it.
#ish. Kalandra // A Frame of Mind â At my core, I consider myself a Norwegian sad girl. Usually, this manifests in some sort of weepy, melancholy prog, the likes of Age of Silence or Madder Mortem.1 But Kalandraâs enfolkened an impassioned take on an artsy, progressive collection of empowering tunes hit me square in my aching heart from the moment I heard it. Most importantly, though, Kalandra knows that suffering is just a step on the path of growth and happiness, which is a message that inspires me every day.
#10. Dawnwalker // The Unknowing â The power to dream and envision a world driven by mysticism has an allure thatâs hard to ignore. And while we know that more determinable laws guide the happenings of our daily lives, a glimpse of the unknown will always find its way into sequence. Dawnwalker putting this esoteric but ever-present concept into an atmospheric, genre-warped, playfully progressive package hardly surprises me, though. The British troupe has had my number since their unsung classic In Rooms,2 so Iâm doing my last in continuing to love them despite Twelveâs best efforts to underrate them.3
#9. Lizzard // Mesh â Lizzardâs 2021 opus Eroded is my favorite album of this decade so far. The French trioâs ability to warp deep, rhythm-tricky layers into driving and emotional rock songs his me at the core of my musical desire for cathartic hope expressed in an unassuming and lush framework. Mesh doesnât present any differently in that regard. But its wrinkles on Lizzardâs timeless yet â90s alternative-rooted oeuvre fuel Meshâs inherent melancholy with a hope thatâs jubilant, like a cracked smile on an overcast day.
#8. Dissimulator // Lower Form Resistance â [INCOMING TRANSMISSION.] âMy name is Clyde, and I arrive from beyond with wonderful news. My good friend Ferox has survived this timeline after all, having learned to navigate the Lower Form Resistance assault of fast-twitch rhythms and slow-twitch death metal punctuation. His head, fully intact, sways wildly in its hairless gloryâbig dives for big skanking breaks, snappy rolls for whiplash accelerations. He may not be as rhythmically gifted in pit-galloping cadence as the virtuoso drum and bass duo that provides life to Dissimulatorâs effortless strides, but Ferox is my everything nonetheless.â [END TRANSMISSION.]
#7. Mamaleek // Vida Blue â I couldnât begin to tell you what has never landed about Mamaleekâs works before with a weird precision. As an act dedicated to sounding only like Mamaleek, their singular expression of tortured black(ish) metal warped by jazzy and slogging attitudes has manifested quite the take-it-or-leave-it musical experience. And while you, dear reader, may assume this is firmly up my alley, it has not been. At least not until Vida Blue served a bottom of the ninth heart-shaker as an ode to a departed friend.4 With a soulful swing, a tortured connection, and an exit velocity powered by equal parts loss and love, Mamaleek has clinched a campaign for my attention.
#6. Defeated Sanity // Chronicles of Lunacy â As an apex predator in the brutal death metal world, Defeated Sanityâs appearance arouses not questions of competency but rather calculations of the carnage wrought. Chronicles of Lunacy does not mark a turning point or novel twist in the Defeated Sanity timelineâits finely tuned lashings hit as inescapable all the same. When neither a beastâs reach, nor mass, nor attack speed goes contested, an exhibition of its might will flash with morbid glee. As such, Defeated Sanity need not surprise to strike mortal wound. Chroniclesâ fangs glisten with an aged-imbrued tarnish, tearing at my flesh in every way I would expect. And I want more.
#5. Orgone // Pleroma â Meticulous and constructed as a master-work, Pleromaâs opening notes signal a trance. Acoustic twang and chamber instrument-fueled swoon build an atmosphere of wonder against a fervent and languished march of post-genre swells and death-fueled crescendos. Cycling through its many shades feels less like a fever dream and more of a trial-filled journey. Wielding a demure grandeur, Pleromaâs effortless realization of Orgoneâs peerless vision never feels like the epic journey its runtime suggests. Were my time truly infinite, Pleroma would be even harder to rip away from the queue.
#4. Julie Christmas // Ridiculous and Full of Blood â A lady screaming bloody murder shouldnât go down this smooth, but thatâs always been the promise and success of Julie Christmas. Few vocalists leave me slack-jawed and ear-shaken in the wake of piercing cries, raw-throated shrieks, and impassioned lyrical slather. Yet, Ridiculous and Full of Blood cuts track after track out of sonic patterns that do exactly that, all while empowering a full band expression of alternative-laced grooves, post-informed climbs, and punk-tied sneer. The Christmas season sums a flurry of inspired performances under the banner of a madwoman. And I stand at the ready to fray my vocal cords in attempt to crack with the same battle-tested precision that Ms. Christmas has earned from a life hard-worn.
#3. Ingurgitating Oblivion // Ontology of Nought â Though born of minds unrelated, Ontology of Nought exists as an esoteric companion to the Pleroma embodiment. Orgone is the twin that went to conservatory, graduated with honors, and holds an honorable performing chair, all while remembering its young love for death metal. Ingurgitating Oblivion, on the other hand, dropped out, spiraled into entheogenic dissociation, earns a living gigging at jazz clubsâalso maintains its youthful lust for the clamoring riff and hammering blast. Maximalism oozes a frothing wonder in the hiss of distorted chatter and rhythmic mastery. An imperfect and breathing construction rises and falls in ethereal inhales and vision-spinning mantras. Ontology of Nought deserves each of its over-budget minutes. Invest time in the freedom that it promises⊠âand cease to be.â
#2. OU // èé II: Frailty â The casualness of OUâs inception belies its profound leap into my necessary rotation. No incumbent love ever has a defined position in the halls of end-of-year accolades,5 and even more so when the actâs very presence rang suspicious in its finely-tuned invasion to my critical wiles. But, as I noted when I first blew my love for èé II: Frailty over the pages of Angry Metal Guy, itâs OUâs âidiosyncratic atmosphereâ that pulls from a âpolyrhythmic hypnosisâ and masterful âenergetic flowâ that continues to chart them deservedly high in the annals of â20s progressive music. And while this collision of classically-minded, synth-addicted madness slowly expands its universe one OU release at a time, Iâm content to sit here and yell their praises at anyone who will listen.
#1. Pyrrhon // Exhaust â You know youâre getting old when an album about modern burnout and the pains of traffic resonates with you all the way from frozen shoulder to radiating lower back to cold-groaning knee. But when Pyrrhon stealth-bombed my aging metalhead mind with a tech-dial riff barrage of noisy and shouting proportions, I had no choice but to surrender. Exhaust demands attention from its initial irony-laced lift-off to its closing brutalist clock-out, swinging skronk-enabled splatters and ache-addled vituperation around every faded line and pothole in its death metal architecture. Though Pyrrhon uses simpler blocks, their construction here defies convention at every step. One fine commenter summed up Exhaust in the most succinct manner in that regard: âDeath Metal, Hardcore, Noise Rock, Technical Death Metal. Itâs just mathcore.â Except they took away the wrong message from that distillation. The verdict, in fact, is fuck you.
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointments oâ the Year:
Songs oâ the Year:
Why give you one when I can give you twenty-seven? Why twenty-seven? Thatâs my secret. Now, Iâve talked enough, go out there and enjoy some music, friends. And enjoy this photo of my dogs.
Coconut (left), Kiwi (right) in a stylish Adidog sweater.
Ferox
I worked way too much in 2024. I canât complain; it was meaningful work that I chose to take on, and it got me that much closer to not having to work at all if I donât want to. Still, thatâs what Iâll think of when I think of 2024: lots and lots of work. That had a knock-on effect, especially when it comes to hobbies like lifting, getting out to national parks, and writing here. I did very little of any of that. I kept up with metal as best I could, and embarked on a big end-of-year listening push to have an accurate picture of what came out in 2024. Iâm grateful that I got to do a list at all this year, so I took the responsibility seriously⊠but Iâd be lying if I said I was buried in the scene all year.
One of the highlights of my 2024 was meeting a whole slew of staffers in person. I traveled a bunch this year, both for work and for my daughterâs ballet pursuits, and with that came the chance to hang with some of the people who make this place go. My body count of staffers met this year: Steel Druhm, Madam X, Cherd, Twelve, Dr. Wyrm, Thus Spoke, El Cuervo, Doom et al, and Holdeneye. It was a veritable orgy of almost entirely chaste fellowship, and only one (1) bad hang among the lot!6
Iâm grateful to Steel Druhm and Angry Metal Guy for indulging my schedule, and for the real leadership they provide at my fake job. I found this unique community because it had the best music writing on the internet, and that remains true today thanks to the talented people who contribute their time and enthusiasm to keeping the machinery humming. Iâm lucky to be a small part of it, and hopeful that 2025 will give me more time to spend in the Hall.
#ish. Mother of Graves // The Periapt of Absence â My â-ishâ spot typically goes to an album that might have listed if I just had more time with it. That holds true of the sophomore effort from Indianapolisâs Mother of Graves, which landed on my radar by way of Carcharadonâs excellent TYHMHM piece. This slab of classic sadboi death doom transcends any tribcore concerns through sheer quality of execution. From opener âGallowsâ through final track âLike Darkness to a Dying Flame,â The Periapt of Absence guides the listener through the stages of grief with varied compositions that maintain a consistent mood throughout. Classic death doom is alive and well.
#10. Wormed // Omegon â Maddogâs compelling rave for Omegon is my personal Review oâ the Year; fortunately, the prose was well spent on this efficient and brutal riff delivery system. Wormed has been creating slam-adjacent otherworldly death metal for a good while now, and Omegon is a distillation of everything the band has learned over the past two decades. 2024 is the year I realized Iâve been a brutal death metal guy all along. With songs like âPareidolia Roboticaâ and âVirtual Teratogenesis,â Wormed took me by the hand and guided me through this journey of self-discovery⊠all while the people in the offices around me called in noise complaints.
#9. Ripped to Shreds // Sanshi â The already impressive Ripped to Shreds leveled up with Sanshi, a blast of aggressive but technically adept death metal that never left my rotation after its release. The guitar hero shredding plays like a release valve to the vicious and punky energy that Andrew Lee injects into his compositions. This cycle of tension and release makes for an addictive listen that feels like it ends mere moments after you hit play. The thrash elements of the R2S sounds are more prevalent on Sanshi, meaning the band now scratches the same itch for me that Horrendous did with their last killer slab.
#8. Scumbag // Homicide Cult â Scumbag! SCUUUMMMMBAGGGG. This nasty bit of business, with its deathgrind touches and morbid sense of humor (âPure Adrenaline Hard-On,â âThe Meatingâ), was tailor-made for the Ferox sensibility. Herein lie twenty-eight minutes of death metal that never slams but still walks the same line that Wormhole managed to last year: brutal but somehow cheerful, and stoopid without being remotely dumb. Dylan Cruz, of this band and Noxis, came out of nowhere to occupy a huge chunk of my limited listening time this year.
#7. Black Curse // Burning in Celestial Poison â With Burning in Celestial Poison, Black Curse stages a forty-five-minute takeover of your central nervous system. Eldritch Elitist captured the elemental power of these five compositions better than I ever could, but this album gave me exactly what I needed in a 2024 that was characterized by an extreme lack of work-life balance. Metal can provide a safe outlet for less-than-savory feelings, and Black Curse expressed a lot of things for me that I couldnât express myself and stay employed. Lose yourself in these five tracks and emerge scoured but smarter.
#6. Spectral Wound // Songs of Blood and Mire â The hot streak continues; Songs of Blood and Mire, Spectral Woundâs fourth album, is their best effort yet. Carcharadon capably cataloged crisp new cross-currents in the bandâs sound, but the song quality remains the same. Tracks like âAt Wine-Dark Midnight in the Mouldering Hallsâ and Song oâ the Year âAristocratic Suicidal Black Metalâ showcase the bandâs gift for coupling aggression with sweeping melody. In this way, Spectral Wound recalls Watain without so much distracting ooga-booga. Songs of Blood and Mire finds them continuing to refine their sound and grow in confidence.
#5. Endonomos // Endonomos II â Enlightenment â Endonomos carried the torch for doom in 2024. Enlightenment is a stately procession, its six long tracks blending influences from all across the doom spectrum. This is music that soars as it plods. Steel Druhm noted similarities to both Khemmis and Fvneral Fvkk. Those comps are perfect; not since Carnal Confessions has a doom album so effectively cut through the clutter of genre tropes to evoke genuine emotion.
#4. Pyrrhon // Exhaust â I hate it when the promotional push for an album ties a record too strongly to the narrative of its creation. Itâs like the record company is trying to force a reaction that the album itself might or might not evoke. So when Exhaust arrived with heavy-handed descriptions of process and what Pyrrhon went through trying to make the album happen, I bristled and stopped reading. Fortunately, the music on Exhaust speaks for itself. This is a bitter and blistering record that finds the band raging against their rageâs inability to change even a single thing. Iâve always appreciated Pyrrhon, but Iâve never connected with their music as immediately as I did on Exhaust.
#3. Defeated Sanity // Chronicles of Lunacy â Defeated Sanity has had quite the AMG journey. Theyâve gone from being brushed aside by a n00b named Potato Jim to being on the receiving end of a double-4.0 fellating from the tenured likes of Dolphin Whisperer and Maddog. Chronicles of Lunacy finds Defeated Sanity extending the Colin Marston-enabled peak that they hit on 2020âs The Sanguinary Impetus. It takes extreme skill to weaponize the base and the stoopid this effectively. Defeated Sanity is more than up for the job.
#2. Inter Arma // New Heaven â Hereâs another band that could be wrestling with The Law of Diminishing Recordings by now, but instead persists with quality release after quality release. Inter Arma never repeats themselves, but each of their albums could only come from them. Hot take: Sky Funeral has remained my favorite Inter Arma album even as theyâve racked up an epic run of excellence. New Heaven makes a run at unseating it. This is a slab that rewards the many repeated listens I gave it in 2024; it sat in my top slot for much of the year until a late-breaking favorite pushed it aside.
#1. Noxis // Violence Inherent in the System â This is my third time publishing a list at AMG; each previous year, I had clear Album oâthe Year winners in Immolationâs Acts of God and Afterbirthâs In But Not Of. 2024 marked the first Listurnalia that began with an opening for my top slot. But as I weeded through my favorite music of the year, I realized: Noxis drew me in with the bass flourish at the beginning of album opener âSkullcrushing Defilement,â and they still havenât let go. The Pittsburgher in me hates to credit anything from Cleveland, but Noxis weeded out that deeply rooted prejudice with their inventive and fresh take on death metal. Every track on Violence Inherent in the System is a wild ride that alternately crushes, challenges, and tickles. The only break from the madcap pace comes on mid-album interlude âExcursion,â but that just prepares you for the utter barking lunacy of âHorns Echo Over Chorazim.â That song incorporates strange arrangements that include various woodwind instruments, and somehow they do it with zero pretension and abundant commitment to brutality. Listurnalia may have begun with a blank space atop my list, but it ended with Noxis firmly entrenched as the winner of 2024.
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointment oâthe Year:
Ferox! I just didnât have time to make a meaningful contribution here this year. It has been a pleasure to watch other members of my n00b class like Dolph and Maddog and Thus become AMG institutions, even as I mostly watch from the sidelines and come out to play when I can.
Song oâthe Year:
Imagine being asked to name your favorite song of the year, and responding with a twenty-seven song playlist!7
#2024 #AFrameOfMind #Aborted #AR #ArthouseFatso #BeatenToDeath #BlackCurse #BurningInCelestialPoison #ChroniclesOfLunacy #CoffinOfConviction #ConcreteWinds #Dawnwalker #DaydreamingInMoonlight #DefeatedSanity #Defying #Dissimulator #Dysrhythmia #Endonomos #EndonomosIIEnlightenment #Exhaust #FuneralForAKing #GodsOverBrokenPeople #HomicideCult #Horrendous #IngurgitatingOblivion #InnerStrength #InterArma #JulieChristmas #Kalandra #Khemmis #Kollapse #Lists #Listurnalia #Listurnalia2024 #Lizzard #LowerFormResistance #Mamaleek #Mesh #MotherOfGraves #Myrath #NewHeaven #NobodyLikesYou #Noxis #OfTheLastHumanBeing #Omegon #OntologyOfNought #Orgone #OU #Pallbearer #Pleroma #Polterguts #PurulenceGushingFromTheCoffin #Pyrrhon #RidiculousAndFullOfBlood #RippedToShreds #Sanshi #SaveThisUtility #Scumbag #SleepytimeGorillaMuseum #SongsOfBloodAndMire #SpectralWound #Stenched #StygianCrown #SufferAndBecome #SunriseOverRigorMortis #SycophanticSeizuresADoubleFeature #ThePeriaptOfAbsence #TheUnknowing #VaultOfHorrors #VidaBlue #ViolenceInherentInTheSystem #Vitriol #Wadera #Watain #Wormed #èéIIFrailty
Ripped to Shreds â Sanshi Review
By Saunders
Four albums deep into a promising and increasingly impressive career, Californiaâs death mongers Ripped to Shreds continue to hammer away and chisel a jagged path to the hearts of old-school death-loving folk. Following back-to-back bangers, the bandâs prolific mastermind and guitarist/vocalist Andrew Lee (also of Azath, Houkago Grind Time, Draghkar amongst a plethora of other projects) readies his battle-hardened companions for another sick, ugly dose of grind-injected old school death mayhem. Quality writing and a deft hand at intertwining classic influences with an unvarnished modern twist, has trademarked an engaging, consistent body of work. Lee lives and breathes the musty airwaves of death metalâs storied, murky past, but composes and plays this shit better than most. Can the fourth album Sanshi capitalize and expand upon the sturdy groundwork and scene cred the Ripped to Shreds brand has so far established?
Despite the occasional proggy foray, this latest platter of crusty nastiness, breakneck speed, and gnarled hooks finds Ripped to Shreds refining a formula that seeks the advancement of their signature style, without muddying the waters with bold attempts at innovation. Few modern acts nail the retro aesthetic and rancid, fleshy appeal as well as Ripped to Shreds without leaning too heavily into derivation or tired recycling of old ideas. Ripped to Shreds sounds invigorated and full of punky, gritty aggression and songwriting flair. The roots of the Ripped to Shreds sound feature the classic vibes of the buzzsawing Stockholm and swampy Floridan scenes of yesteryear. Throw in a healthy dose of early Pestilence and vintage grindcore influences, think prime Terrorizer, and some flashy melodic shreddery, and you have a recipe for awesomeness.
Overall, the grind influence is more pronounced, unloading some of the bandâs nastiest work to date, balanced by the increasingly noteworthy use of extravagant melodic solos and leads. The tradeoff vocals from Lee and the backing efforts of his bandmates work a treat, blending nasty guttural grunts and higher-pitched explosions with anguished van Drunen-isms and all manner of rip-roaring variations. Sanshi opens ambitiously, launching a six-plus minute juggernaut courtesy of the multi-pronged âInto the Court of Yanluowang.â Length isnât an issue due to the propulsive energy, structural shifts, and an action-packed blend of death, grind, and thrashy melodeath influences, touching on some Horrendous vibes. The punky grind meets the thrashing death punch of âçć„çŽ (Sacrificial Fire)â jams swaggering grooves and melodic guitar embellishments into a violent tornado. Ripped to Shreds balances its crisper melodic tendencies and production values expertly with its feral, abrasive instincts. Balance is the key to much of Sanshiâs success. The albumâs varied songwriting palette is showcased through blunt force grooves colliding with riff-driven thrashy death (âć„ć© Corpse Betrothalâ), compact, blazing deathgrind numbers (âForce Fed,â âPerverting the Funeral Rites, Stripping for the Deadâ), and brutish beatdowns punctuated with heroic shredding solos (âæźć±ćŸ©æŽ» [Horrendous Corpse Resurrection],â âCultivating Towards Ascensionâ).
Leeâs skills as a composing architect, accomplished axe-slinger and chief vocalist are well established, however, there is an argument Lee is really coming into his own with a fully-fledged line-up of like-minded souls. The whole band fires on all cylinders, the material fueled by ripping tempos, technical precision, and gritty, yet undoubtedly infectious songwriting. Brian Doâs sick, blasty drum performance is worth noting, while the addition of second guitarist Michael Chavez proves a masterstroke, adding firepower, showmanship, and a potent dual axe dynamic to the formula, emphasized through the string of stunning solos and memorable riffs, touching on thrash, death, melodeath, and grind influences. I could use a little more fuzz and grime to the guitar tone, and the bass drums are a little clicky, otherwise, the production adds sharp edges and crisp punchy tones to compliment the albumâs rawer charms.
Ripped to Shreds remain as consistently solid as ever with this latest opus. Sanshi takes the ingredients that have worked so effectively for Ripped to Shreds thus far and ups the ante to reveal some of their most potent, impressive work to date. Leeâs songwriting skills are reaching increasingly esteemed heights and the expertise in which the band wield speed, melody, abrasiveness, chugging grooves, and catchy writing is top-shelf. Every Ripped to Shreds album has delivered quality, teetering on the precipice of greatness. Sanshi keeps the consistent trend going, though takes it up a notch and showcases the Ripped to Shreds juggernaut operating in peak form.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stinky Stream
Label: Relapse Records
Websites: rippedtoshredsdeathmetal.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/rippedtoshredsband
Releases Worldwide: September 27th, 2024
#2024 #40 #AmericanMetal #Azath #DeathMetal #Deathgrind #Draghkar #Grindcore #Horrendous #HoukagoGrindTime #OldSchoolDeathMetal #Pestilence #RelapseRecords #Review #Reviews #RippedToShreds #Sanshi #Terrorizer
When Pink Floyd meets Death Metal:
#BloodIncantation: The Stargate
The whole:
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6N4rLtjPzH0
- https://redirect.invidious.io/watch?v=6N4rLtjPzH0
The three parts:
- https://song.link/t3pt4s7wwgrrv
- https://song.link/cjm3kcrq3rnwq
- https://song.link/smtd2t58r7g62
#ProgressiveDeathMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal
#TheMetalDogArticleList #BraveWords HORRENDOUS Share Official Music Video For "Preterition Hymn" bravewords.com/news/horrend... #Horrendous
#TheMetalDogArticleList
#BraveWords
HORRENDOUS Share Official Music Video For "Preterition Hymn"
https://bravewords.com/news/horrendous-share-official-music-video-for-preterition-hymn
#Horrendous played #Chicago with Tomb Mold last Friday. Check out them doing two songs from their last album #OntologicalMysterium with some great bass playing thrown in:
More videos from Horrendous' set and the other bands from the show are available on my YouTube channel.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vL4T0rDcIXY
#metal #deathmetal #metalmusic #metalconcert #metalshow #deathmetalmusic #livemusic #concert #timbowmanmedia
Let's start filling the playlist of @Kitty's #MittwochMetalMix, so they'll have something to listen to early in the morning:
Blood Incantation: Obliquity of the Eclectic
#BriannaGheyâs #mother #slams â#horrendousâ #antitrans #hate directed at her #murdered #daughter
Brianna was #stabbedtodeath in a #park in #Culcheth, #Warrington just over a year ago. She was 16 years old.
#Women #Transgender #LGBTQ #LGBTQIA #UK #Tories #TERFS #Media #MoralPanic #HateSpeech #StochasticTerrorism #Hatecrimes
https://www.thepinknews.com/2024/02/20/brianna-gheys-mother-slams-horrendous-anti-trans-hate/
@flexghost The quality of this ad was just horrible! I don't recall ever seeing such a bad ad before!! And Iâm not even referring to the content.
#marketing #video #Horrendous
Begravement â Horrific Illusions Beckon [Things You Might Have Missed 2023]
By Saunders
Amidst the slew of mighty fine death metal releases in 2023, there were some killer debuts and plenty of albums well worth your attention, even if they didnât feature heavily, or at all, during another epic Listurnalia campaign. One such album was the debut LP from up-and-coming Minnesota death dealers Begravement and their potential packed Horrific Illusions Beckon album. And though it didnât quite crack my own end-of-year list, I certainly spent lots of time jamming Horrific Illusions Beckon. In a crowded modern death metal field Begravementâs lively formula features the distinct stench of the classic Florida death metal scene from yesteryear, coupled with forward-thinking arrangements, progressive flourishes and an aggressive, thrashy bent. In what we hope will be an equally robust year of death metal in 2024, letâs explore the exciting depths and twists of Horrific Illusions Beckon.
Begravement offer a busy, multifaceted sound that touches on numerous styles and influences within the broader death genre. Creating a colorful, technical and wildly adventurous offering that nonetheless doesnât forget to have fun, Begravement unleash an abundance of fiery, headbangabale riffs and furious thrashy death salvos. There are knotty technical and proggy nods to Death and Atheist, the gnarled thrashy precision of Vader and The Chasm, and hints of modern trailblazers Horrendous. Throw in the prominent thrash influence, experimental touches and hints of smooth melodeath elements and you are left with a memorable and versatile package. Whether exploring more progressive, complex and adventurous pastures (âValley of Everlasting Darkness,â âIntergalactic Espionage,â epic closer âReturn to Planet Earthâ), ripping, though bouncier melodic territories (âAnaphylaxisâ and âScarabs Beneath the Fleshâ) or straight up proggy, death ragers (âA Horrific Illusion,â âDesecration of the Meekâ), Begravement execute swiftly and thrust their rabidly aggressive stylings to the forefront.
Musically the four-piece are an accomplished bunch, collectively flexing their instrumental muscles, without letting shit get too cutsie or self-indulgent. Ezra Blumenfeld (also on vocals) and Owen Hiber share a deep appreciation for death metalâs long and varied history, slamming out a dexterous mix of slash-and-burn death-thrash riffs, striking melodic leads, and brooding, progressive turns and explorations. Grady Westling attacks his kit with feisty energy, comfortably shifting modes of speed and rhythm with the ever-shifting dynamics of the music, while extra praise is warranted for the skillfully performed melodic counterpoint of Matt Schrampferâs fretless bass. Blumenfeld handles lead vocals, with his mid-ranged, well-enunciated and deceptively dynamic rasps and growls fitting the vibe well, though I occasionally crave a little more guttural heft.
All this impressive musicianship would count for little without decent songs, and thankfully Begravement do not disappoint in the songwriting department. This is a collection of finely crafted and diverse compositions, though at 54 minutes there is some bloat present, indicating a future need to perhaps tighten up on the editing front. Overall, for all the many positive traits, strengths and potential packed into Begravementâs debut, the pleasing takeaway is that this is early days and the prospect of Begravement improving and building on the sturdy frameworks and foundations they have created here stirs up excitement for where they head next. In the meantime, Horrific Illusions Beckon is an extremely accomplished, borderline great album for an exciting death metal act on the rise. A little more refinement of their songwriting abilities and tighter editing will hopefully see Begravement reap greater rewards on their next album.
Tracks to Check Out: âAnaphylaxis,â âValley of Everlasting Darkness,â âIntergalactic Espionageâ.
#AmericanMetal #Atheist #Begravement #Death #DeathMetal #Horrendous #HorrificIllusionsBeckon #OldSchoolDeathMetal #ProgressiveDeath #Review #Reviews #TheChasm #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2023 #Vader
Saunders and Felagundâs Top Ten(ish) of 2023
By Saunders
They werenât shitting, time really does fly. Another year is done and dusted and itâs time to assemble our respective takes on the music that mattered in 2023. How a year in heavy music stacks up is of course subjective and often genre and taste-dependent. Overall, I found 2023 to be a solid year for metal, without standing out as one of the humongously awesome years in recent memory. Nevertheless, most death metal fans would be satisfied with the smorgasbord of quality releases that flooded the airwaves. It was particularly cool to hear so many classy veteran acts still going strong, with a slew of solid to borderline great albums from the esteemed likes of Dying Fetus, Vomitory, Cannibal Corpse, Suffocation, Cryptopsy, and Autopsy. Outside of death realms, Enslaved also released their most noteworthy album in a number of years. A couple of list-wrecking behemoths popped up late, Phobocosm and Convocation, with not enough time afforded to fully absorb and appreciate. Xoth, Sulphur Aeon, and Warcrab rolled out quality albums late in the year without quite breaking into list territory. The latter two in particular were steps down from their immediate predecessors. While on the nostalgia front, the old-school melodeath charms of Omnicidal and Majesties warmed the heart.
Highlights? Well, the aforementioned brigade representing old school, classic death metal, and longevity stood out, while being able to contribute to ranking pieces for two long-time favorites in Dying Fetus and Suffocation were treasured writing experiences. By contrast, 2023 also threw up some tremendous releases from less-established death metal acts and young gun outfits, including a handful of show-stopping debut albums (Bloodgutter, Fabricant, Begravement, Rotpit). It also never ceases to amaze the growth and strength of AMG.com year to year. Approaching a decade of service to the blog, I tend to get sentimental and nostalgic at this time of year, and still being a part of the AMG crew, albeit from the far away corners of Australia, is an endlessly awesome privilege, especially when surrounded by the talented folk that write alongside me.
Cheers to everyone who frequents these pages and helps contribute to the best online metal community going âround, and special thanks to Steel, Angry Metal Guy, Madam X, Doc Grier, the tech wizardry of Sentynel, and all the other higher-ups and editors for their tireless behind the scenes work and smooth, authoritative running of this mighty blog. All the best for a safe, happy, and healthy 2024.
#ish: Godthrymm // Distortions â In the odd occasion I sought out a doom fix in 2023, invariably Godthrymmâs epic second LP Distortions delivered the goods. I only recall giving their debut a cursory listen. However, Distortions gripped me from the outset and drifted in and out of rotation since its release when the mood struck for some melancholic, muscular, and gorgeously crafted doom that packed serious heft on both a sonic and emotional level. The My Dying Bride pedigree always held the band in good stead, yet it is how Godthrymm embraces their classic roots while spinning modern elements and fresh ideas into their brooding template that raises the bar. Yeah perhaps a few minutes could have been trimmed from the final package, with some minor bloat, but the strikingly powerful guitar work, earworm melodies, and towering, multi-faceted vocal performance crushes any minor gripes on length.
#10. Sodomisery // Mazzaroth â Every now and again the good olde Doc Grier and Iâs tastes overlap. With the shared appreciation and dabbling in the progressive/post-metal waters of The Ocean, the quirky underground charms of Son of Sam, and rejuvenated veterans Green Carnationâs triumphant comeback album from 2020 most recently come to mind. Sodomisery, and their second album Mazzaroth, was exactly the palette-cleansing blackened storm I needed in 2023. The unheralded Swedish act expertly weaves icy melodic black, galloping melodeath, bleak atmospheres and tastefully presented orchestration into epic, catchy, fist-pumping tunes. Subtle shifts and striking dynamics highlight an album bursting with vicious, throat-grabbing hooks, ripping aggression and at least in nostalgia and melancholic tone, the quieter, clean passages remind me of early Opeth. You get the feeling the best is yet to come, however, Sodomisery has firmly grabbed my attention and banged out a helluva album.
#9. Outer Heaven // Infinite Psychic Depths â For whatever reason, Outer Heavenâs 2018 debut Realms of Eternity didnât do a whole lot for me. It certainly resided in my wheelhouse but failed to gain traction at the time. Perhaps I need to revisit, as their long in the works, conceptual sophomore album, Infinite Psychic Depths, took me by storm from the get-go. Infinite Psychic Depths hooked me in and has kept me coming back for more. I particularly enjoy how the band straddles influences and eras across the death spectrum, all while cultivating a distinctive sound their own. Thereâs an ugly old-school vibe, residing next to the bandâs modern inclinations and exploratory, experimental angle. Meanwhile, technical firepower under the hood and sick, guttural brutality offer plenty to keep the brutal death and tech fiends happy. However, Infinite Psychic Depths is neatly grounded by the bevy of excellent riffs, brain-melting solos, and nasty, viscous grooves. There are aspects of the production I donât love, while the length is a little overdone, but these nitpicks fail to bring down one of death metalâs powerhouse releases of 2023.
#8. Bloodgutter // Death Mountain â There were a number of impressive death metal debuts in 2023, however, it was the ultra-chunky debut from Danish heavy hitters Bloodgutter that warranted much attention and stayed in heavy rotation from its middle-of-the-year release. There were more brutal, heavier, technical, and ultimately better death platters to indulge in throughout 2023, but few stirred up the adrenaline, brought the fun factor, and kept the head banging as frequently as Death Mountain. Boasting one of the yearâs best and heaviest guitar tones, Death Mountain is a blast of no-frills old-school brawn with a hefty modern crunch. The songs are uncomplicated but well-constructed, tightly played, and possess a thick, catchy streak that has kept me clambering back for more on a regular basis. Featuring a member of underrated Danish bruisers Dawn of Demise, Bloodgutter brings a similarly rib-shattering intensity and keen sense of violent, swaggering groove and riffcraft to the table. Such an exciting and consistent debut bodes well for a bright future.
#7. Horrendous // Ontological Mysterium â It is no secret to anyone who has frequented these pages over the years that Horrendous are a big fucking deal to me. The old-school progressive death heavyweights have done little wrong over the past decade or so, smashing out a string of triumphant platters with nostalgic nods to the past, and a boot firmly planted in forward-thinking and innovative territories. Following their longest recording break thus far, Horrendous finally returned with their fifth LP, Ontological Mysterium. Despite unreasonable expectations and the album taking a few extra listens to fully unveil its greatness, make no mistake, Horrendous once again proved themselves masters of the modern prog-death craft. Listeners not fully on board with the bandâs increased proggy bent, will likely take issue, but Horrendous have long been on the progressive path and the balance is still deftly handled, with the deathlier aspects remaining prominent, carrying the torch of later era Death. Throw in the best production in the business and you have yet another spectacular addition to an increasingly essential discography.
#6. Mutoid Man // Mutants â Mutoid Man is an absolute personal favorite of mine and their music never fails to excite, energize and provide bucketloads of endlessly wacky fun. After a lengthy wait, third LP Mutants finally arrived and largely met high expectations. Back in 2017 War Moans made a huge impact on me, while also helping navigate tough times, so itâs an album I hold in especially high regard. Mutants may not exceed or quite match the front-to-back awesomeness of its predecessor, but itâs a top-notch album in its own right. Continuing to blur lines between rock, metal, punk, math, hardcore, and everything in between, Mutants offered a more measured, melodic batch of slick, uber fun tunes, without watering down their zany characteristics. Despite being a less wild ride than its predecessor, Mutants still manages to surprise and delight, even throwing down a couple of nastier, discordant ditties recalling the spastic turns of their early days. The replay factor has remained strong, and when seeking something sharp, fun, and laden with infectious riffs and juicy hooks, Mutoid Man delivered again and again, being the ultimate pick-me-up album of 2023.
#5. Wormhole // Almost Human â Along with Afterbirth, Baltimoreâs Wormhole paved the way for what slam can be in 2023. Following a different but equally appealing trajectory, Wormhole took all that was great about their previous releases and enhanced all aspects of their visceral, ridiculously heavy, sci-fi-themed tech-slam assault. As much as I enjoyed its predecessor, 2020âs The Weakest Among Us, the songwriting consistency, quality, and replayability elevates Almost Human to more elite, essential realms. The production and musicianship are top-shelf, but beyond the sonic attributes and technical showmanship reside a batch of killer songs that remain unrelentingly brutal, slammy, yet oddly accessible, memorable, and intelligently crafted for the style. Throw in the almost EP territory album length, and youâre left with one of the most compact, deadly efficient, and catchy slam albums in recent memory. Wormhole makes every song count and cycling through favorites is an ever-shifting task, though such addictive, devastating gems like âElysiism,â âSpine Shattering High-Velocity Impact,â and monstrous âDelta Labsâ are fine advertisements to an unforgettable brutal tech-slam experience.
#4. Carnosus // Visions of Infinihility â Considering its early year release, Visions of Infinihility has impressively stayed in and around regular rotation, the depth of its quality creeping in through its persistent presence, razor-sharp hooks, and technical supremacy. French vets Gorod also released a cool tech-death platter, however, it was this unheralded Swedish act that stole the show. Carnosus ensures their tight, techy attacks donât forget to have fun. The songs are melodic, thrashy, chock full of interesting twists and tasty hooks, yet still boasts a brutal edge and tons of groove. Although the five-piece line-up impresses with their supreme technical skills across the board, the real wildcard is vocalist Jonatan Karasiak. His diverse and charismatic vocals add a further layer of intrigue and versatility, effortlessly shifting tones from high-pitched blackened rasps and screams to deeper, more guttural fare, occasionally bringing to mind the sadly departed Trevor Strnad. It all makes for a delightfully acrobatic, crunchy, and explosive album experience.
#3. Somnuri // Desiderium â The surprise packet of the year. Initially, I missed Cherdâs enthusiastic review of this New York bandâs second LP, Desiderium. However, once I eventually clued in, Somnuri proceeded to blow me away with their potent hybrid and hook-laden blend of hardcore, sludge, and â90s-inspired alt/grunge rock. Ever since I have been hopelessly hooked in what has become one of the yearâs most addictive albums. Somnuri never skimps on the vicious hardcore bite meets sludgy heft, and the way they juggle these aspects with the earworm clean vocal hooks and â90s influence is a thing of songwriting beauty. Desiderium is an album of wall-to-wall bangers and nary a sign of weakness. Hard to pick a firm favorite, but the stretch from âPale Eyesâ through to âDesideriumâ is tremendous, without discounting the quality of the other tunes. The main beef I can level at the album is regarding production, with the in-your-face sound packing punch but the crushed mastering fails to do justice to the wonderful dynamism of the top-shelf songwriting. Itâs hardly a deal breaker on a marvelous collection of biting, catchy tunes.
#2. Afterbirth // In But Not Of â The third full-length endeavor from the once long-dormant New York brutal death/slam crew Afterbirth has been the talk of the town since its October release, and rightfully so. Though the hype train can get carried away in over-the-top praise and hyperbole wankery, in this case, I am well and truly on board. Four Dimensional Flesh was a terrific album, so expectations were high. Afterbirth crafted an album that pushed the envelope of brutal death and slam, a subgenre generally not renowned for innovation or such wildly brave experimentation. I get listeners not on board with the albumâs brooding atmospherics and spacey, post-metalisms. In particular, the albumâs trippy back half takes some time to fully appreciate after the dense, jugular-grabbing first half of brutally proficient and proggy slam-death. However, the pay-off of the atmospheric, springy, and gorgeous melodic bent and contrasting gurgled vox somehow works and elevates an already great album into some weirdly off-kilter cosmic slam meets post-death hybrid that shouldnât work but does.
#1. Sermon // Of Golden Verse â Weirdly enough when seeking my prog fix in 2023, it was mostly looking backward to previous releases, with minimal 2023 prog albums gaining much traction. Way back in March, UKâs mysterious dark progressive metal band Sermon returned with a momentous sophomore album, raising the bar high for prog metal in 2023. Perhaps the 4.5 rating was a tad overzealous, only time will tell. But as my highest rating review of 2023, the album hit me hard and stayed in solid rotation throughout the year. Despite never being a foregone conclusion, it seems fitting to bestow top honors on Of Golden Verse. Sermon plays prog metal like none other. Sure, influences and similarities to like-minded acts exist, however, Sermon boasts a unique sound they can call their own, dark, eerie and deadly serious vibes and almost melodramatic flair flows through towering, intelligent, and emotive prog metal epics. The constantly heightened tension and ritualistic edge permeating the album creates a mysterious, tense, and beguiling atmosphere, consolidated by consistently gripping songwriting and skyscraping hooks on such memorable gems as âGolden,â âLight the Witchâ âWake the Silentâ and stunning closer, âDeparture.â
Honorable Mentions
Disappointments oâ the Year
Non-Heavy Picks
Return to Form
Song âo the Year
A lot of cool songs kicked arse, so narrowing it down to one is really a futile task in 2023. Therefore, I selected the following belter from a shortlist and ran with it. With a thick, sludgy, hardcore edge and earworm chorus, Somnuriâs âWhat a Way to Goâ was frequently close to hand when I needed a pick-me-up tune.
Felagund
What a difference a year makes! Since last, I sat down to compile my completely objective, highly-regarded Top Ten(ish) list in the dying days of 2022, much has changed in the world oâ Felagund. I left a job, started my own business, and tried in vain to get my six-year-old to show even a fleeting interest in The Hobbit. In the immortal words of The Dude, 2023 was full of âstrikes and gutters, ups and downs.â But isnât that always the case? None of us emerge completely unscathed, but I hope you and yours were able to weather any storms this dastardly year threw your way and emerge with your sanity intact. Not dignity, though. You spend far too much time on this site to have any of that left.
Now, as I embark on my third end-of-year list as a spit-at and put-upon AMG staffer, I can look back at twelve months chock full of musical riches, particularly in the death metal department. It was certainly a solid year for my pet genre, and I think my list (and honorable mentions) reflect that. But some things never change. Just like last year, I didnât find nearly enough time to listen to all the music I wanted to, nor was I able to take a deep dive into some of the albums reviewed on this very site (although, if weâre being honest, most of them are probably just overrated 2.5s). And just like last year, my output continues to be a source of shame, ridicule, and scorn. Iâm going to blame my lack of productivity on being a new business owner, but I know that no amount of excuses, pleas, or cries will ever earn Steelâs forgiveness.
Now before we get to my many metal musings, Iâd be remiss if I didnât first acknowledge and thank my returning listmate Saunders, who once again inadvertently introduced me to yet another prog album that ended up in my top five. Many thanks must also go to the mighty Steely Dan and the rarely-seen but universally-beloved Madam X. Steelcut Oats has put up with a lot from your friendly neighborhood Noldor this past year, what with my incessant tardiness and my penchant for âalteringâ his well-respected moniker in my reviews. On a more serious note, kudos are also required for his steadfast leadership and ongoing support as he keeps the derelict denizens (read: staffers) in line and out of trouble. The beatings have continued, morale has not improved, and Iâm convinced we deserve far, far worse. And yet, I find myself uplifted and inspired by a growing crew of long-suffering editors and fellow authors who, despite their questionable taste, make AMG the special, endearingly deranged place that it is. And let us not forget the man, the myth, the bearded legend himself, Angry Metal Guy, the namesake of this digital institution, a learned doctor as determined by an accredited institution, and the final arbiter of all things trve.
Now, without further ado, entirely too much aplomb, and lacking all pomp, I present my top ten(ish) albums of 2023. May you listen, may you learn, and may you realize just how wrong you are.
#ish. Mutoid Man // Mutants â From the first few moments of album opener âCall of the Void,â I knew right away that this was an album Iâd be spinning again and again. And while it didnât quite crack my official top ten, itâs hard to deny Mutantsâ infectious groove, the earworm hooks, the Voivod-esque sci-fi oddities, and the effective interplay between clean and extreme. Mutoid Man can seamlessly blend an array of disparate genres, from progressive metal and punk to hard rock and a dose of dissonant noise, and that makes their latest album a worthy #ish for any discerning weirdo.
#10. Anareta // Fear Not â I was unfamiliar with New Orleans-based Anareta until I read Dolphin Whispererâs glowing review. My interest was further piqued when I saw AMGâs equally gushing prose, declaring Fear Not Aprilâs Record oâ the Month. Iâm glad I took a chance on this album, because Anareta is definitely something special, delivering both crushing extremity and lush beauty, caustic rage and bitter anguish. This interplay is made all the more effective by the melodious stringed instruments that thrive against the shrieked, furious vox. Perhaps in less adept hands, this mix would grate on the listener, but Anaretaâs self-styled brand of âChamber Metalâ uplifts the traditional bass, guitar, and drums by adding in virtuosic orchestration, doomy chants, and blackened vocals to deliver a unified sound that grabbed my attention and refused to let go.
#9. Horrendous // Ontological Mysterium â Horrendous is a band unafraid of growth, as evidenced by their consistent evolution across five high-quality releases. Ontological Mysterium builds on this trend, both as a towering slab oâ death and further proof that Horrendous continues to evolve as musicians and songwriters. Leaning further into their progressive tendencies only strengthens their arsenal, and while I didnât find Ontological Mysterium as immediately engaging as some of their previous releases, repeated spins proved increasingly rewarding. Horrendous is a band that has proven that they can stay true to my beloved OSDM while still boasting technical freneticism and hefty groove, and for that, theyâve earned their spot on this list.
#8. Xoth // Exogalatic â Sci-fi-tinged thrash? Check. Lovecraftian horrors delivered via a blackened death onslaught? Check. All wrapped up in a catchy, crunchy, crushing record over 39 minutes? Count. Me. In. On Exogalatic, Xoth builds upon very familiar themes, and I couldnât be happier that theyâre still hard at work, honing their sound in the Stygian depths of space, where no one can hear you shred. Exogalatic boasts both razor-sharp technicality and thrashy speed without ever sacrificing melody, memorability or heaviness. And there are songs about trading blows with reptilian alien pugilists and quenching a newly-forged space-blade in the blood of dead gods? Take my money and welcome to my list, lads.
#7. Wayfarer // American Gothic â If Cormac McCarthyâs Blood Meridian ever had a soundtrack, Wayfarer would be the party responsible, and rightly so. So well-honed is their moody, emotive, brutally cynical (for good reason) Wild West-inspired take on black metal that I can almost hear their compositions accompanying McCarthyâs narrative. Any band with the ability to place the listener into such a specific time and location is worth your time and money. Wayfarer accomplishes this over and over again on American Gothic, and the result is a beautiful, furious, and sad rumination on industry, exploitation, death, and the power of myth. if American Gothic isnât on your end-of-year list, itâs just because you havenât listened to it yet.
#6. Sodomisery // Mazzaroth â Did Grier talk about Sodomisery endlessly? Yes, he did. And because our tastes are so divergent (and because he makes fun of me for the stuff I like) I nearly avoided this one. But so convincing was his review that I decided to give it a chance, and wouldnât you know it? Here sits Mazzaroth, nearly breaking into my top Five. Much has been made of the bandâs name, and while it lacks subtlety, have you seen some of the other garbage weâve covered? Besides, instead of clutching pearls, you should be busy enjoying the majestic tones of Sodomiseryâs melodic blackened death metal, replete with emotive orchestration, earworm hooks, effective vocal variations, and a songwriting approach that deftly balances heaviness with accessibility. With nary a filler tune in sight, the lesson is simple: donât let Grier scare you, as long as you list an album he likes.
#5. Carnosus // Visions of Infinihility â And just like that, weâve entered the Top Five. As I said in the introduction, 2023 was a year of death metal riches, and for me, that assertion is perhaps best embodied by Carnosusâ and their sophomore effort. I was unaware of this band until this year, but âtis far better to be late than to beâŠnever. Carnosus delivers a heaping slab of evocative technical death metal without ever forgetting that good songs need good riffs. And boy is this album overflowing with riff after succulent riff. I must also mention Vocalist Jonatan Karasiak, who delivers every high-pitched shriek, DM growl, and percussive grunt, lending even more variety to an already diverse platter while still maintaining album cohesion. This is a bold, mature, expansive tech death album from a band that has no right to be this good this early in their careers. As such, this album was an easy lister.
#4. Sermon // Of Golden Verse â Last year, Saundersâ endorsement of Disillusionâs Ayam ultimately led me to award it my vaunted number two spot. And now, I find myself in a similar situation: Saunders awarded Of Golden Verse a lofty, nearly unattainable 4.5, and now here I sit, placing yet another one of his chosen progressive metal acts into my Top Five. While I could take issue with my listmateâs worrying control over my decision-making, Iâm instead going to celebrate this twist of fate, as it brought me this gem of an album. And what an album it is! Sermon establishes a consistent, ominous atmosphere without ever losing momentum. Instead, Sermon relies on wave after wave of musical variation; the lush and emotive can give way to the more intense and extreme; progressive, churning melodicism can grow and cascade into an all-enveloping chorus. Of Gold Verse is a beautiful, complex album that only gets better with repeated listens and deserves a spot on any respectable Top Ten.
#3. Crypta // Shades of Sorrow â What a way to kick off my Top Three! Ever since 2021âs Echoes of the Soul, Iâve been a vocal supporter of these Brazilian death metalers. And after two years, Fernanda and co. have once again delivered the goods. Itâs clear theyâve grown as a band, crafting an even stronger album that feels more mature, bolder, and heavier than their previous effort, chock full of grimace-inducing riffs, impressive vocal acrobatics, and a drum sound that pins you to the wall and dares you to peel yourself off. While Crypta is still fetid, OSDM adherents, Shades of Sorrow also amps both the black and thrash influences, resulting in a compelling sophomore effort that packs a significant, unforgettable punch. In a year where quality death metal releases were not in short supply, I think it says a lot that Crypta was able to set themselves apart not only from the blistering success of their first album but from the rest of 2023âs excellent releases.
#2. Cattle Decapitation // Terrasite â Last year I caught grief for daring to include Ghost in my Top Ten. This year, Iâm sure some maladjusted malcontents will take issue with me including Terrasite so high on my list. âTheir old stuff is better!â or âThere are too many awkward cleans!â I can hear you loudly posting in the comment section. But the unfortunate truth is that Cattle Decapitation remains a force to be reckoned and 2023 marked yet another great addition to an already undeniable discography. Iâm still enamored with CDâs ability to craft memorable, pummeling death metal that often veers into grind, brutal death, or melodeath territory. I also cannot get enough of Travis Ryanâs vocal range, from blackened snarls to percussive, deathened growls to plaintive cleans. But as I mentioned in my Terrasite review, my favorite aspect of the album isnât just the rage they level at the human race, but the accompanying resignation. This adds an emotive layer while also paving the way for oddly beautiful, destructive tracks like âScourge of the Offspring.â Iâm proud to call Terrasite my number two, and I scoff at those elitists unwilling to enjoy a good album, even after itâs been shoved down their ungrateful gullets.
#1. Afterbirth // In But Not Of â The album that snagged the top spot on my year-end list did so surprisingly fast, after only a few spins. I knew right away that In But Not Of was something special, and that belief has only been reaffirmed after multiple listens and even deeper dives. Death metal certainly had a bumper year, and in my humble (and correct) opinion, Afterbirth is the ideal example of a band that helped bolster the genre and propel it to loftier heights in 2023. And why wouldnât it be? For a band that traffics in slammy, knuckle-dragging brutal death, In But Not Of carries with it an undeniable progressive, cerebral quality, which will come as no surprise to fans and feels like a logical outgrowth from their previous effort Four Dimensional Flesh. But as Ferox pointed out in his review, perhaps the most impressive, engaging, and effective aspect of In But Not Of is the clear distinction on display; while the first half of the record comports itself as a tried-and-true, brutal death metal scourge thatâll leave you happily battered and bruised, the second half explores more progressive fair, featuring unexpected atmosphere, slower sections, and even some non-metal influences. Indeed, In But Not Of is the kind of album that grabs your attention immediately, but like a legend, it grows in the retelling, and it requires repeat spins to uncover all the tasty little morsels tucked between animalistic grunts and frenetic, chunky riffs. Youâre listening to elevated slam here, and donât you forget it; I know I wonât.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year
Afterbirth â âDevils with Dead Eyesâ What are you waiting for? Listen to this track and tell me it doesnât evoke some of the most chaotic, overwhelming moments of 2023. Sure, Sodomiseryâs âDelusionâ is the far more catchy option, but when I think of a song that represents all that 2023 was (and wasnât), I canât help but return to âDevils with Dead Eyes.â It doesnât hurt that it features a truly killer riff, Iron Maiden-esque chuggery, and even a touch of grunge. Make of all that what you will, just as long as youâre about to press play.
#2023 #Afterbirth #Ahab #Anareta #BlogPost #Bloodgutter #CannibalCorpse #Carnation #Carnosus #CattleDecapitation #Crypta #DisguisedMalignance #DyingFetus #Godthrymm #Gridlink #Horrendous #Kruelty #Lists #Listurnalia #MutoidMan #OuterHeaven #SaundersAndFelagundSTopTenIshOf2023 #Sermon #ShoresOfNull #Sodomisery #Somnuri #Suffocation #TardigradeInferno #VanishingKids #WalkingCorpse #Wayfarer #Wormhole #Xoth
Dolphin Whispererâs and Feroxâs Top Ten(ish) of 2023
By Dolphin Whisperer
Dolphin Whisperer
I donât remember anymore exactly when or how I stumbled upon Angry Metal Guy, but I know that Iâve been reading the site for fourteen years now. In that time Iâve gone from barely a student to a working professional who routinely feels the drain of a society sinking around him. But itâs ok because along the way I managed to find a partner who loves me for all my flaws and quirks (or at least thatâs what she tells me).1 She wasnât always there, though, nor was the comfort that weâve built into our life. When she wasnât there, and when human company could not provide for whatever reason, both Angry Metal Guy and the music world at large always existed to evolve around me and shine a path to work that saw where I was and reflected my pain. Or my happiness. Or the existential dread of another day. Or just comforted me with a warm bowl of guitar noodles with a side of riff salad.
You may not have seen my words pop around much over that time, but rest assured, I was there like all of you now, reading as AMG the Man validated my feelings or presented admiration for an idol I donât worship or killed my darlings with questionable opinions. I was there when Steel was the new Ape on the block. I developed a taste for the cast who I agreed with most and scanned with ravenous eyes for the next 0.5 or 1.0 to watch a train wreck meet a car crash. I watched this community who knew nothing of me stand up for important and meaningful things all while staying steadfast to the goal of simply reviewing metal in all its glory.2 Then one day I decided to join the Discord group that had been advertising itself at the bottom of every article for I donât know how long before I noticed. And in that feverish chatterbox of swirling opinions, I realized that this community meant so much to me that I wanted to give it a go behind the curtains.
I made friendsâfriends surrounding music whether I agree with them or not. Thatâs what it means to love music in my mind. Hate and love both ignite passion, and passion is what squirms the happy juice in our brains. Iâm sure you, dear reader, will have thoughts about the below choices. And know that you are more than welcome to voice them in any way you see fit. Go ahead, recommend me something while youâre at it. If you do agree with these opinions, also know, then that you can click through to any of the associated reviews, Bandcamp pages, label linksâany way that you can reward the artist with your hard-earned currency, if youâre able. Because remember, itâs people like you and me (nerds) who keep this silly business of music alive. Did you know you can click those links? On my reviews, on my buddy Feroxâs reviews. Even on reviews that you donât agree with! So read something, click something, support something, tell a friend, tell a partner⊠or just take whatever knowledge you gain and listen to some good music. If you continue reading, you will encounter my recommendations to fill that void of good music in your life. Above (or below, whatever the Editing Gods decide) Ferox has some recommendations for you too. Know that these two sets are the best recommendations you will receive this year. Live loudly, listen responsibly.3
#ish. Anareta // Fear Not â In a year with less to love, Fear Not could have placed higher, but the riches across different facets of my listening pleasures spilled forth in almost every possible way. Alas, this unique act couldnât have come further out of left field when promos began to trickle in for 2023, and Anaretaâs delicate precision with weeping string melodies against their brutish incisions of blood-curdling shrieks struck the tucked-away Grayceon bone in my body. Alongside up-and-coming act Exulansis out of Oregon, thereâs a promising wave of chamber-informed bands growing in the wilds of niche-loving minds. As they say, it only takes two to tangoâŠthough âOmnicideâ feels a little more like a foxtrot, right?
#10. Tongues // FormlâĂžâse Stjerner â That I managed to cobble together words that described the mysterious air that surrounds this album baffles me. Countless listens later, I still get lost in the swaying vibrations of the tricky whammy-addled leads and layers of reverb decaying over a vast landscape. And even though all these forward choices usually spell a path down the intangible and incoherent, a lurking melody and grounded rhythmic performance seals the hypnotism that would feel just out of reach with a lesser performance. Your mind knows that each tone source here found its way to the recording behind closed doors, but the energy that emits throughout FormlâĂžâse Stjerner casts like a sonic beacon through the dreariest of nights on the open, foggy sea.
#9. Vanishing Kids // Miracle of Death â The kids are gone!!! I wasnât particularly a fan of their previous release so that Miracle of Death hooked me was a small miracle all in itself. Iâm no stranger to enjoying shoegaze-y things, psych-rock-laden things, sinfully synthful thingsâthe airy 60s era croons and shimmering Hammond shudders throughout this give me all kinds of shoulder-relaxing, neck-tingling goodies. You think thatâd remind me of someone like The Mamas & the Papas, but my mind drifts toward the episodic, warble-clipped daze of the Cunninglynguists classic Oneirology. Funny how the mind works, innit? Regardless, the sheer beauty of sound on display throughout Miracle of Death is impossible for my sugar-starved brain to ignore. Vibe with me.
#8. Slumbering Sun // The Ever-Living Fire â I know the Rodeö entries provide a healthy serving of less-than-desirable releases, but if youâre skipping them entirely then maybe you missed Slumbering Sun when they dropped their debut LP, The Ever-Living Fire way back in February. You see, one of the reasons Iâve helped fuel the Rodeö is that bands like Slumbering Sun still exist out there, under the radar, largely unpromoted, with gem ideas. Leaning on the modern sadperson melodic doom angle pioneered by an early Pallbearer, this Texas troupe delivered a longing yet hopeful collection of tunes that never fails to stir the slow burn of teary-eyed smiles in my heart. If Patrick Walker (Warning) were younger when he found peace, perhaps 40 Watt Sun would have gone this direction.
#7. Jarhead Fertilizer // Carceral Warfare â I didnât even think I was getting a Jarhead release this year, but the death metal overlords decided that 2023 hadnât quite graced me yet with this extremely specific kind of deranged, violent, feral death metal that I crave. Samples and segues function like dim lights in a dive bar, masking the filth strewn about while the seedy world around you builds its slow assault on your senses. Carceral Warfare stinks, its riffs carved in cracked and corroded skin. Thereâs nothing acute about injuries that Jarhead seeks to afflictâthe wounds Carceral Warfare doles out aim to fester and brim black with incurable disease.
#6. Gridlink // Coronet Juniper â I never expected my favorite power metal album of the year to be a grindcore album. Gridlinkâs take on the punk specialty has always been a bit different though. Always fast, always pushing the treble ceiling, and always leading with melodies that donât quit, Coronet Juniper highlights all the strengths that this outfit has always promised. As their last album, it functions as a tribute to themselvesâtheir collective passions executed at ridiculous speeds and unadvisable levels of throat punishment. It may not be as groundbreaking as what came before it, but when youâre ten steps ahead of the pack, you can settle to simply show âem how itâs done. And I got to use Gundam clips in the review. Win-Win.
#5. Wormhole // Almost Human â The formatting will get all weird if I only scream WOOOOOOOOOOOORMMMMMMMMM-HOOOOOOOLLLLLLEEEEEEEEEEEE like I want to, so hereâs more. Ken and I donât often end up hole-to-hole on an album, but when we do, you better bet that itâs great. When all that was out for Almost Human was the singles, I repeatedly binged those first two tracks as if they were a whole album to themselves. And thatâs the magic of this bright and horrifying slamfest. Itâs shiny, itâs punishing, and, most importantly, itâs relentless in worming its way into my gaping sound receptors.
#4. Anachronism // Meanders â Iâve been listening to this all damn year at this point. I was late to the Anachronism party with Orogeny, but not so with Meanders. Its uncanny ease in mood and brevity in run hold an important home in contrast to its finger-testing technicality and unparalleled rhythmic brutality. A natural but still unexpected successor to the post-tinged, brooding brutality that showed itself in flashes, Meanders rains textural and colorful in ways that other death metal simply doesnâtâall while still staying death metal. Oh, and Lisa Voisard has a piercing shriek to go with her scruffy bellow. Who wouldâve guessed?
#3. healthyliving // Songs of Abundance, Psalms of Grief â I knew how much I loved this album before I realized it. When it dropped, I told all the writers, âI think I have my first TYMHM yâall.â But then I went and filtered it, which is no dishonor but doesnât quite capture the intensity of what healthyliving has to offer on this debut outing. Building tension through an eclectic array of jangling chords and understated rhythms, the supporting cast sets the perfect stage for vocalist Amaya Lopez-Carramerro to absolutely shred with fearless virtuosic wail. Or sheâll sit back and set a slow burn with a restrained and emotive croon. Can I call her my favorite vocalist in metal right now? Is this even metal? Maybe. But I couldnât care less. Itâs damn good.
#2. KEN mode // VOID â NULL ended up on my top ten last year, and with the consistency that these angry Canadians provide, enjoying VOID came naturally, disarmingly so. What I didnât expect, however, was that this act known for being noisy and rambunctious and pulverizing would be able to dial back the melancholy of previous works with an additional varnish of lived-in depression. A partner to what came before it, VOID captures the last spat of mania before an extended comedown and the dragging sorrow that follows. And yet somehow, though it hurts almost every step of the way, I feel just a little bit lighter after every listen. Get over yourself and listen if you havenât bothered yet, if only for the buzzing synths and buttery, booming bass tones.
#1. Vvon Dogma I // The Kvlt of Glitch â You, the commentariat, had plenty to say about this album when it dropped. âI tried⊠No thanks.â â âIâm voting Dolphin Whisperer off the island. This is crap.â â âWhat the actual fuck?â All choice examples. Some of you also decided to write this off because of the AI-base of the cover art despite the artists involved self-funding this whole exploration and fully crediting the digital assistance. Your asceticism will go unrewarded. This is a humble reminder that you, the commentariat, do not influence my complete and utter enjoyment of this mad pairing of cyberpunk industrial, fanned-fret progressive, angelic electronic piece of edge-skirting metal. The spirit of adventure that graces every phrase throughout the Kvlt of Glitch stimulates the thrill-seeker, the floating spirit, the head-banging hooligan in me all at once, while lathering me with a fresh sense of dread for a technology-warped future. Maybe you never liked Genghis Tron before they disbanded after Board Up the House. Maybe you never liked Unexpect when they graced us with album after album of shrill and unfathomably progressive fantasy. Maybe youâve got a shallow throat for multi-layered, programmed voices that fizzle the ears with rich harmony. But The Kvlt of Glitch is willing to welcome you whenever you choose to accept its power. I am God now!4
Honorable Mentions:
Disappointments oâ the Year:
Soen // Imperial Memorial â Let me level with you, Lotus is a fantastic album and the pinnacle of a career for Soen, a band that has grown further away from the flourishes that make their music interesting. Lush production? Humming Hammond overlays? Joel Ekelöf spreading sweet nothings over the course of an urgent and chunky build? Who needs any of that when you can write worse choruses over the same riff and people continue to latch onto it. Soen almost remembers their strengths (âFortress,â5 âTragedian,â âVitalsâ), and it is admirable that Ekelöf tries to stretch his wings as a grittier vocalist while maintaining his Eurovision aspirations. But with a direction thatâs even less dynamic than the uncharacteristically narrow master that Memorial shows, Iâve got little to reason believe that this is a direction that Soen should continue. Not good. Not good at all.
Einar Solberg // 16 â After Aphelion wiped away the hope I had left for Leprous, I looked to this solo outing from Mr. Solberg as a chance for him to find a way back to a good tune. It seems that it did help him reclaim a somber and less ahhAAAahhAAAaahaah character to his voice, and drummer Keli GuðjĂłnsson (Agent Fresco, notable Leprous-like act) really helps a few bright moments shine (âRemember Me,â âBlue Lightâ). However, Solberg did not have to take his play at Jamiroquai (âHomeâ) nor include a guest rapper (also âHomeâ) nor include his sister (for what effect on âWhere All the Twigs Brokeâ) nor include his brother-in-law for a growled guest spot on a trip-hoppy track (thatâs Ihsahn on âSplitting the Soulâ) nor give us seventy minutes of whatever you want to wrap this up as. Sadboi art pop perhaps? Skippable in any case.
Best Thing I Missed in 2022:
Polterguts // Gods Over Broken People â I havenât heard an album this seriously fucking pissed off since Admiral Angryâs Buster, but the level of frustration here rings just a touch less sexual and frustratedâitâs defeated. The malaise that Gods captures renders itself in lyrics that spout from a voice fed on apathy and gravel: âI used to pray for my friends/I used to hurt when they hurt/I used to love without expecting any love in returnâ (âSkullbowlâ), âI like it here at the bottom where they know me by name/I used to think I wanted out, but now Iâm begging to stayâ (âBuckle the Spineâ), âIâm not strong enough to hold it together, but It breaks my heart to watch you struggle for air/Iâm sorry I couldnât get both of us out, but that doesnât mean I wasnât thereâ (âInjuryâ). As harrowing as that is to read, itâs even more brutal to hear. And I suspect for those stuck in the same kind of recursive, small-town Midwest drain from which this attitude grows, this would hit even harder. One part Meshuggah, one part Chat Pile, and another part its own punished deathcore, Polterguts holds in one hand my aching heart and in another its own, stained and hollow.
Songs oâ the Year:
Why give you one when I can give you twenty-seven? Why twenty-seven? Thatâs my secret. Now, Iâve talked enough, go out there and enjoy some music, friends. And enjoy this photo of my dogs.
Kiwi (top) and Coconut (bottom).
Ferox
I got my own big boy list! AMG Industries: where doing an adequate job on the free work youâve been assigned leads to opportunities for more free work. I wouldnât have it any other wayâI love this place, even if the prospect of making this list fills me with anxiety and imposter syndrome. I am generally not given to best-of lists, or year-end reflection. But weâve got a fake job to do, so letâs get stuck in!
2023 was a weird one. It began with a case of long-ish Covid that saw me coughing uncontrollably every time I laughed, segued into a writerâs strike that shut down my industry for six months, and ended with a faint and collision between the Ferox noggin and a concrete floor. That last one put me in bed recovering for the better part of a month and seriously fucked with my workout goals. Despite all this, it was an incredible year! My family flourished, I snuck a couple of projects into production at my day job, and I had a blast writing here as much as I could. The only complaint I could possibly muster is that itâs all flying past way too quickly.
As for AMG⊠this is that rare place that improves the lives of all who touch it (Rodeö bands excepted). It did that for me when I lurked as a reader, and it continues to do so now that I cling to a staff position. How does a place this positive place exist? On the internet?! Iâm grateful to Steel for providing real leadership at my fake job, to my fellow members of the AMG Class of â21 for being good eggs and excellent writers, and to everyone Iâve met through a gig that makes life richer and more fun. Maybe the real 2023 was the bollocks we talked along the way.
#ish. Spirit Possession // Of the Sign⊠â Do you guys like Nifelheim? I sure as heckfire do, and this album that captures some of their defiant spirit stole my heart in the waning moments of 2023. The reprobates of Nifelheim arenât the only point of departure here. Portlandâs Spirit Possession is a borderline tribcore act that aims to capture the feel of an era more than the work of one particular band. Here youâll find echoes of Bathory, Hellhammer, and Venom. Sometimes a project like this works so well that the music transcends the lack of originality baked into these sorts of things. Of the Sign⊠is one such album; it may well have landed in my top ten if I had had more time with it before Listurnalia.
#10. Horrendous // Ontological Mysterium â Horrendous, already on a very short list of the best metal bands so far this century, bolsters their legacy with the concise and intoxicating Ontological Mysterium. The quartet has carved out a take on progressive death metal that is entirely their own, one that is melodic, wonky, and sweeping all at once. Theyâve never been more engaging than they are on Ontological Mysterium. The album wends its way through nine tracks in less than forty minutesâOntological Mysterium defies its run time by taking you on a journey that feels epic, but releases you before fatigue sets in. Only closer âThe Death Knell Ringeth,â an inexplicable dud that can scarcely walk and chew gum at the same time, keeps Ontological Mysterium from ascending to loftier heights.
#9. Wormhole // Almost Human â Wormholeâs take on brutal death metal is at once savage but cheerful, and stöopid without being remotely dumb. I am fully on board with any band that uses the low art of the slample to describe their own sound, as Wormhole does with a sunny interjection of âTech Slam!â on the title track of their latest. The AMG staff would have you believe that itâs necessary to choose between Wormhole and Afterbirth, the bandâs peer in innovative and excellent brutal death metal. That is nonsense; appreciate the Slam-aissance in all its glory, as these two remarkable outfits elevate one of metalâs least-loved subgenres to new heights.
#8. Sodomisery // Mazzaroth â Sodomisery makes life hard on themselves with an atrocious name that is way too persnickety about the respectable pursuit of sodomy. Some folks just need to play the game on difficult mode, I guess. If the hideous moniker is what it takes to spur Sodomisery to this kind of work, then the outfit should keep indulging themselves. Mazzaroth is an endlessly replayable slab of genre-bending excellence. Symphonic flourishes and well-placed clean vocals accent the bandâs hybrid of black metal, death metal, and melodeath. Mazzaroth is big fun, an album that effortlessly synthesizes a cornucopia of influences into something that feels both classic and new.
#7. Xoth // Exogalactic â A late-in-the-game remaster unleashed the power of a fully operational Exogalactic. The album finds the pan-genre madlads of Xoth playing in the margins, expanding their sound here and there while defending their Party Lovecraft turf. Across eight engaging tracks, the excellent songwriting of Exogalactic is augmented by audacious technical what-the-fuck-ery. The albumâs forty minutes fly past, and while Xothâs sound might not be the revelation it was on Invasion of the Tentacube and Interdimensional Invocations, this Seattle quartet remains very much on top of their game. Play a song, any song, and joy will invade your earholes. Thatâs the Xoth promise, and Exogalactic delivers.
#6. Gridlink // Coronet Juniper â I could go on about the pleasures of Coronet Juniper, but chances are Dolphin Whisperer already has you cornered and is doing just that. My list buddy extolled the virtues of this grind funhouse to the point where I finally just pretended he was saying âBREEEEEEEEEEEEEâ and tuned him out. Then I played the album a month or so later in the gym, and Gridlink rocketed me to a dimension of pure fun. Coronet Juniper is a grind joyride, so confident in its songwriting that the band includes a run of instrumental âkaraoke versionsâ at the end of the album that is every bit as playable as the so-called official tracklist.
#5. Outer Heaven // Infinite Psychic Depths â Outer Heaven understands both the virtues and the confines of old-school death metal. Infinite Psychic Depths gives the subgenre a glow-up by taking us on a tour of everything that still works, while adding a few new wrinkles. The album never plays as mere pastiche; like some kind of Quentin Tarantino of death metal, Outer Heaven refreshes old tropes by building something new from a pile of familiar elements. I havenât dug much into the high concept that underlies Infinite Psychic Depths, but thatâs because I donât need to. The music stands on its own. Already a highlight of 2023, Infinite Psychic Depths feels like one that could grow in esteem with time. It could well be underrated in my fifth slot.
#4. Tribunal // The Weight of Remembrance â Hereâs one that roared out of the gate back in January and absolutely refused to cede any ground. The Weight of Remembrance runs classic doom through both an orchestral and a death metal filter. The various genre flourishes enhance the strong songwritingââOf Creeping Moss and Crumbling Stoneâ is so incredible that it became a workout staple despite its plodding pace, and nearly earned a spot on this yearâs Heavy Moves Heavy playlist. The highlights donât stop there. They donât stop until The Weight of Remembrance has run its course. The Debut oâ The Year also happens to be one of the very best albums of 2023.
#3. Warcrab // The Howling Silence â Warcrab boasts fighting spirit, sharp claws, and a crustacean shell thatâs fitted for turret combat. Theyâre obviously game for a scrap, butâas Cherd pointed out in his reviewâthe band doesnât have much competition in their death-sludge niche. A relief, then, that Warcrab is anything but complacent on The Howling Silence. These seven tracks roar past, the stifling atmosphere pierced on occasion by icepick solos that showcase the Guitar Tone oâ The Year. This one was a grower for me. The Howling Silence initially did little to distinguish itself from previous slab Damned in Endless Night. But my lizard brain heard layers that my ears werenât processing, and the album kept earning spins. Layers of excellence kept revealing themselves, and before I knew it this piece of heavy artillery blasted its way to the upper echelons of my list.
#2. Carnosus // Visions of Infinihility â This rollicking slab of tech death earned a 4.0 from me back in early February, and I do believe I sold these Swedes short by half a point. Visions of Infinihility was a mainstay of my 2023. The album remained close at hand throughout both a long strike and a stretch of vertigo-induced bedrest. If Iâm not tired of it yet, I probably never will be. And whatâs not to like here? Every one of the nine tracks on Visions of Infinihility stands up to heavy listening. The siteâs top writer summed it up most precisely: âIt doesnât matter if youâre wearing four thousand dollar headphones or a bullet beltâVisions of Infinihility should appeal to wonks, diehards, and metalheads all across the spectrum.â
#1. Afterbirth // In But Not Of â Long Islandâs Afterbirth crams an abundance of riches into a brutal death metal album that twists and transmutes as it goes. The first half of In But Not Of stays planted in the brutal death genre that Afterbirth had a hand in creating. The second departs for distant parsecs, fusing elements of post-metal, alt-rock, and even ambient music onto death metal songs. The experiments work seamlessly, and I continue to find surprises almost every time I revisit In But Not Of. âDevils With Dead Eyes,â âAutoerotic Amputation,â âIn But Not Of,â and âAngels Feast on Fliesâ are the standout tracksâany one of the four could credibly lay claim to Song oâ The Year. Colin Marstonâs production showcases and elevates the material. My favorite critic said it best: âThis is music to concuss you and then heal your battered brain⊠[In But Of] is an album to savor and return to again and again, a companion piece to Four Dimensional Flesh that manages to equal if not surpass its predecessor.â Also: revel in that gorgeous album art by Alex Eckman-Lawn, a sci-fi Frankensteinâs monster that perfectly encapsulates the record. My top score of 2023 is an easy choice for Feroxâs Album oâ The Year.
Honorable Mentions
Song oâ the Year: Afterbirth â âIn But Not Ofâ
Disappointment oâ the Year
#2023 #Afterbirth #Anachronism #Anareta #Angra #Aphotic #Autarkh #Autopsy #BlogPost #Carnosus #Convocation #DolphinWhispererSAndFeroxSTopTenIshOf2023 #DrippingDecay #EinarSolberg #Fabricant #Gorod #Gravesend #Gridlink #healthyliving #Horrendous #Immortal #JarheadFertilizer #KENMode #Lists #Listurnalia #MaudTheMothTrajedesaliva #OkGoodnight #Omnicidal #OuterHeaven #Polterguts #PupilSlicer #SerpentCorpse #SlumberingSun #Sodomisery #Soen #SpiritPossession #TombMold #Tongues #Tribunal #VanishingKids #VvonDogmaI #Warcrab #WorldSEndGirlfriend #Wormhole #Xoth
#Decibel magazine picked Horrendous' "Ontological Mysterium" as their #AOTY
So far I didn't listen to it, but I did that just now.
Verdict: interesting, good (3,5 out of 5), but far from beeing my #AOTY2023
You should check it out though:
đ #NowPlaying on #KEXP's #VarietyMix
Horrendous:
đ” Cult of Shaad'oah
https://open.spotify.com/track/1G2gIvViMPVHsjHQ9Cqxkq
https://horrendous.bandcamp.com/track/cult-of-shaadoah
đ¶ #Show #playlist đ
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6G4PaS9BNkIuGqMo44rbfZ
đ¶ #KEXP #playlist đ
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/6VNALrOa3gWbk794YuIrwg
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Review: Horrendousâ Ontological Mysterium is a Death Metal Masterpiece
"Whether it's something in the Philadelphia water or just a combination of songwriting chops and excellent musical camaraderie, Horrendous have made one of the best death metal albums, not only this year but in recent memory."
#Horrendous
#OntologicalMysterium
#DeathMetal
#AlbumReview
#MetalSucks
#ProgressiveDeathMetal
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#MetalInjection
THE WEEKLY INJECTION: New Releases From SPIRIT ADRIFT, HORRENDOUS & More Out Today 8/18
Plus releases from Skalmold, Ringworm, Nott, and Atreyu.
#SpiritAdrift
#Horrendous
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#MusicReleases
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#NewMusicFriday
#BluesRock
#ThrashMetal
#BlackMetal
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