#InvictusProductions

2025-03-04

Grave Infestation – Carnage Gathers Review

By Steel Druhm

With so much classic heavy metal clogging up my review queue lately, I’ve been neglecting the baser caveman side of my reptilian brain. Canada’s Grave Infestation are back to fix that with their sophomore platter, Carnage Gathers. When they last slimed my doorstep in 2022 with the gruesome Autopsy and early Death worship on Persecution of the Living, they left a mucilaginous impression on my thick skull. Their grizzled and nasty take on old school death was exactly the kind of filth I love to wallow in. Not much has changed on Carnage Gathers, which is another putrid scuzzbucket full of grotesque sounds, primitive riffs, and an IQ below that of rudimentary tool users. It revels in the early days of the genre while fetishizing the lo-fi sound of Hellhammer. It’s all about ear abuse and carnal debasement, and I refuse to be threatened by a good time in the rot pit. Prepare to embrace the sump.

This is not a varied and complex work of art. It’s a tug of war between extremities as the band tries to crush your chestal cavity with ghastly doom segments and then shake your brain stem with bursts of speed and punky d-beats. The whiplash is intended to induce nausea, and it often does. Opener “Living Inhumation” has the bona fides to have appeared on Death’s Leprosy or Autopsy’s Severed Survival and fit right in like a bowel leech. It’s scabby, poo-encrusted offal of a high caliber loaded with jangled, discordant riffs and abysmal vocals. The guitar tone is absolute sewage, and everything is dank and reeking. The only downside is the length. At nearly 6 minutes, it overextends its welcome by the end. This is an unfortunately common trend here, with multiple songs of good construction outliving their trust funds of attention. I love many things about “Ritualized Autopsy,” especially the slimy riffs that ooze everywhere and make you feel unclean. I also appreciate its relentless, unstoppable assault. At points, the guitar work even reminds me of Destruction’s immortal debut EP, Sentence of Death, which is a very good thing. But it too plods on too long, losing some of its visceral impact.

Every track has things going on that I love. Grave Infestation have that sound I’m hopelessly drawn to, and the way they layer nerve-flaying fretboard abuse, bone-breaking grooves, stupid chuggs, and atmospheric noodling gets me every time. Lay some vomitous vocals and pounding drums over that shit and Steel comes to your yard for the gutshake. However, the band doesn’t know when enough is enough, and quality cuts with righteous moments like “Black Widow” and “Drenched in Blood” refuse to stop when they should. There are some absolute ball breaking though, like primal closer “Murder Spree” which just fucks up your shit with insane, panic-inducing riffs that won’t leave you alone. It’s like they took the best moments from Possessed’s timeless classic Seven Churches and sutured them roughly to early Autopsy demos. What more could you want? At 39:56 minutes, Carnage Gathers doesn’t feel too long, though certain tracks do. The production is perfectly mucky and raw, and the guitar sound is exactly the kind of abrasive my rusty metal heart wants.

I’m a big fan of the guitar work from Graham Christofferson and “BC.” It’s their horrific string mutilation that makes the material throb, and they have a knack for skin-removing riffs and twisted flourishes. They create the soundtrack to a madman’s nightmare while paying homage to classic early death albums we all know and love. At times, their riffs sound like those on Bathory’s The Return, which makes me unreasonably giddy. Graham Christofferson’s vocals are a match made in Hell – horrid, repulsive, and full of gut-busting throat exertions. He reminds me of Chris Reifert (Autopsy) at times and, at others, Jeff Beccera (Possessed), but he’s always disgusting. The entire band is solid, but the lack of editing is a nagging defect.

I desperately wanted to give Carnage Gathers a higher rating because I dig so much of what Grave Infestation does. They play exactly the kind of death metal I love, and their commitment to appalling excess speaks to my crude ape brain. If they trimmed the blubber off the best cuts, this would rise in the ranking considerably. As it stands, Carnage Gathers is a quality death metal album sure to please the sick and deranged. It could have been MOAR though!

Rating: 3.0/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Invictus Productions
Websites: graveinfestation.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/graveinfestation | instagram.com/graveinfestation
Releases Worldwide: February 28th, 2025

Kenstrosity

Formed from members of Canadian antifascist crust/sludge metal outfit Ahna and known death filthifiers Ceremonial Bloodbath, Grave Infestation helped pull me out of a skull pit intent on suffocating me under a mountain of bullshit and dumped me right back into a different skull pit entirely—this one teeming with rot and cadaveric bouquets. I suppose I should be thankful, as this is the kind of thing that fills my pores with what some might consider the scent of WICTORY. So, without further ado, I dive deeper into the corpse pile that is Grave Infestation’s sophomore record, Carnage Gathers.

Death metal is a known quantity. We all know it when we hear it, and can describe it without much conflict or confusion. Such is the case for Grave Infestation. Carnage Gathers represents death metal at its most rank, channeling equal parts Asphyx and Incantation, with a membrane of slick Autopsy sleaze surrounding its diseased skin. It’s a combination that works wonders for those who search tirelessly for the nastiest of the nasty, and in that respect, Grave Infestation don’t disappoint. Buzzing and boisterous riffs abound, slammed into the earth below by the crushing heft of doom-laden chugs and yanked back upright by a relentless barrage of squealing solos. Cheering on these deadly antics, a vomitous wretch, brutally projected from afar, echoes its sickening cry across Carnage Gathers’ necrotic scenery. Drawing the line just shy of the caverns from whence Tomb Mold’s early work spawned, Carnage Gathers boasts a sound that exudes old school death at its prime.

Of course, that means that I’m drawn to Carnage Gathers almost by instinct, an animal magnetism against which mental fortitude and willpower crumbles at the slightest breeze. Choice cuts “Inuman Remains,” “Black Widow,” and “Drenched in Blood” take full advantage of my weakness here. Bridging the gap between Incantation’s sheer heft with the vicious onslaught of Autopsy’s violent ways, these songs juggle riffs and grooves engaging enough to motivate the necks of even the staunchest death dissident. “Black Widow,” in particular, marks Grave Infestation’s high water mark, boasting a punky d-beat swagger in conjunction with screeching dive bombs that make an instant memory. Songs like these show that Grave Infestation not only understand the kind of songwriting that made death metal an international underground phenomenon but also identify and implement subtle ways to invigorate that well-worn, comfortable style for a modern audience.

However, Carnage Gathers demonstrates understanding and implementation inconsistently. Pulling from many of its doomier segments, Grave Infestation’s writing outside of their ravenous tears and mid-paced stomps leaves a lot on the table. “Ritualized Autopsy,” “The Anthropophagus,” and “Murder Spree,” among a couple others, routinely inject slower passages characterized by generic chugs and repetitive solos, thereby undermining Carnage Gathers’ strongest material with filler. Considering several tracks reach past five minutes with the inclusion of these insubstantial sections of languid doom death, it seems a clear weak point in Grave Infestation’s repertoire. The undeniable fact that their ripping, death-focused outbursts regularly demolish everything in their path each time they rear their ugly heads only further illuminates the flat, featureless nature of their doom-laden dalliances.

As I surface from the Carnage that Gathers to breathe deep of stale, putrid air, I rest easy knowing that despite its flaws, Carnage Gathers isn’t half bad. Its best moments are a ten-ton anvil of repugnant fun, and the doomed detours that fail to resonate in any meaningful way also don’t derail the experience entirely. Instead, these flawed moments serve as an opportunity for growth. Grave Infestation are still young and have a ton of potential. It wouldn’t take much for them to further refine and empower their sound, launching the quality of their output into higher echelons. For the moment, though, Carnage Gathers is a simple, fun platter of filth, and that’s fine with me.

Rating: Mixed

#25 #2025 #30 #Ahna #Asphyx #Autopsy #CanadianMetal #CarnageGathers #CeremonialBloodbath #Death #DeathDoom #DeathMetal #DoomMetal #Feb25 #GraveInfestation #Hellhammer #Incantation #InvictusProductions #Leprosy #Obituary #PersecutionOfTheLiving #Possessed #Review #Reviews #ScreamBloodyGore #TombMold

2025-01-16

NECROMANIAC – Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable Review

By Tyme

Having toiled and troubled over a bubbling cauldron for the past thirteen years, London, England’s Necromaniac, is finally prepared to cast the spell of its debut album Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable.1 A multi-national coven consisting of musicians from Sweden, Spain, Greece, and Poland, Necromaniac are self-described practitioners of “morbid metal.” After 2015’s promising and well-received demo Morbid Metal dropped, in addition to 2018’s mini-EP Subterranean Death Rising, Invictus Productions signed on in 2024 to release Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable, promising listeners “A truly sinister musical journey containing nine forbidden rites steeped in witchcraft, necromancy and an overall occult and utterly macabre atmosphere.” So I wondered, is this pricking in my thumbs a sign that something wicked this way comes, or is Necromaniac‘s witchery nothing more than parlor tricks?

An elixir of blackened death and thrash, with synth-sprigs of thyme and dashes of doomsbane thrown in for atmospheric effect, the morbidity of Necromaniac‘s metal is steeped mainly in the olde ways. Conjuring strong Hellhammer and Morbid2 vibes, there’s a rawness to the sound of the organic mix that belies the DR score you see below. Ensorcelling ‘guitarmageddon’ is Sadistik Fornicator, who laces the swirling potions of Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable with Toxic Holocaustian riffage (“Daemonomantia”) and guitar passages that sound as if they could have come straight from the cutting room floor of Slayer‘s Show No Mercy sessions (“Teraphim (Skull Sorcery)”). Combine those riffs with the potency of The One’s ‘Basstard Tremblings’ and V. Pestilencia’s ‘Apocalyptic Drumonitions,’ and the thrashily blackened death metal Necromaniac offers up is ruthlessly effective. When things shift toward the more atmospheric, however, cracks start to show and highlight the most significant battle fought within the album’s walls, which pits the strength of its metal against its more melodramatic tendencies.

With nothing to dilute its potency, the metal of Sciomancy, Malediction, & Rites Abominable is razor-sharp and capable of carrying the weight of the entire album. One quaff of the black-‘n-roll draught of riffs from “Grave Mound Oath” will have you bobbing your head and wondering what the hell ever happened to Carpathian Forest. At the same time, the swirling speeds of “Great is the Thirst of the Restless Dead” and the remorseless “Swedenborg’s Skull,” with its ebb and flow of pummeling riff work and atmospherically doomy passages, are a satisfying earworm of harrowing hocus-pocus. Atop all these infernal conflagrations float the vociferous vocalizations of C. Howler, whose grunts, growls, and menacing howls perfectly complement Necromaniac‘s morbidly sharp metal blade. If this were all we had to speak of regarding Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable, the overall perception would have been mostly positive, but there are elements left to address.

Necromaniac‘s firm forays into the strictly atmospheric fall short, cloaking those elements meant to invoke spine-chilling shivers in shrouds of theatrically overwrought melodrama instead. Other than “Caput Draconis,” with its effectively doomy guitar work and King Diamond-esque warbling3 providing an atmospherically eerie opening to the record, other attempts to tap the same vein miss the mark. Supplied by and known here only as A Corpse Without Soul, the guest vocals on “Bring Forth the Shade” and “Conjuration of St. Cyprian” are a mixture of cantankerous chuckles and over-embellished groans, whispers, and wails, combined then with the half-baked doom instrumentation and synths, create an overall effect more cringe than creepy. These tracks, in tandem with the ten-plus minutes of overly-long closer “Necromancess / Cauda Draconis,” full of meandering drawn-out doom work, make Sciomancy, Malediction & Rites Abominable feel longer than its near forty-nine-minute runtime should, negatively impacting the flow and momentum this witchy metal seance might otherwise have had.

Necromaniac‘s strength lies in the metal of its sciomantic maledictions and less in the melodrama of its abominable rites. Songs like “Grave Mound Oath,” “Teraphim (Skull Sorcery)” and “Swedenborg’s Skull” prove Necromaniac has the chops to stand tall next to other bands successfully peddling this same form of blackened death metal, but using vehicles that end up conjuring an atmosphere more mawkish than macabre costs Necromaniac most here. And while I can’t fully endorse Sciomancy, Maledictions and Rites Abominable, there’s enough meat on this bone to have me scoping Necromaniac‘s next incantation.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 9 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Invictus Productions | The Anja Offensive
Websites: necromaniac.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/necromaniacUK
Releases Worldwide: January 13, 2025

#25 #2025 #BlackMetal #DeathMetal #DoomMetal #EnglishMetal #Hellhammer #InvictusProductions #Jan25 #Morbid #Necromaniac #Review #Reviews #SciomancyMaledictionsRitesAbominable #Slayer #TheANJAOffensive #ThrashMetal

2024-07-15

Mages Terror – Damnation’s Sight Review

By Dr. A.N. Grier

Look at this, another metal exploration by the horror-loving guitarist and drum programmer, Horror Illogium. While staying busy between his efforts as founder of Portal and guitarist of Vomitor, this Australian native seems incapable of sitting still for long. With the help of the vocalist and guitarists of Australia’s newest Pustilence, Illogium is out to ravage the annals of black, death, thrash, and speed metal with Mages Terror’s debut record, Damnation’s Sight. While the man is not new to writing thrashy licks for Vomitor, Mages Terror is an old-school tribute to the sounds of olde. Stripped to its basic elements, Damnation’s Sight does little to tinker with them individually, they combine them all to deliver a unique twist in Illogium fashion. Spattering the riffs and song structures with eerie and sinister guitar tricks, this record looks to meld death and speed elements into those early, dark days of Sodom. It’s time to damn them eyes.

Having been a part of the Australian metal scene for a long time, this new project is unique because Illogium has teamed up with young pups that only recently released their first full-length record. And, according to Metal Archives, the drummer has never seen combat. But that doesn’t slow them down as they dive into this weird combination of genres and smash out ten songs in a mere 36 minutes. The result is barebones with a guitar tone that feels like I’m back in the late ’80s/early ’90s. Which, inevitably, does no more than any other band of its kind, but the spooky tone of the record is very much as you would expect from an outfit led by Illogium. Between its short runtime and horror-inspired character, there’s just enough to keep the interest up for a rather old-man inclusion into the metalverse.

“Serpent Bat” kicks things off in good form with old-school Sodom vibes as the vocalist alternates between black metal rasps and death metal growls. The fast-moving blackened thrash riff moves along nicely, interrupting itself in the song’s final minute to drop some heavy chugs wrapped in a dark presence. This latter riff, in particular, sets up the mood for the rest of the album. The follow-up track, “Paramount Specter,” keeps the ball rolling with its own black/thrash character and overlapping rasps and growls. The guitar work also increases a bit, delivering an intricate riff that, sometimes, feels like the guitars can’t keep up with the drums. But this is only the beginning. This song is all over the place, transitioning to some heavy riffage before introducing strange guitar leads and a mid-paced groove. For only three-ish minutes in length, this is the most confusing track on the record because it has no idea which riffs it wants to settle on.

Better tracks on the album are “Ruthless Guild,” “Master in the Black Cavern,” and the surprising instrumental, “Demon Bell.” The first is a trve banger with a high-pitched, mid-paced thrash lick that builds throughout. Its first riff change comes with neck-breaking beauty and punching vocals that remind me of the older stompers in 1349’s catalog. It also shows off some solid drum work from the newly-christened drummer. “Master in the Black Cavern” also sees solid drum work as it leads this heavy number chockful of tasty soloing tidbits. The bass also lends its sinisterness to the mix to create something truly cavernous in the final, chugging moments. “Demon Bell” is a surprising piece because, being near the end of the record, I didn’t think something with such killer riffs and structure would come without vocals. But it’s a nifty piece with surprising dueling guitar work—at least in comparison to the album’s other instrumental, “Presage.” This instrumental isn’t bad, but its sad, reverberating guitars do little to introduce its follow-up.

Damnation’s Sight has a lot of old-school character, where simplicity reigned supreme and solos ruled the roost. That alone sets it apart from those modern outfits trying to mash multiple genres and sub-genres together to create something unique. Not once did I feel like I was heading somewhere special with this release, but I still enjoyed it for what it was. Sure, the chorus of “Fane of the Slug Gods” is so forced that it becomes almost funny. And “Vulgar Overlord” is so simplistic that I barely remember it with each new listen. But, for what it is, the old tone matches the style, and the weird, eerie guitar work on songs like “Paramount Specter” provides a unique twist to the album. In the end, Damnation’s Sight is a solid effort even if it doesn’t completely grab me.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Invictus Productions | Bandcamp
Website: facebook.com/magesterrorfront
Releases Worldwide: July 12th, 2024

#1349 #25 #2024 #AustralianMetal #BlackMetal #DamnationSSight #DeathMetal #InvictusProductions #Jul24 #MagesTerror #Portal #Pustilence #Review #Reviews #Sodom #SpeedMetal #ThrashMetal #Vomitor

2024-06-09

Still reeling from the 25 years of #InvictusProductions show in #Eindhoven Ears are buzzing. Hopefully we didn't get the setlist too far off. See #Lucifericon #coscradh #OMEGAVORTEX and #Sacrilegia tear it up here:
youtube.com/watch?v=Dcm0ECQpjQ

2024-06-08

We just came out of the 25 years of #InvictusProductions + 15 years #Lucifericon anniversary show in #Eindhoven, with #OMEGAVORTEX, #coscradh and #Sacrilegia What a great BM & DM show! No filler, just four killer bands, straight out of the underground. Happy anniversary to both Invictus and Lucifericon.

SacrilegiaOmegavortexCoscradhLucifericon
2024-05-06

Flamekeeper – Flamekeeper Review

By Kenstrosity

Our mischievous promo handlers love to play mind games with us lowly writers, practicing to deceive us by teasing with unexpected genre combinations. Labels and bands do this equally as often. The reasons behind this trend are legion, I’m sure, but in every case it’s a double-edged sword. On one side, it grants us the privilege of discovering killer tunes we might not have otherwise considered. On the other, we occasionally encounter something that fails to deliver on the promise of something novel and unique. Italian/Swedish one-man trad/heavy newcomer Flamekeeper captured me with an alluring combo of power metal, heavy metal, and black metal tags. A genre-bending mind-fuck like that I could never resist, and so I snapped up their self-titled debut LP without hesitation. To my slight dismay, what I thought would be an exciting mashup turned out to be merely a mixed bag.

Believe it or not, we’ve covered Flamekeeper mastermind Marco S. before, under his blackened death metal project Demonomancy. It stands to reason, then, that Marco knows what black metal sounds like, but there is almost no trace of it in Flamekeeper. An occasional dalliance with quicker gallops verifies some measure of power metal heritage as well, but at the core this music is tailor-made for raising swords and pumping chests in the traditional way—think less Morgul Blade and more Manowar. Despite heavily accented vocals, Marco proves himself a competent singer for this style. His smooth, but understated baritone complements the simplistic but highly effective instrumentation behind him. His sense of rhythm—as displayed through his choice of beats, bass guitar work, and vocal cadence—elicits just the right kind of triumphant swagger to give each of these nine tomes respectable motivation. Somewhat predictably, and despite similarities to the music of trad metal legends on the surface, Flamekeeper can’t hold a candle torch to those classics, though it does an admirable job at steel worship nonetheless.

In fact, one of Flamekeeper’s greatest strengths is memorability despite its rather generic nature. Opener “New Wild World,” slightly awkward lyrics and all, emits an irresistible charm that allows it’s chorus to lodge in the grey matter. The unexpected recall to Shocking Blue’s “Venus” in the title track similarly secures its permanent installment in my memory. “Raise the Banner” features some of the album’s strongest percussion, leads, and riffwork, but Marco’s spitfire verse work steals the show instantly with its clarity and accuracy. The album’s true highlight, however, is penultimate track “As One with Light.” Using this opportunity to flex epic metal musculature, Flamekeeper soars in this track with highly effective vocal and guitar leads, thrashy power metal rhythms, and a killer chorus, resulting in an unqualified heavy metal triumph.

Regrettably, Flamekeeper’s approach is far too reserved to make the meteor impact I think Marco intended with this record. Epic metal requires a certain undeniable grandeur and sense of scale to complement traditional metal’s adventurous and eager spirit. Think about bands like Sorcerer and Manilla Road, who each set souls ablaze across the world. This phenomenon is no accident; deliberately gigantic sound, gutsy performances, and a seemingly limitless thirst for battle and victory define the style and inform the standard by which genre standouts earn their names. With Flamekeeper, a distinct lack of all three of these qualities leaves me almost totally unmoved, with the exceptions of “Raise the Banner” and “As One with Light.” These highlights alone awaken the red-blooded warrior that lives in me as it does in all of us, but even then, they don’t make that warrior feel powerful enough to take on whatever the world dares throw my way.

Instead of empowering and enlivening me as a listener, Flamekeeper leaves me terminally starving for more POWERS. While this debut is, for the most part, enjoyable on casual spins, it fails the mission statement of epic, traditional metal. In my mind, a record of this type needs to make me feel absolutely invincible, as a paragon of battle-hardened strength and fierce will. Flamekeeper, on the other hand, feels almost tentative, uncommitted to achieving ultimate victory at all costs. A fine proof of concept for Marco, but nothing greater at this time.

Rating: Mixed
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Invictus Productions
Websites: facebook.com/flamekeeperofficial | flamekeeper.bandcamp.com
Releases Worldwide: May 10th, 2024

#25 #2024 #Demonomancy #Flamekeeper #HeavyMetal #InvictusProductions #ManillaRoad #Manowar #May24 #MorgulBlade #Review #Reviews #ShockingBlue #Sorcerer #SwedishMetal #TradMetal #TraditionalMetal

2023-12-17

Malokarpatan – Vertumnus Caesar [Things You Might Have Missed 2023]

By Dr. A.N. Grier

I don’t know about the rest of you, but work has been a fucking bear this year. Since starting tenish years ago, 2023 might be my lowest contribution to the site. It also caused me to miss a lot of great records I was looking forward to. Thank the sweet metal lord that we have TYMHM. And this one is special. Since 2017, Malokarpatan has been a mainstay on Grier‘s top ten lists, and this year is no different. Never one to settle for a particular style or deliver an album structured like its predecessor, Vertumnus Caesar finds the band continuing to push boundaries and deliver even more riffs and mindfuckery. And, as always, it’s difficult to say if it’s better than another in their catalog. It exists as a succession of the others without being a sequel. It’s just there, and I’m here for it.

Like Nordkarpatenland, the album kicks off with a strange, yet soothing instrumental to set the mood. Then, “Kočár Postupuje Temnomodrými Dálavami na Juhozápad” bursts forth in galloping fury. Though not in a traditional sense. That’s not how Malokarpatan rolls. With rasping vocals slathering the ether, the riffs gallop along in Iron Maiden fashion. As the song progresses, the intensity increases. The drums hammer a trench in the ground as the tight, pinched Mercyful Fate guitar play chases you down it. Then, it all falls away. Prayer ensues, engulfed in haunting harpsichord. Then, the guitar solos are unleashed—tearing through the sky like bloodthirsty bats. Like so many of the band’s songs, there are no rules. Yet, even with all the chaotic shifts, it’s still a pleasing, complete song.

The follow-up track, “Vertumnus Caesar,” tips the previous song on its head and dumps out a hard-hitting black metal piece. But, again, there’s nothing that truly identifies the songwriting as black metal. After toying with some blackened riffage, old-school trad metal grooves and wails away. Like its predecessor, it eventually abandons it in favor of a key-riddled outro. Now that you have a taste of what to expect, “Maharal a Golem” arrives to crush all expectations. It kicks off with a crushing, second-wave black metal attack, leveraging some haunting, cathedral chants. Then, it transitions into a weird, industrial passage that somehow keeps the mood while completely changing it. When the original riffage resurfaces, the vicious vocals lead a face-ripping charge to the song’s conclusion.

I could go on forever about Vertumnus Caesar but the final two highlights have to be “Panstvo Salamandrov Jest v Kavernách Zeme” and “I Hle, Tak Zachádza Imperiálna Hviezda.” The first track is a six-and-a-half-minute journey through multiple Malokarpatan landscapes. While it’s rooted in heavy metal attributes, it explores so many nooks and crannies. Beginning with slick, intricate guitar work, the song explores a haunted cathedral before taking a walk through a majestic forest where fairies play flutes. Then, it ends with a rumbling drum outro that is so out of place it works. But the closer takes everything experienced on the instrumental and goes even further. After a painstakingly slow build, the song gets moving with some old-school gallops before exploring some upbeat, folky characteristics (is that cowbell I hear?). Then, it begins to slow, wrapping itself in a majestic blanket of key atmospheres, growing in strength until everything goes quiet. In its place, a calmness overcomes you, slowing your heart rate until you quietly fall asleep.

Tracks to Check Out: All of them

#2023 #BlackMetal #HeavyMetal #InvictusProductions #IronMaiden #Malokarpatan #MercyfulFate #SlovakianMetal #ThingsYouMightHaveMissed2023 #VertumnusCaesar

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