đ° Ja disponible
DES DE MĂS ENLLĂ (1929)
d'en H. P. Lovecraft.
đ Disponible en PDF i ePub.
đđ» AgraĂŻments al
Joan CiberSheep (@cibersheep)
per la revisiĂł.
https://www.lapesanta.cat/2025/05/17/des-de-mes-enlla-1929-den-h-p-lovecraft/
đ° Ja disponible
DES DE MĂS ENLLĂ (1929)
d'en H. P. Lovecraft.
đ Disponible en PDF i ePub.
đđ» AgraĂŻments al
Joan CiberSheep (@cibersheep)
per la revisiĂł.
https://www.lapesanta.cat/2025/05/17/des-de-mes-enlla-1929-den-h-p-lovecraft/
Wenn ich das höre merke ich erst wie mir der ganze #numetal #femalefronted #metalCore Kram eigentlich auf den Zeiger geht đ€đ€đ€ #frombeyond #massacre #Herford #kulturwerk đ€đ€ bald #TrueMetal # deathMetal
https://open.spotify.com/track/104HTgq3Kq2pyS34H4haX6?si=cRueYMMZTh2uX0nWpmXxsQ
Holdeneyeâs Top Ten(ish) of 2024
By Holdeneye
This was a strange year for old Holdeneye, characterized by relative outer peace and significant inner turmoil. Peruse my last few lists, and youâll see that Iâve been on a mental health journey for some time now, and this year has honestly been the toughest nut for me to crack. Iâve spent the last few years changing my external circumstances to set me up for interior success, and that has certainly helped. But Iâm starting to come to grips with the fact that my choice to follow a career as a first responder, while it has benefitted my family and myself enormously, has come at a cost. Combine with that the absurdities of modern society, and the anxieties and pressures of parenting children, and Iâve been finding my fortitude to be mightily tested. Iâm afraid Iâm come down with a moderate-to-severe case of cynicism.
George Carlin once said, âInside every cynical person is a disappointed idealist,â and I strongly agree. Iâm by nature a pretty soft-hearted, idealistic person, but with high ideals come high expectationsâand high expectations are basically impossible to meet. I spent much of this year (years, really) embracing my newfound cynicism because it seemed easier and less painful than having my impossibly high expectations disappointed again and again. Fortunately, I stumbled upon a book called Hope for Cynics by Jamil Zaki, and it has been an amazing tool for recalibrating my perspective on life. The book provesâscientificallyâthat Samwise Gamgee was correct when he said, âThereâs some good in this world, Mr. Frodo, and itâs worth fighting for.â I highly recommend that anyone and everyone read itâitâs exactly what the world needs to hear right now.
Cynicism is not conducive to creative work, so my 2024 AMG output was abysmal. Instead of listening to new albums, I listened to my Manowar playlist over and over and over. At one point, I finally pulled the trigger and told Steel I needed to step away. I felt good about that decision, that is until my friend Kenstrosity had his home destroyed by a hurricane. The way the Angry Metal community banded together to support Ken broke through the hard crust that had been forming around my tender heart. The staff, and especially you, the readers, jumped at the chance to help, and it was incredibly inspiringâand it once again proved just how wholesome and unique this little internet community can be. Iâm resolving to stay involved, producing whatever content I can make time for, but more importantly, to just be around. When times are hard, I tend to withdraw, but Iâm finding that those are the times when I really need to fight to stay engaged.
Thanks for your patience and for your even-handed, if brutal, leadership, Steel. Thanks to everyone who makes this place so special; you are all agents in the war on cynicism. Special shoutouts to Dr. Wvrm, Ferox, and Doom_et_Al for hanging out with me in personâextra special to Doomy for letting me crash at his placeâand to Crispy Hooligan (Rest In Retirement) for recognizing and chatting with me at a Judas Priest show. It was awesome to take my AMG community into three dimensions this year.
Well, youâve heard enough from this gloomy goose! Rest assured that Iâm looking to 2025 with hope and a healthy skepticism instead of my usual oscillation between idealism and cynicism. Onto the tunes!
#ish. Judas Priest // Invincible Shield â This one comes as a bit of a shock to me. When it first released, I was pretty indifferent. I really enjoyed the previous album Firepower, but I didnât feel a strong need to hear or enjoy a new Judas Priest album in 2024. I have my ten-year-old son to thank for changing my mind. While I was driving him to school one day, he randomly said, âDad, my favorite band is Imagine Dragons, but my favorite music is heavy metal.â I knew I had to capitalize on this make-or-break moment, so as soon as I got home, I bought two pre-sale tickets to the Invincible Shield tour. Seeing these legends with my boy was a core memory that I will always treasure, and while I prepped for the show, I began to see Invincible Shield for what it really is: one more gift from the metal gods of old, one that is far more energetic and ruthless than it has any right to be. Sample: âPanic Attackâ
#10. Necrophobic // In the Twilight Grey â As someone who gained their black metal fangs because of Necrophobicâs modern-day sound, I understand that Iâm unfairly biased to enjoy everything theyâre putting out these days. But biased or not, I absolutely dig what Necrophobic have done on In the Twilight Grey. Theyâve taken just about every shade of black metal available and incorporated a bit of this one and a bit of that one to construct a varied collage of blackened brutality. The guitar work on this record is exemplary, and it speaks to my classic heavy metal heart with lead after lead that could fit on just about any Priest album. I didnât listen to much black metal this year, and this album is partially to blame. In the Twilight Grey arrived early on and essentially sated my appetite for blackened platters. Sample: âShadows of the Brightest Nightâ
#9. Ironflame // Kingdom Torn Asunder â Consistency is an underrated and often maligned trait when it comes to music, but itâs something I really value. I love when every day is just about the same as the last. I can eat the same meal three times per day, no problem. As I mentioned above, I can listen to the same Manowar playlist on repeat for months at a time. I like consistency because I like to know what Iâm getting. Ironflame has become my poster child for consistency when it comes to modern traditional metal, and I while I may know exactly what an Ironflame record is going to sound like before I ever play it, I take an enormous amount of joy finding my preconceived notions to be 100% accurate. Andrew dâCagna can write killer metal anthems in his sleep, and Kingdom Torn Asunder is full of them. Sample: âSword of a Thousand Truthsâ
#8. Vitriol // Suffer & Become â This album definitely tested the limits of my musical taste. Vitriolâs brand of death metal is so punishing that it becomes overwhelming for me, but Suffer & Become includes just enough beauty to let the beast shine by contrast. Full disclosure: I have to be in the right mood for this album. It is so dense, so challenging, so heavy, that it makes me uncomfortable. Without relying on the overt groove or melody that usually anchors the music I enjoy, Suffer & Become manages to hook me through pure violence, leaving me just a few fleeting moments to pop my ahead above the surface to grab a quick breath before dragging me back below. Released back in January, my response to this record was the first indication that my taste (and my list) in 2024 would be trending in a brutal direction. Sample: âThe Flowers of Sadismâ
#7. Oxygen Destroyer // Guardian of the Universe â As I went to wheel my thrash can to the street, I wondered if it would even be worth the trip. While I didnât listen to all that many albums in total this year, I had an especially noteworthy dearth of thrash albums that caught my attention. Fortunately, the one album that did end up in my thrash can filled it to the point of overflowing. Oxygen Destroyer has received honorable mention on my year-end list before, but this time around, the band has leveled up in so many ways that it was impossible for me not to put Guardian of the Universe on my list proper. Where previous albums were more of an even death/thrash mix, this one is an absolute thrashterpiece, and every single song has at least one earworm riff that refuses to leave my brain. Lord Kaijuâs utterly pissed-off vocals are the perfect match for what the rest of the band is doing musically, and with one forthcoming exception, there was no better half-hour set of music with which to torture myself this year. Sample: âBanishing the Iris of Sempiternal Tenebrosityâ
#6. Aborted // Vault of Horrors â Iâm a late-stage Aborted adopter. Vault of Horrors was my first exposure to the band, and the uniqueness of this album is probably responsible for why Iâve come to enjoy the band so much. I was at first put off by all the guest vocalists, but then I remembered that I love hardcore vocals. Abortedâs mixture of brutal death and deathcore is already potent, but when a host of talented hardcore and metal vocalists add their voices to the mix, the result is an adrenaline-pumping, testosterone-boosting beatdown. One of my favorite metal moments of the year goes to witnessing many of these cuts live in the mighty presence of my Angry Metal brothers Ferox and Doom_et_Al. Vault of Horrors has been one of my gym mainstays since its release, and that quality alone is nearly enough to boost an album onto my Top Ten(ish). Sample: âDeath Cultâ
#5. Unhallowed Deliverance // Of Spectres and Strife â I honestly canât remember what review it was for, but one of our lovely readers suggested this album in the comments, and I havenât been able to stop listening to it. Unhallowed Deliverance is another band that mixes brutal death metal and deathcore, but where Aborted goes for the throat nearly 100% of the time, these guys throw in a pinch of atmosphere and a boatload of technicality to create an insanely strong, multifaceted sound. Frontman Arthur Haltrich complements his standard death/deathcore growls and shrieks with some of the gnarliest belches, gurgles, and verbal flatulence Iâve ever heard, giving Of Spectres and Strifeâs sonic texture even more depth that its already intricate music provides. The record even includes a collaboration with Kenneth Copeland, the artist responsible for my 2020 Song oâ the Year. Sample: âTreatise on the Lowest Form of Manâ
#4. Nemedian Chronicles // The Savage Sword â Itâs been many months since Iceberg grossly underrated this absolute gem, and it is a gem that Iâve clutched as greedily as if Iâd personally plucked it from a cursed dungeonâs treasure hoard ever since. When I first sampled The Savage Sword, I was intimidated by its 70-minute length, but it took little more than a single listen for me to realize that this album is incredibly well-executed from start to finish. Yes, Nemedian Chronicles made the bold choice to start the record with what are essentially two intro tracks, but they are so epic and genuine that they act as a pair of tentacles, forcefully drawing me into the conceptâs Hyborian world and setting me up to enjoy of deep immersion. The rest of the album is a masterclass on how to properly deliver epic heavy and power metal goods, and it is frankly the best Blind Guardian album released since the 90s. Sample: âThe Savage Swordâ
#3. Brodequin // Harbinger of Woe â More like Harbinger of Whoa, amirite? I could probably sum this album up with just that single word âwhoa,â but Steel would most likely force me to sit on that old-timey chair on the cover art if I didnât elaborate. This was another comment section find, and Iâll be damned if it didnât grab me almost immediatelyâa rare occurrence for music of this level of intensity. The production on this album raises it so far above much of its comparable competition because it so perfectly balances the materialâs speed and chaos with an overwhelmingly tangible heft. Harbinger of Woeâs 30-minute runtime is so bludgeoning that my watch sometimes registers my listening sessions as cardio, so Iâd like to think that this album has made me a healthier person in 2024. Brodequin, or Brother Quinn as I like to refer to them, can take comfort in putting out one of the finest brutal death metal albums in a year filled with quality brutal death metal albums. Sample: âOf Pillars and Treesâ
#2. Keygen Church // Nel Nome Del Codice â In what is perhaps my greatest musical surprise of the year, this album instantly bewitched me body and soul, and I love, I love, I love it, and wish from this day forth never to be parted from it. Iâve enjoyed some of Victor Loveâs work in Master Boot Record, but as someone who is drawn to liturgical expressions of spirituality, Keygen Churchâs inclusion of Baroque organs and choirs absolutely godsmacked me from moment one. If you asked me to name the greatest song of all time in any genre, Iâd probably go with Bachâs âToccata and Fugue in D Minor,â so it should come as no surprise that Nel Nome Del Codice feels as if it were tailormade to tickle me right in the pipe organs. I have no idea how music like this is produced, but my hat is off to Love for creating such a powerful aural experience. Sample: âSulla Via Della Gloriaâ
#1. Hell:on // Shaman â When I dropped a 4.5 on this back in May, I was pretty confident that nothing else would be able to top it, and since Iâm almost always right, I was right, of course. Hell:onâs mix of death metal, throat-singing, ritualistic rhythms, and Eastern instrumentation makes me feel like Iâm trapped within some infernal combination of a death metal concert and a Witcher III boss fight, and itâs a feeling that has yet to get old. The band went all-in on the inclusion of their Ukrainian cultural elements within their music this time around, and it was an incredible success. In a year where death metal made up the majority of my top records, Shaman had to fight to keep its place upon the top of the heap, but no other album felt as spiritually dense to me in a year where Iâve fought to find my own personal peace. The textures offered here both exhilarate me and help me into a meditative state, and the resulting empowerment has been a Godsend to me. Sample: âWhat Steppes Dream Aboutâ
Honorable Mentions
Olde Record (and Hot Take) oâ the Year
Manowar // Warriors of the World â When I wasnât listening to new music in 2024âwhich was really, really oftenâI was probably listening to Manowar. I listened to them so much, in fact, that my streaming platform placed me within the bandâs top 0.1% of listeners worldwide. Warriors of the World was the first true heavy metal album that I ever purchased, and so many of its songs remain personal favorites to this very day. As I ravaged the bandâs discography this year, I came to the realization that Manowar circa 2002 is the absolute highwater mark for heavy music. This album has some weird inclusions that make it feel somewhat unbalanced and goofy at times, but Iâm convinced that if the band had cut a bit of the fluff and added in the two cuts from the Dawn of Battle EP, Warriors of the World would have been a 5.0 and the greatest metal album of all time. Disagree? Then youâre not into metal, and you are not my friend. Just kidding. We can still be friends, poser!
Disappointment oâ the Year
In Aphelion // Reaperdawn â After In Aphelionâs debut Moribund pummeled its way into the top tier of my Top Ten(ish) of 2022, I had huge expectations for its follow-up, Reaperdawn. Whether it is because several of the bandâs members released a similar-sounding and stronger album with their main project Necrophobic or because these songs just donât match up to the debut, this one just didnât do it for me. It has a nice blackened aesthetic and some quality moments and performances, but it lacks the edge that made Moribund feel so genuinely dangerous. I hope to hear something new from these guys in the not-so-distant future, because I know theyâre capable of going for my throat.
Song oâ the Year
Hell:on // âI Am the Pathâ â This song resonated with me from the very first time I heard it. The way the song swings back and forth between brutal death metal and ritualistic groove strikes the perfect balance for me, and the folk instrumentation adds even more layers to the experience. I canât tell you how many times Iâve listened to âI Am the Pathâ this year, but just about every time I do, I feel my eyes wanting to roll into the back of my head so I can commune with the primal spirits of the earth. The trackâs title and chorus have become something of a personal mantra for me as Iâve struggled to find inner harmony this year. It reminds me that I can make all the positive external changes in the world, but if I really seek health and joy, I must walk that most challenging of all paths: the path within.
#2024 #Aborted #BlogPosts #Brodequin #BrothersOfMetal #Fimbulvinter #FromBeyond #GuardianOfTheUniverse #HarbingerOfWoe #HellOn #HoldeneyeSTopTenIshOf2024 #InAphelion #InTheTwilightGrey #InvincibleShield #Ironflame #JudasPriest #KeygenChurch #KingdomTornAsunder #Lists #Manowar #Necrophobic #NelNomeDelCodice #NemedianChronicles #OfSpectresAndStrife #OxygenDestroyer #PneumaHagion #Reaperdawn #Shaman #SufferBecome #TheSavageSword #UnhallowedDeliverance #VaultOfHorrors #Vitriol #WarriorsOfTheWorld
Barbara Crampton Gets Gooey in This CULT CLASSIC!
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=vmL84cJKVyo
#TheHorrorGeek #MikeBracken #SickFlicks #FromBeyond #BarbaraCrampton #JeffreyCombs #KenForee #StuartGordon #HorrorMovie #HorrorMovies #HorrorFam #MutantFam
Apparently it's the 38th Anniversary of "From Beyond". Maybe it doesn't quite live up to "Re-Animator", but Barbara Crampton and Jeffrey Combs... what more can you ask from a mid-80s horror?! đ€Ł
#FromBeyond #ReAnimator #Movies #HorrorMovies
Pneuma Hagion â From Beyond Review
By Holdeneye
Before I started driving fire engines, I drove garbage trucks. I was the relief driver for a small refuse company, so I had to know all the different routes pretty well. I spent many days riding along with my coworkers in order to get familiarized, and, let me tell you, being trapped inside a cab with someone for eight to ten hours can lead to some interesting experiences. Some days were filled with awkward silence, others with a non-stop verbal assault, and every day was scented with the intermingling of individualized fart gasses. I vividly remember a day where one trainer unleashed an 8-hour dissertation on theology. You might think Iâm exaggerating, but Iâm positive this guy had the knowledge base to teach in seminary. While my eyes glazed over for much of his spiel, I will never forget him explaining the Hebrew concept of Godâs kevod. Kevod is translated âglory,â but it also carries the notion of âweightâ or âheaviness.â As he explained this, my ears perked up, and I thought to myself that Kevod would be a fucking sick band name. Well, if Kevod ever exists as a metal band, I think it should sound exactly like Texasâ Pneuma Hagion.
Taking their name from the Greek form of âholy spirit,â Pneuma Hagion bestows unto us an offering of no-frills death metal. It feels like these guys took Morbid Angelâs Gateways to Annihilation and simmered it over low heat for hours, reducing it down to leave a delicious sauce of pure, unadulterated groove. But where Morbid Angel embellished Gateways with blistering guitar pyrotechnics, Pneuma Hagion has sold their soul for more bottom end. Gaze upon the intro of the embedded single and album opener âHarbinger of Dissolution,â but take care lest you be caught in the swirling, malevolent arrogance of the narrator. A huge breakdown just past the midpoint arrives to grind your bones to dust in time for a reprisal of the furious intro to blow through and scatter your remains across the stars.
That combination of simple, well-executed death metal with the self-aggrandizing ravings of a demiurgical entity is what makes From Beyond such a success. Pneuma Hagion has been known to dabble in both Lovecraftian and Gnostic themes in their past works, and that trend continues here. As a recovering Christian fundamentalist, the highly scriptural nature of the lyrics adds a satisfying layer of terror that, in my opinion, takes Lovecraftian horror to another level. This album is a psychically delivered hate letter from some mysterious being adrift somewhere in space and time, and the music is the perfect medium for such a message.
If I havenât spent very much time describing said music, itâs because this is a very simple album for people of very simple tastes. At nine tracks and 24 minutes, From Beyond is a concise treatise on heaviness. Both members play the hell out of their parts; Shane Elwell must blow through drum kits by the sound of the beating he gives his here, and Ryan Wilsonâs guitar, bass, and vocal performances are simply thunderous. I saw an interview where Wilson stated, âWe really try to make the music palpable, like a physical presence with a weight that you can actually feel. I think this new album has gotten closer to our ideal levels.â I think so too, buddy. I do wish that there was another song or two on the level of the two singles, âHarbinger of Dissolutionâ and âThe Temple Fires,â but the album ends up being a journeyman effort in focused brutality.
While Lovecraft-themed metal albums are a dime a dozen, the way that Pneuma Hagion adorns their particular brand of eldritch horror with theological trappings makes for something gloriously heavy. From Beyond is a simple, concise record, but donât let that fool you into thinking it isnât lethally effective. Put this on in the gym, and I guarantee your gainz with be otherworldly.1
Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Everlasting Spew Records
Websites: pneumahagion.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/pneumahagion218
Releases Worldwide: August 30th, 2024
#2024 #35 #AmericanMetal #Aug24 #DeathMetal #EverlastingSpewRecords #FromBeyond #MorbidAngel #PneumaHagion #Review #Reviews
Just finished listening to the #FromBeyond trilogy by #JasperTScott and #NathanHystad. Excellent secret agency #space #scifi with a touch of #IndianaJones and #Aliens. The fact that it's read by the legendary #RayPorter just makes it more awesome. Give it a go, if you're into that sort of thing.
https://www.audible.co.uk/series/From-Beyond-Audiobooks/B09HXWMFHC
"That machine has got to be destroyed."
#FromBeyond
Nice to stumble upon the origin of a sample, this from Skinny Puppy's The Second Opinion.
It's running itself!
#FromBeyond
From Beyond (1986) Creature Scenes
https://review.peertube.biz/videos/watch/ca7c692e-1a66-40f0-bb30-5809d0244f73
@podsothoth Always glad to hear Lovecraft given a spin, so to speak.
Let me know if you ever want (free!) donated voice work for supplemental characters or the like.
#HPLovecraft #FromBeyond #Narration
https://soundcloud.com/user-651726783/from-beyond
For @HailsandAles #BlackMetalMonday... From Beyond from Portugal released this cosmic horror themed progressive black/death metal album titled The Great Old Ones in 2022... đ
It's on bandcamp here:
https://frombeyondofficial.bandcamp.com/album/the-great-old-ones
Un 24 d'octubre s'estrenava FROM BEYOND (1986) de l'Stuart Gordon.
També coneguda com a RE-SONATOR.
Repetien l'equip de RE-ANIMATOR, en una nova adaptaciĂł lliure d'en H. P. Lovecraft.
From Beyond⊠The Killer Popcorn Monster Available October 31
#horror - #horrorcomics - #comicbooks - #FromBeyond⊠- #MJMyers - #PaulDulski - Author: M.J. Myers & Paul Dulski From the over-active minds of Paul "Disturbed" Dulski and M.J. "The Maniac" Myers. Comes a rockabilly-eques horror story to make your eyeballs "POP!" Plot; When hazardous waste accidently enters our food chain, the only outcome is a radioactive monster that can't be stopped... Or Can It??
https://horrornerdonline.com/2023/10/from-beyond-the-killer-popcorn-monster-available-october-31/