#occultmetal

2025-05-23

Witchcraft – Idag Review

By Mystikus Hugebeard

Once, Witchcraft were a prominent figure in the analog rock/metal scene, mentioned alongside acts like Orchid, Uncle Acid and the Deadbeats, and The Sword. They treated us to some right bangers like 2005’s Firewood and 2012’s Legend, and I was eagerly anticipating whatever might come after 2016’s Nucleus. What eventually followed was the acoustic and intensely somber Black Metal, which struck me as less of a Witchcraft album and more as a hyper-personal form of artistic expression by multi-instrumentalist frontman Magnus Pelander, something meant for him and him alone. It’s an honest and compelling artistic work, but it can be difficult to recall amidst the context of Witchcraft’s proggy occult doom/rock discography. Now, with two fresh band members, Witchcraft have reincorporated the lo-fi buzz n’ fuzz of their analog roots in 2025’s Idag.

When I first snagged Idag, I was struck by Witchcraft’s label change from Nuclear Blast to Heavy Psych Sounds, but it becomes immediately apparent as to why upon first listen. Idag is notably fuzzier than Witchcraft’s previous work, leaning heavily into the stoner-doom sound. In some cases, this manifests as Pentagram-adjacent chugging doom in the beefy riffs of “Burning Cross” or the slowly building grooves of “Idag.” The Coven-meets-Sergeant Thunderhoof nature of proto-Witchcraft is still present in the faster grooves of “Drömmar Av Is” and “Drömmen Om Död Och Förruttnelse,” though they haven’t escaped a healthy coat of fuzz. Some moody Black Metal acoustics return as well, given a refreshing shot of vigor without sacrificing atmosphere like in “Christmas.” Idag is all around well-produced and well-performed; it’s easy to buy into Idag, whether you’re a newcomer or returning fan.

Then again, it’s never been hard to buy into Witchcraft, because Witchcraft have long since established a pattern of writing rock solid music, and that’s exactly what Idag is: rock solid. The best songs in Idag will often find a strong core groove and then let it carry the bulk of the weight. “Drömmar Av Is” is a punctual tune that lands on a critically funky groove right out of the gates and hammers it home with minimal distraction. This song contrasts well with the more varied tunes like the eight-minute opener, “Idag,” which follows a similar philosophy of sticking to strong core ideas, all of which are given appropriate time to germinate with a delightful tempo increase in the latter half to keep the song from stagnating. Idag’s riffs might not always be the most audacious or inventive riffs ever made, but they’re effective and catchy. Then again, Idag is undeniably elevated by Pelander’s killer pipes. He’s the sort of singer you could recognize in anything, and his rich voice adds a lot of character to the music. Unintentional or not, I enjoy the detail of his voice sounding oh-so-slightly off-key with some of the guitars in “Om Du Vill.” It’s a nice touch of authenticity and reintroduces some of the vulnerability from Black Metal.

That authenticity also strikes at the chord of what makes Idag work for me; to my ears, from a songwriting standpoint, Idag is the sort of thing one might hear blasting from a garage, whereupon you’d find a couple of lads bangin’ on their instruments in ways that Just Sound Neat. That unrefined quality, that coarseness, is something I cherish, and Idag scratches that itch. The lead guitars across Idag howl with warbling feedback, and I love the unrestrained summer fun of the drum and guitar fills in “Irreligious Flamboyant Flame.” It is a bit of a double-edged sword, though. I appreciate the grime, but I also recognize that Idag lacks the consistency and focus to truly hook me like Legend did. It’s not like Witchcraft are suddenly a “jam band” on Idag, but it’s giving the moniker some funny looks. There are just enough frustrating oddball choices to be noticeable. As a comparatively longer song and practical closer, “Spirit” lacks the escalation that made “Idag” work, and the chorus in “Irreligious Flamboyant Flame” is a bit limp. Furthermore, both “Gläntan (Längtan)” and the actual closer “Om Du Vill (Slight Return)” feel out of place and borderline pointless.

I was lukewarm on my first spin of Idag, but it has grown on me. It might not be the most essential Witchcraft record, but it is nevertheless worth the time of any Witchcraft fan or purveyor of fuzzy stoner jams. But no matter how I felt about Idag, it wouldn’t have been a more potent feeling than my relief that Witchcraft is still making music. I will always look forward to their next release.

Rating: 3.0 / 5.0
DR: 10 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Heavy Psych Sounds
Websites: facebook | bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: May 23rd, 2025

#2025 #30 #BlackMetal #Coven #Firewood #HeavyPsychSoundsRecords #Idag #Legend #May25 #OccultMetal #OccultRock #Orchid #Review #Reviews #SergeantThunderhoof #StonerMetal #StonerRock #TheSword #UncleAcidAndTheDeadbeats #Witchcraft

2025-03-25

Savage Master – Dark & Dangerous Review

By Kenstrosity

I had the pleasure of catching Savage Master live during January’s Heavy Mountain Music Festival. Eight straight hours of killer music, with no duds across the entire bill, played a key role in rekindling my lust for live music after the hurricane tried—and failed—to wash away my spirit. For their part, the Kentucky occult/heavy metal quintet were one of the best acts of the night, brimming with classic crowd-rousing energy and sparkling stage chemistry. However, their reputation for varied reception by our Ape ov Steel on this blog precedes them. Can they recover some devilish grace with upcoming fifth record, Dark & Dangerous?

Citing such reference points as Cirith Ungol, Bitch, and even Saxon, not much about Savage Master’s BDSM-based, Satan-seducing approach to heavy metal changed since With Whips and Chains and Myths, Magic & Steel. Guitar and vocal forward, Dark & Dangerous doubles down on catchy riffs, shreddy solos, infectious verses, and sticky choruses delivered with the same occult swagger I love about acts like Saturday Night Satan and Avatarium‘s bouncier material. Challenging the status quo of heavy metal at large isn’t on Savage Master’s agenda, but rollicking tracks like “The Edge of Evil” suck you into a hellish party vibe that doesn’t want to let you go until it has your body and soul for itself for all eternity. In other words, Dark & Dangerous is oodles of fun, and it gives the impression that Savage Master has as much, if not more, fun than you.

Despite Stacey Savage’s sultry, powerhouse delivery, it is Julian Fried’s and Larry Myer’s dueling axe antics that lock the devil’s seal on Dark & Dangerous. Much to my great joy, their shimmery leads and emphatic solos on record match the sensually charged aura they exuded on stage. Standout tracks in the middle of these tight 38 minutes, “The Edge of Evil,” “Devil’s Child,” and later highlight “When the Twilight Meets the Dawn” showcase their enthusiastic fretwork best. In these, bright and ebullient melodies twist their forked tongues against the scalding flesh of heated solos and trotting riffs such that my attention never wavers from such carnal debauchery. Yet, Savage’s venomous wails and full-bodied belts still ring out with clarity, solidifying her role as the troupe’s merciless dominatrix (“The Edge of Evil,” “Never Ending Fire,” “I Never Wanna Fall in Love”). Adam Neal’s bass guitar offers fun bounce to that low-end counterpoint that juggles rhythmic duties with drummer John W. Littlejohn’s youthful gallops on the kit, maintaining ample momentum to keep Dark & Dangerous from losing any steam (“Never Ending Fire,” “When the Twilight Meets the Dawn”).

While it is evident that Savage Master clearly have a ton of fun writing and playing this well-worn variety of heavy metal, as many individual cuts on Dark & Dangerous fade out of memory as those which brand the gray matter for all time. Where bar-crawling rockers “Devil Rock” and “I Never Wanna Fall in Love” maximize the sweet and sticky hooks of 80s hair and glam, solidifying their eternal presence in my mind, other cuts like “Warrior’s Call,” “Black Rider,” and “Screams from the Cellar” fail to make any impression at all. These tracks follow a similar formula as stronger options like “The Edge of Evil,” but distinguishing characteristics or cleverly packaged writing come at a steep premium, squandering any chance of being remembered. Overblown ballad closer “Cold Hearted Death” attempts a slower and more somber number, but it, too, falls flat outside of its powerhouse chorus and satisfying final-third solo.

Perhaps most damning of all, at the core, Dark & Dangerous is an extremely simple, by-the-numbers affair. As fun as this record can be in the moment, it’s hard to argue that it competes well against standout contemporaries like Tower or Saturday Night Satan in this competitive field. Several cuts off Dark & Dangerous are a shoo-in for any quality heavy metal playlist, but as an album, it’s but another point in the pentagram. Still, Savage Master’s fifth is worth a spin or two for a good time. And if you ever get the chance to see them live, don’t miss!

Rating: Mixed
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Shadow Kingdom Records
Websites: savagemasterofficial.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/savagemasterofficial
Releases Worldwide: March 28th, 2025

#25 #2025 #AmericanMetal #Avatarium #Bitch #CirithUngol #DarkDangerous #HeavyMetal #Mar25 #OccultMetal #Review #Reviews #SaturdayNightSatan #SavageMaster #Saxon #ShadowKingdomRecords #Tower

2024-11-20

Dewfall – Landhaskur Review

By Kenstrosity

Italian black metal quintet Dewfall aren’t what they used to be. According to Metallum, their early work fell under the traditional heavy metal umbrella, placed most closely alongside Iron Maiden. To listen to them from 2018’s Hermeticus onward, you’d be hard put to find that heritage beneath a thick fog of icy tremolos, vicious rasps, and machine-gun double-bass blasting. And yet, that sophomore release is what put them on the map, and on Naturmacht’s well-regarded roster of quality bands. It also attracted my attention, sneaking its way into various playlists and rotations over the last six years. And now, their third installment Landkhaskur looms just over the horizon. What fresh hell will this bring?

Those who slept on Hermeticus missed out on an engaging if a tad bloated, black metal experience. While their core sound and style at that time rarely connected to Iron Maiden, Hermeticus’ epic feel and dramatic flair in their songwriting and melodic tendencies retains a certain kinship with those heavy metal legends of olde. Landhaskur is much the same in that regard. Brooding, ominous, and richly composed, Landhaskur pushes the Death-tinged melodic black metal formula presented on Hermeticus (just check out the incredible “Moondagger”) further into the icy void. More specifically, Landhaskur is a colder, more ritualistic affair, leaning strongly into Paara‘s occult character and blending it with Aklash‘s mystical idiosyncrasies. Dewfall stop short of wholly transforming themselves again, but this gentle evolution simmers just beneath their story-driven, riff-and-lead focused black metal surface.

Dewfall’s strongest moments have always been those where unorthodox instrumentation and musical adventurism take the spotlight, and that remains true here. “Hrings” shines with a brooding, beautiful cello introduction, falling into a dark jig laden with smooth baritone choirs, storming gang shouts on top of tumbling drums, and layered acoustic accouterments making vital contributions to the frosty tremolos and rasping screams that raze the ground beneath my feet. “Lackeskur” sees the triumphant return of the mouth harp into Dewfall’s instrumental repertoire. An addition which almost single-handedly elevates this standout track to album highlight status, that mouth harp works wonderfully inside the song’s jaunty bounce, energizing listeners for the epic, charred journey that is nine-minute closer “Laur.”1 “Maska” introduces a crucial burst of high-octane adrenaline courtesy of an addicting percussive attack, then switches it up with a sexy mid-tempo swing that entirely changes the character of the song. And yet, Dewfall’s execution across the board makes that unusual transition—among many others on this record—feel like the most natural trajectory. Therein lies the magic of Dewfall’s method.

Magical though many of Landhaskur’s moments undoubtedly are, I often look back to Hermeticus with a fondness that I can’t seem to find this time around. Both records share similar characteristics: both are remarkably back-loaded, both feature dynamic and consistently engaging songwriting twists and instrumental embellishments, and both showcase the band’s knack for buttery-smooth, but novel transitions. However, Landhaskur lacks a showstopper, whereas Hermeticus offered the aforementioned “Moondagger.” Experiencing Dewfall records as theatrical pieces—dependent on dynamic musical topography to carry me across different stages of their stories and, hopefully, offer some sort of catharsis along the way—I feel that Landhaskur is missing its climax. Standout chapters like “Maska” and “Lackeskur” come so close to providing that high, but ultimately fail to deliver the knockout blow. In the end, this represents Landhaskur’s only critical blunder, but it comes at the cost of greatness.

Nonetheless, Landhaskur is a fine record worthy of installment in any black metal fan’s rotation. It tells its story well, and repeated spins reveal new and intriguing details listeners are likely to miss the first or second time around. Aside from a few missed opportunities to punch above its weight class and deliver a world-class number at the record’s peak, there’s very little here that saps my enjoyment. It’s safe to say, then, that I’m content with Landhaskur, and I look forward to seeing what Dewfall do next.

Rating: Good
DR: 9 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Naturmacht Productions
Websites: dewfallofficial.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/pages/dewfall/152487144778710
Releases Worldwide: November 29th, 2024

#2024 #30 #Aklash #BlackMetal #Death #Dewfall #epicBlackMetal #EpicMetal #IronMaiden #ItalianMetal #Landhaskur #MelodicBlackMetal #NaturmachtProductions #Nov24 #OccultMetal #Paara #Review #Reviews

#TuneTuesday Jess and the Ancient Ones - Astral Sabbat 🎶 We're firmly in the season for this! #psychedelicrock #occultrock #metal #occultmetal youtube.com/watch?v=5hgWxb1bXk

2024-09-27

Bewitcher, the blackened speed metal band from Portland, Oregon, conjure their fourth album from the beyond, Spell Shock. Review at FFMB, flyingfiddlesticks.com/2024/09 #metal #heavymetal #rock #hardrock #CenturyMedia #Bewitcher #Portland #doom #thrash #blackmetal #occult #occultmetal

2024-09-07

Castle – Evil Remains Review

By Steel Druhm

I had quite a torrid love affair with Castle from 2011 through 2016. Their gritty, back alley take on occult doom really got into my bones and I was helpless to resist their demonic charms. Albums like In Witch Order, Blacklands, and Under Siege were in near-constant rotation at the House of Steel and I wanted more, more, MOAR. They were just so skilled at their chosen brand of minimalist street doom and Elizabeth Blackwell’s rough yet seductive vocals were nigh irresistible. By the time 2018s Deal Thy Fate rolled around, some of the bloom was off the black rose and things were starting to sound a touch less essential. Fast forward 6 years and we’ve survived a million crises and the whole occult doom trend has died down considerably, with acts like Jex Thoth and Sabbath Assembly going quiet. This new world order awaits Castle as they finally return with a fresh album. Will the long absence make my rusty heart grow fonder for Castle, or will Evil Remains fall victim to the insidious Law of Diminishing Recordings?

As opener “Queen of Death” kicked off I got a warm, nostalgic feeling in the empty void where my heart should be. It’s good to hear Elizabeth Blackwell’s demonic snarls and sultry crooning again and Mat Davis’ beefy leads are still aces. It’s the same hard-rocking doom they’ve excelled at forever and the big, burly grooves are a pleasure to be crushed by. Blackwell sounds great and she’s still unmatched at changing tones to suit the moment, moving from menacing to alluring. This one could have been on In Witch Order, which means Castle aren’t fucking around here. “Nosferatu Nights” is even better— aggressive and dark but chock full of hooks that pierce the flesh. Mat Davis shines brightly with some filthy, very Wino-esque playing and Elizabeth sings her witchy heart out. “Deja Voodoo” is also pure fire and one of the better songs in the Castle stable, fully leveraging the band’s strengths on a very good piece of mood-drenched writing. Elizabeth owns this song completely with her necromantic exhortations and the riffs are just the right amount of damn-nasty.

Evil Remains is a consistently spry album. “Black Spell” is almost NWoBHM in style, upbeat and urgent with Judas Priest-adjacent riffage, but it manages to keep the occult doom aesthetic intact. “She” is a badass song crackling with inky, doomy magik. The guitar playing speaks to the olden days of American doom but the hard rocking energy forces it into more vigorous, shambling action. A few songs feel less mighty, but none are bad or skip-worthy and the album’s tight 37-plus minute runtime is very easy to digest. Everything flows well and the energy levels are kept in that sweet spot between doom and rock to prevent your eyes from glazing over.

There are traces of Pentagram, The Obsessed, and Saint Vitus in the DNA of Mat Davis’ guitar work, and I hear a lot of Wino in his phrasing along with a deep love of 70s rock. He’s always been great at channeling the ghosts of doom’s past and shocking them with extra power and he does it again across the album. He’s especially good at locking into weighty grooves only to depart to hit a righteous solo or colorful flourish. Elizabeth Blackwell has always been one of my favorite metal vocalists and she’s on her game here. Her ability to chill the soul one moment and enchant the next has always been the biggest piece of the Castle puzzle and she’s lost none of her power. She gives it her all on “Nosferatu Nights” and “Deja Voodoo” and I can’t imagine anyone else doing it better. In the end, Davis and Blackwell demonstrate yet again that their stripped-down take on doom rock is a winning one and that I’m still a sucker for it.

It seems my days in the occult doom bubble are not over thanks to Castle. Evil Remains features everything I love about their sound and offers a collection of punchy songs with enough weight to convince. It’s good to hear Castle alive and well and I hope they can keep the wicked times rolling. Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in!

Rating: 3.5/5.0
DR: 8 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Hammerheart
Websites: castlesf.bandcamp.com | heavycastle.com | facebook.com/castlesf
Releases Worldwide: September 6th, 2024

#2024 #35 #AmericanMetal #Castle #DoomMetal #EvilRemains #HammerheartRecords #InWitchOrder #JexThoth #OccultMetal #Review #Reviews #SabbathAssembly #Sep24 #UnderSiege

2024-05-11

Stuck in the Filter: March 2024’s Angry Misses

By Kenstrosity

While it was cold and gloomy just a couple weeks before writing, now it’s blisteringly hot and humid. Such is the transition from February to April in the land of Ken. It’s May now, of course, so we are once again traveling back in time to when our Filter was brimming with scabs and scaled plucked from the Hides of March. As is my prerogative, I sent my minions, which are legion, into the thick of it to retrieve those lost gems which would otherwise be damned for musty eternity.

So, without further ado, my I interest you in our March Filter wares? The answer is always yes (or else)!

Kenstrosity’s Singular Stipend

Saturday Night Satan // All Things Black [March 15th, 2024 – Self-Released]

Obviously, I was bound to spin this record. A kitty on the cover? Sold. That’s literally all I needed to know I was gonna dig Greek occult heavy metal duo Saturday Night Satan. Lo and behold, their debut full-length All Things Black RAWKS. The first five songs, from rollicking opener “5 AM” to “Lurking in the Shadows,” constitute perhaps the best and most addicting introduction to a new band that I’ve heard in ages. Jim Kotsis’ (Black Soul Horde) swaggering riffs, buttery-smooth bass, and infectious rhythms consistently motivate this record through high-octane, bar-ready romps and doom-y crawls with equal liveliness, proving himself to be a versatile and exciting musician. Meanwhile, Kate Soulthorn croons and belts her way across this record with a venomous, but brassy and clear delivery oozing with charisma (“Rule With Fire,” “Lurking in the Shadows,” “Witches’ Dance”). While the record loses just a touch of momentum in the middle (“By the River, Crown of Arrogance”), there are no bad tracks to be found. Furthermore, repeat spins yield even greater enjoyment, as this record has only grown on me since my first spin and I don’t expect that trend to taper anytime soon.

Tales From the Garden

Molten // Malicide [March 6th, 2024 – Transylvanian Recordings]

Sometimes a band does one thing so well you don’t really need anything else to be great. Molten doesn’t stand out because of its vocals, a serviceable but somewhat limited growl. The drums are likewise decent, but nothing to cream your pants over. But the riffs! If that hurly burly bouncing up the stairs riff of “Pathogenesis” doesn’t put your facehole in a grin, it may be time to call it quits on death metal. Same for the insane, blistering solo that punctuates “Scorched” or the absolute neck-snapping title track. The latter is also the best place to spot the skillful bass parts that sneakily elevate the guitars to sound as good as they do. With a bunch of short ‘n snappy tracks showcasing Molten’s chops, a sudden 9-and-a-half-minute thrash epic sounds like a disaster in waiting, but the riffs, the solos and the serpentine bass are all high enough quality that I don’t want the San Fran boys to stop firing their big hooky shit at my face anyway. Malicide is a humble package, utterly crammed with infectious fun and riffy goodness, so get on that shit or get off the death metal pot.

 

Saunders’ Smoldering Cinders

BRAT // Social Grace [March 15th, 2024 – Prosthetic Records]

Look beyond their questionable moniker and self-proclaimed ‘Bimboviolence’ tag, and NOLA up-and-comers BRAT impresses on their debut LP, Social Grace. Listeners would be foolish to pass over this band as some sort of gimmicky modern metal act, the rugged, ugly musical form BRAT composes packs a serious punch. Social Grace present a thuggish, volatile concoction where the crossroads of grind, death and powerviolence meet. Factor in sludgy hues and seedy NOLA tones adding layers of extra grime and grit to short, sharp, stabbing cuts that pull no punches. The blasty, belligerent throes of old school grind meets sludge stomp of “Hesitation Wound” showcases BRAT’s deft ability to shift gears and compliment rabid blasting and grindy chaos, with infectious riffs and brawling grooves. Social Grace features similarly raw examples of gnarly, unbridled menace. Amped aggression, throaty vocals and speedy surges are complemented by fun, headbanging riffs and toughened grooves, lending the album a catchy edge and solid replay value reflected on gems such as the rifftastic title track, contrasting charms of “Truncheon,” and feedback-drenched grind-punk fury of “Human Offense.”

Suicidal Angels // Profane Prayer [March 1st, 2024 – Nuclear Blast]

Unsung Greek institution Suicidal Angels have pumped out material since the early aughts, crafting Euro-flavored thrash with a heavy dose of American influence, including Exodus and Slayer. Throw in an occasional atmospheric, melodeath twist, and you are left with a dependably solid batch of meat and potatoes goodness. Although rarely blowing minds, Suicidal Angels’ retro thrash platters, such as Dead Again and Bloodbath, represent potent examples of the band’s trusty formula. Following a five-year recording gap, Suicidal Angels return with their eighth LP, Profane Prayer. Profane Prayer follows a familiar trajectory, yet sounds fresh, full of energy and armed with fiery, aggressive riffage. These dudes are a tight unit, and the explosive speediness and exuberant performances shine alongside killer old school riffage, slashing solos, and technical embellishments. Ferociously infectious thrashers like “When the Lions Die,” “Purified by Fire,” “Crypts of Madness” and ‘Virtues of Destruction” sound more inspired than I’ve heard from the band in some time. Profane Prayer has moments of bloat, but the pros outweigh the cons, resulting in a largely enjoyable and explosive thrash platter. Props to the band for stretching their wings on the epic, progressively leaning journey of “Deathstalker,” and similarly adventurous closer “The Fire Paths of Fate,” showing Suicidal Angels still have some tricks up their sleeves.

Thus Spoke’s Forgotten Findings

Carrion Vael // Cannibals Anonymous [March 29th, 2024 – Unique Leader Records]

I was introduced to Carrion Vael by Dr. Grier’s review of their 2022 LP Abhorrent Obsessions where he deemed it “a beast of a record,” and I wholeheartedly concurred. Fortunately for all of us lovers of the Indiana melodeath/deathcore/generally heavy bunch, Cannibals Anonymous largely picks up where the previous one left off. It’s vicious, and satisfyingly slick, the rapidly descending/ascending scales, smooth, fast transitions between always-driving-forward tempos, and cutthroat snarls once again betraying a Black Dahlia Murder influence, but with a bit more of a deathcore angle. The riffy kind of deathcore. Because yeah, this thing has riffs (see especially ” “Love Zombie,” “Discount Meats,” and “Pins and Needles”)—as well as gore—spilling out of its every orifice, and they’re great. Also surprisingly fun are the further extended use of cleans now appearing on most of the album’s tracks, which only serve to make them more catchy, compelling, and fun, whether they’re shouty and atonal (“Discount Meats”), or genuinely mellifluous (“Savage Messiah,” “Pins and Needles,” “Augusta’s Dead”); and they’re more often the latter. Carrion Vael also lean a little further into the urgent-minor melodic refrain territory that made Abhorrent Obsessions so sticky, with “Savage Messiah,” “Pins and Needles,” and “Everything/Nothing” standing out. This isn’t changing the scene, but goddamn it if you won’t have a fucking fantastic time chucking some heavy weights around or generally vibing with a massive grin on your face whilst listening to it. Go on, you know you want to.

Dear Hollow’s Deafening Debris

Givre // Le Cloître [March 29th, 2024 – Eisenwald]

It’s not often that a black metal band willingly discusses Christianity in a somewhat endearing light, so the Quebecois Givre is a bit of a conundrum. However, in the most brutal fashion possible, this trio discusses examples of female saints and each respective trail of pain left behind in the pursuit of holiness. Given the subject matter, you can imagine the cross that is borne across its forty-two-minute runtime. Each track carries with it a mood and style of its own, united as a whole through the atoning power of agony, as all characters throughout have suffered greatly for the sake of Christ. That being said, this is regardless a hopeful album, and in many ways, La Cloître feels like a meditation, fluid movements whose organicity revolves around gentle plucking. While tracks like opener “Marthe Robin (1902-1981)” and “Sainte Thérèse d’Avila (1515-1582)” embrace this aesthetic of prayerful lamentation, it does not stop the winding riff punishment of “Louise du Néant (1639-1694)” from scorching the surrounding soil, or the mysterious, nearly Southern rock-oriented, “Sainte Hildegarde de Bingen (1098-1179)” and desperate start-stop riffs of “Sainte Marguerite de Cortone (1247-1297)” from commanding otherworldly planes. While the stylistic choices differ and may be jarring to listeners, it is cemented by its theme as it pursues God down lesser-trodden trails of atonement through flagellation.

Profane Burial // My Plateau [March 1st, 2024 – Crime Records]

The Norwegian black metallers channel nearly everything they can get their grimy claws onto in My Plateau. Profane Burial professes to be “cinematic black metal,” and that is an accurate description in its boundary-pushing of atmospheric and symphonic texture: imagine if Midnight Odyssey and Septicflesh met at a midnight showing of The Exorcist. Besides its more contemplative moments, you’ll find that My Plateau is a deceptively mammoth listen, as chugging guitars and colossal drums collide with grim symphonics and haunting ambiance. The opening title track, “Fragments of Dirge,” and “Disambiguate Eradication” are aptly bombastic kabooms in mad waltzes of demonic proportions layered with rich symphonic textures, while the blasts colliding with chugs and piano trills in “Moribund” and “Righteous Indoctrination” add to the Wreche-on-crack vibe, while the triumphant battle cry in closer “Horror Code” is equal parts macabre and pummeling. For being inspired by horror scores, Profane Burial is scatterbrained and wonky, but it doesn’t stop My Plateau from embracing the bombast in a fun-as-hell symphonic black metal foray touched by madness.

#2024 #AllThingsBlack #AmericanMetal #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #BlackSoulHorde #BRAT #CanadianMetal #CannibalsAnonymous #CarrionVael #CrimeRecords #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Doom #Eisenwald #Exodus #Givre #GreekMetal #Grindcore #HeavyMetal #LeCloître #Malicide #Mar24 #MelodicDeathMetal #MidnightOdyssey #Molten #MyPlateau #NorwegianMetal #NuclearBlastRecords #OccultMetal #OccultRock #Powerviolence #ProfaneBurial #ProfanePrayer #ProstheticRecords #Review #Reviews #SaturdayNightSatan #SelfRelease #SepticFlesh #SepticFlesh #Slayer #SocialGrace #StuckInTheFilter #SuicidalAngels #SymphonicBlackMetal #TheBlackDahliaMurder #ThrashMetal #TransylvanianRecords #UniqueLeaderRecords #Wreche

2024-03-06

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