Whether or not you believe in the concept of a devil, you can’t deny there is evil, unease, and diabolical intent in so many of the things that surround us. Be that the government, grifters, liars, cheats, what have you, you always have to peel back the layers to find the true underpinnings. But that doesn’t mean there also can’t be pleasure in the darkness.
“The Devil and All His Works” is the new record from long-running UK doom outfit Witchsorrow, and if you’ve been along for the ride since their inception or at some point along the way, you’ll find a lot with which to identify on these seven tracks and 48 minutes. The album title is inspired by the Dennis Wheatley’s 1971 book of the same name, and the band—vocalist/guitarist Nick “Necroskull” Ruskell, bassist Emily “Witch” Ruskell, drummer Scott Taylor (David Wilbraham played drums on the album)—delves into deep, smoking doom metal that feels foreboding and dangerous but also revels in heathenism and decadence, showing two signs of the coin of darkness.
“Omnia Finiuntur” opens, an 11:30-long opus that dawns with doom bells chiming, organs swelling, and the charred playing adding pressure, Necroskull’s vocals flexing and smearing. The aura immediately is sinister, buzzing and twisting, driving even harder as the playing toys with your psych as the heaviness and smoke coverage expand. Fuzz accumulates as organs spill, and the doom mass peaks, the fog subsiding as keys usher us away. “Bacchus” has guitars sweltering and a burly heat, the singing darkening as the playing pummels, the soloing heating up and testing wills. The humidity spikes as the singing echoes, visions swimming in your head, guitars scorching madly. “Hades Chains” punches in, spewing ash, blistering as washed-out vocals give off a dreamy effect. Howls then mangle as the punishment scathes, Serena Cherry (Svalbard/Noctule) adds thorns via her fiery screams, the muck chugging through mud, thrashing as the vocals strangle, and the fires finally go out.
“Altar” brings darkness as the ball coils, the playing waylays, and the singing hypnotizes, echoes rippling through the clouds. Gloom and heaviness collide as the guitars add muscle, Nick’s wails sending coarse waves. The soloing catches fire and swelters, making you sweat out all your toxins. “In Triumph We Rot!!!” is thrashy and direct, coming at you with blades windmilling, Necroskull wailing, “Rise from the grave, forever doomed!” Bells echo as the soloing floods your senses, landing heavy blows, the electricity darting through your bloodstream. “Lamentation” is a quick interlude, doom slithering over, guitars jarring with filth, a Hamlet quote playing that ends with, “And yet, to me, what is this quintessence of dust?” That leads to closer … “A Quintessence of Dust.” Slow-driving power bruises as the singing lashes, the playing eating away at you, drubbing as the pace catches fire. “Bring out your dead!” Necroskull howls, the soloing exploding with lava, the playing getting fiery and faster, slipping back into pace, the doom bells that greeted us leading us to the grave.
“The Devil and All His Works” is pretty quintessential Witchsorrow, and if you’ve been on their journey alongside them, the surroundings will be familiar, if a little more charred around the edges. Their yarns about the devil and his intertwining into every aspect of life is both a celebration of heathen behavior and a cautionary tale served with white-hot doom that aims to draw blood. This is another strong building block on Witchsorrow’s wicked foundation that they treat with chaos and soot.
For more on the band, go here: https://witchsorrowdoom.bandcamp.com/
To buy the album, go here: https://deathwishinc.com/collections/church-road/products/witchsorrow-the-devil-and-all-his-works
Or here (Europe): https://churchroadrecords.com/collections/church-road-releases/products/witchsorrow-the-devil-and-all-his-works-pre-order
For more on the label, go here: https://churchroadrecords.com/



















