#TechnicalDeathMetal

2025-05-07

WOUND COLLECTOR – Begging For Chicxulub
eternal-terror.com/?p=67749

RELEASE YEAR: 2024

BAND URL: woundcollector.com/

For my second perfect score review this year (yet concerning last year) I’ve chosen the Belgian progressive death metal quintet uniquely named Wound Collector and their 1st EP after 2 full lengths, Begging For Chicxulub²⁰²⁴ independently released last June 15th. What makes this outfit compelling is how they seamlessly […]

#BeggingForCHICXULUB #belgium #DeathJazzMetal #deathMetal #EpicDeathMetal #EPICSAXOPHONISEDDEATHMETAL #Independent #ProfaneRecords #ProgressiveDeathMetal #ROTTENToTheCoreRecords #Saxophone #TechnicalDeathMetal #WoundCollector

2025-05-05

Ominous Ruin – Requiem Review

By El Cuervo

I’ll be the first to admit that technical death metal is not my forte nor favorite. As much as I love death metal in its many stripes, I disapprove of how tech death often relies on blistering speed and technical showmanship rather than focusing on songwriting. But a nod from the immortal Willowtip Records and nine tracks across just 40 minutes makes for what should be a tidy slice of metal on Requiem by San Francisco’s Ominous Ruin. With just one full-length and a smattering of demos prior, Ominous Ruin are a band in ascendancy. Do they continue with Requiem?

It makes for a distinctly intense experience as it blends stomping rhythms, nerdy technicality, and trilling flourishes into an album that proudly sits in the death metal camp but that also has a foot over the melodic line. Ominous Ruin execute this sound with the ridiculous level of instrumental skill typical of tech death, including a top-drawer lead guitarist who forces me to re-assess how good I am at anything in comparison to him. Likewise, the powerful vocalist scrapes the sewer’s bottom with her guttural vox. It all contributes to a significant volume of content that moves so quickly that I was scarcely able to keep up with my notes. It’s difficult to appreciate many of the component passages; like an F1 car, when you attend a race, it’s impossible to admire the skill and craftsmanship in their design when they pass at 220 miles per hour.

Ominous Ruin commit the cardinal sin committed by most tech death bands: brick-walling the master.1 While extremely energetic, tech death is a style that suffers from a lack of musical dynamism, given its constant speed and maximalist approach. If one makes the decision to also limit the master’s dynamism it traps all that energy into a tiny space that drains what little dynamism already exists in the music. The result is that large chunks of Requiem struggle to distinguish themselves from each other. This is compounded by riffs that, while solid, generally fail to make me bang my head. The acrobatic, speedy leads are basically fine but repetitive and unremarkable (“Staring into the Abysm”). By contrast, the mid-paced closing lead on “Architect of Undoing” stands out as more groovy and powerful. Its slower riff works well to counterpoint the preceding faster riffs.

I generally dislike signposted intro/outro/interlude tracks that stand apart from the main songs. I especially dislike those with unimaginative descriptions instead of titles (“Opening” or “Interlude I” for example); it usually connotes a rote album of uninspired material. Sadly, Requiem is saddled with a separate introduction titled “Intro.” Happily, Ominous Ruin are a little more inspired than many tech death bands. Their greatest strength is how they stack layers of melodies to construct surprisingly ornate compositions. They almost sound like Ulcerate in places where they knock the music off-kilter (“Eternal” and “Architect of Undoing”). The compositions belie a group that doesn’t just want to write songs that sound like a queue of riffs. But, besides the well-demarcated interludes, the music is so undynamic that it takes real diligence to pierce the heaviness and appreciate the smart ways they deploy harmonies, melodies, and counter-melodies.

It takes truly exceptional tech death to excite me, and Requiem is not truly exceptional. Mileage may vary for tech death nuts, as I acknowledge the real artistry in how Ominous Ruin piece together knotty compositions through layers of melodies and counter-melodies. But the real killer is the boxy production that constrains the dynamism that’s already limited by the everything-everywhere-all-at-once style favored. The heavy passages, and even most of the light passages scattered throughout, sound repetitive. It’s therefore difficult to score Requiem any higher than average.

Rating: 2.5/5.0
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps MP3
Label: Willowtip Records
Websites: ominousruin.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/ominousruin
Releases Worldwide: May 9th, 2025

#25 #2025 #AmericanMetal #May25 #OminousRuin #Requiem #Review #Reviews #TechnicalDeathMetal #Ulcerate

2025-05-02

Wakuum - Konzert: Tyrolean Death Alliance Tour

29. Mai 2025, 18:00:00 CEST - GMT+2 - Club wakuum, 8020, Graz, Österreich

events.graz.social/events/e1b3

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2025-04-30

Exterminatus – Echoes From a Distant Star Part 1 Review

By Owlswald

“Exterminatus” is a Warhammer 40k term that describes a global mass extinction event authorized by the emperor when the Imperium deems the cost of holding or retaking a planet too high. While I’m naïve about such things, Canadian fivesome Exterminatus certainly isn’t. And these Canucks are here to incinerate your eardrums with a heavy dose of sci-fi inspired tech-death. Originally demoed in 2012, Echoes From a Distant Star Part I was to be the follow-up to Xenocide’s debut album, Galactic Oppression. However, the group disbanded before they completed the album, and its members—including most of the original lineup—subsequently formed Exterminatus. Thirteen years later, these Vancouverites have released two solid albums and are finally prepared to relaunch Echoes after recording and re-recording the material three times. Seeking to venture into deep space through a celestial narrative that investigates interstellar creation and its obscure realities, I’m left wondering if the destination justifies the voyage.

Raising the pace and intensity of its predecessors, Exterminatus mostly operates in overdrive on Echoes, peppering the limited moments of empty space with Faceless-esque grooves and melodic leads. Lead by the dual axe attacks of Tabreez Azad and Elia Baghbaniyan, the duo warps the fabric of reality with their percussive shredding, laser-fire tremolos, and technical articulation, flicking and tapping for thirty minutes across the album’s seven chapters.1 Together with Max Sepulveda’s (The Zenith Passage) ruthless drumming, the trio dominate the record’s linear mix, occasionally permitting Lucas Abreu’s virtuosic basslines to break through the wall of crushing brutality (“The Cloud,” “Suffer in Silence”). Lukas Bresan’s heavy Archspire-like growls provide additional gravity as they narrate Echoes’ grand planetary saga. Drawing inspiration from the famous works of Isaac Asimov and Arthur C. Clarke, as well as the Stargate SG-1 and Mass Effect franchises, Exterminatus explores the universe’s fundamental forces through the familiar and technical movements of tech-death’s stalwarts.

Exterminatus thrive when they back off the accelerator and use their technical expression to manipulate the cosmos in a manner that boosts Echoes’ groove-rich currents. Closer “The Signal,” is a no-frills banger that finishes with a savage dose of syncopated thrash riffs and agile drumming that aptly finds the balance between brutality and accessibility. Abreu’s playful bass lines at the onset of “Cosmic Disturbance” conveys its ominous warning with finesse, while the pulse-driven riffing of the song’s end hits with the power of a supernova. Meanwhile, the heroic solo before the launch of “Starbound” or the melodic leads of “The New Theia” provide moments of respite around outbursts of cosmic turbulence. Though Echoes’ highlights are generally not as memorable as I would like, there are enough amidst the onslaught of staccatos, pummeling double bass, and light speed shifts to provide necessary touchstones and avoid a full system overload.

Still, Exterminatus’ ambitious pursuit fares better in concept than in execution. Track sequencing and songwriting diminish Echoes’ voyage, hindering the whole with abrupt openings and sudden descents that disrupt the journey. Songs like “Primordial Sea,” and “The New Theia” suffer from bloat, while “Suffer in Silence” and “The Signal” seem truncated. Accordingly, Echoes feels more academic than vibrant, a collection of separate tracks that are challenging to connect with, rather than an absorbing cosmic saga. Additionally, the production sacrifices nuance and emotion for volume and intensity, thereby crushing any promise of dynamics. The overly loud mix is too aggressive—particularly the drums and guitars—which fatigued my ears and became frustrating. Likewise, Exterminatus’ reliance on tropey bass drops to replace the lack of energy in Echoes’ peak moments are a distraction, achieving the opposite of their intended effect.

Despite years of development, Echoes doesn’t hit its mark. Exterminatus clearly possess the talent to create something special, and their commitment to crafting an ambitious, sci-fi narrative is commendable. However, the album’s songwriting and production prevent it from reaching its potential, serving instead as a demonstration of what they are capable of. What Echoes lacks in cohesion, it partly compensates for in technical expression and sheer sonic intensity. But if Exterminatus can refine the issues that hinder Echoes, their next venture into the cosmos could be great indeed.

Rating: Mixed
DR: 4 | Format Reviewed: 256 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: exterminatus.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/exterminatusband
Releases Worldwide: April 18, 2025

#25 #2025 #Apr25 #Archspire #CanadianMetal #DeathMetal #EchoesFromADistantStarPart1 #Exterminatus #Review #Reviews #SelfReleased #TechnicalDeathMetal #TheFaceless #TheZenithPassage

El Pregoner del Metallpregonermetall
2025-04-27
El Pregoner del Metallpregonermetall
2025-04-27

SUPREME VOID (Polònia) presenta nou àlbum: "Towards Oblivion"

2025-04-25

Changeling – Changeling Review

By Dolphin Whisperer

Creation, evaluation, iteration—art lives and transforms an untold number of times before its flesh lays bare for a dissecting audience. Thus, the album runs on a path of turns sharp, around, back again—whatever it takes—before the artist declares it enough. Tom Geldschläger has worn many musical lives, both under his given moniker and “Fountainhead” with acclaimed acts like Obscura and Ingurgitating Oblivion, and as a performer/engineer. And now, with Changeling, Geldschläger seeks to express a culmination of his works, partnerships, and curiosities in a grand exploration of his unique fretless guitar stylings amongst progressive, orchestral, and deathly conjurings. In the credits alone—over thirty performers with credits ranging from Wagner tuba to marimba to an Andy LaRocque (King Diamond, ex-Illwill) wailing solo—Changeling shows its mutable form forged of virtuosity, novelty, and adventure.

Looking to the past to create a history-laced work with a fresh trajectory holds a foundational pillar throughout Changeling. Consumers of Geldschläger’s past—whether they’ve realized he was part of it or otherwise1—will notice signature shred motifs and Cynic-imbued urgencies that pass through shades of Akróasis (“Instant Results,” “Falling in Circles”),2 with the epic conclusion of “Anathema” holding as a spiritual successor to “Weltseele.” Geldschläger has also accumulated a talented Rolodex along the way, with minor identities like Matthias Preisinger’s (Shape of Dreams) piano and strings and Jan Ferdinand’s (Ingurgitating Oblivion) vibraphonic emissions holding necessary weight against primary contributors like the chameleonic Morean (Alkaloid) on word and voice and virtuoso Arran McSporran (Vipassi, ex-De Profundis) on dancing bass. In the spirit of true collaboration, the resulting Changeling wears progressive music, and its own associated acts, in a vision that screams and scurries and soars into the fade of a thunderous drum strike.

A unifying voice of fretboard bombast holds tight the flow that whips Changeling through its fiery, deathly roots and its experimental crawl and swell. Though progressive and technical death metal begin to define early numbers, Changeling holds loose to genre conventions and pairs playful string ensembles (“Falling in Circles”), rhythm-warping oud tuplets (“World? What World?”), and tabla-guided choirs (“Changeling”). Of course, dissonance in excess and avant-garde-isms can often pose heavy barriers to long-term enjoyment. And though Changeling dabbles plenty in both the ghastly awe of Morean’s off-kilter and emotional vocal charisma (“Abyss” and “Abdication” hosting the greatest highlights), and alien tonal explorations (“Cathexis Interlude”), the weight of diverse riffage and stupefying power of Geldschläger’s fretless anomolies anchor Changeling in masterful songcraft—every song idea cradled and decorated with mischievous flair.

In sequence, Changeling swells from short-form shredscapades (“Instant Results,” “Falling in Circles”) to novella-length celebrations (“Anathema”)—layers of progression towards a whole. Following its escalating narrative, Changeling’s themes follow the spasm of psychedelic expansion (“Instant Results”) to dissociated questioning (“World? What World?”) to ego breakdown (“Abyss”) to awakening and rebirth (“Abdication,” “Anathema”). And despite this overarching cohesion, each successive track introduces a new element, whether it be as simple as the Germanic drama of deep brass (“World? What World?”), as darting as the chase of wobbly percussion (“Changeling”), or as escaping as the Yes-via-Princess Mononoke of dreamlike orchestration (“Abdication”). With every piece finding a return and final hurrah in the throes of “Anathema,” Changeling’s lengthy run feels justified so long as you can give it proper time and space.

And even if you can’t carve an hour to explore Changeling’s enriched and engorged elaborations, the questions that Changeling raises with this fresh take on progressive death metal dig plenty deep, even at the song level. Just how many times does that main ostinato in “World? What World?” jump instruments? Where does one rapid-fire guitar arpeggio end and velvety bass recursion begin in “Instant Results”? Is that slippery lead intro to “Falling in Circles” a bend, a dive, a slide, or some unholy combo of all three? Does any solo compete with the triumphant stutter-to-squeal finale of “Anathema”? Sometimes the answers include a revelation that yes, in its Devin Townsend-y “wall of sound,” Changeling requires some loudness adjustments. And, yes, that snare packs a POW more aggressive than any other sound on the whole album. But after countless dives into its meticulous and eccentric world, it’s apparent that Changeling wears any flaws it may have with an empowering and intoxicating flamboyance.

Rating: 4.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Season of Mist | Bandcamp
Websites: thefountainhead.de | changelingofficial.bandcamp.com | instagram.com/changeling.official
Releases Worldwide: April 25th, 2025

#2025 #45 #Alkaloid #Apr25 #Changeling #Cynic #DeProfundis #DevinTownsend #GermanMetal #IngurgitatingOblivion #Obscura #ProgressiveDeathMetal #ProgressiveMetal #Review #Reviews #SeasonOfMist #ShapeOfDreams #SymphonicDeathMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #Vipassi #Yes

2025-04-23

#Allegaeon - Dark Matter Dynamics (ft. Adrian Bellue)

This is technically a link to the full album but it's set to the start of the song I wanted to share. I went this route to avoid using a YTM link so hopefully nobody who wants to listen runs into licensing garbo.

youtube.com/watch?v=KbaOstpk7U
@metal #music #metal #MetalMusic #TechnicalDeathMetal #MelodicDeathMetal #MeloDeath #ExtremeMetal #HarshVocals #MaleVocals

Marcel Gevelerunnon89@nrw.social
2025-04-19

Rivers of Nihil sind für mich auch mit Abstand eine der besten Bands ❤

Rivers of Nihil - Water & Time
youtube.com/watch?v=MZC2hfkdf2

#TechnicalDeathMetal #Metal #Music #RiversOfNihil

pope of nope 🇺🇦lkundrak@metalhead.club
2025-04-14

omg they really are the sun gods ☀️
love 'em so much
youtube.com/watch?v=mfI34HGGJ9

#gorod #metal #DeathMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal

2025-04-11
Allegaeon sind eine meiner Lieblingsbands aus dem Technical Death Metal. Live irre stark, und auch wenn ich als Riley-Fan den Vorgänger „Damnum“ komplett abgefeiert habe, läuft mir „The Ossuary Lens“ mit ihrem alten Sänger Ezra heftig gut rein … AOTY-Material fo‘ shizzle! 🔥🕺
#allegaeon #deathmetal #technicaldeathmetal #music #aoty2025
Allegaeon Coverart of The Ossuary Lens - a naked female statue diving in water
Jordi (Flopsome Opossum)Jorsh@beige.party
2025-04-10

#CurrentlyListeningTo Blood Incantation - Absolute Elsewhere #HeavyMetal #DeathMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal 🇺🇸

2025-04-09

Since the genre listing of this band on metal-achives.com alone is enough to make me curious, Goldstar by Imperial Triumphant is now playing. It's their latest album, just released in March. #MittwochMetalMix

bandcamp link:
imperialtriumphant.bandcamp.co

#Music #Metal #AvantgardeMetal #TechnicalDeathMetal #TechnicalBlackMetal #ImperialTriumphant

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