Prog chameleons Moths tackle origins of sin, connection with humanity on captivating ‘Septem’

People are easy targets when it comes to the darkness we force on other people. We’re not always the most honorable beings inhabiting this earth, and that fact long has poisoned politics and religion and, as a result, the population in general. It’s a sickness we never seem to be able to overcome, and we’re largely to blame.

Prog metal force Moths are fully aware of this, and on their new record “Septem,” they use their prowess and impressive range of sounds to look at something that’s long plagued humans. This seven-track album is based on the seven deadly sins, with each track taking the name of one of them, and it’s a whirlwind of an experience. The band—vocalist Mariel Viruet, guitarists Jonathan Miranda and Omar González, bassist Weslie Negrón, drummer Daniel Figueroa—could fit in regions outside of metal, and they aren’t here for brutality front to back and are flush with melody. But the barbs are there, and if you’re not paying attention, they’ll snag you. Like these dreaded sins. 

“Sloth” is the opening instrumental, acoustic and folkish, the guitars taking on a bluesy swagger, washing through to “Envy” where things get a little grittier. Drums slink as Viruet’s smoky singing sets the pace, the playing picking up and heading into progressive waters, the guitars feeling properly spacey. The pace numbs before penetrating beneath the surface, the vocals commanding, and everything coming to a raucous end. “Greed” opens with growls snarling and the pace mashing, the singing returning to make blood flow harder, bruising heat doing its damage. Fuzzy, burly melodies thicken as the howls wrench, the cosmic void deepens, and the final moments make nerve endings tingle.

“Pride” has synth waves swimming, screams pushing into madness, and the richness getting thicker and more reflective. The band swings back to prog fire again, feeling like they’re channeling Rush in the early 1980s, the keys blasting and all elements building to a huge crescendo. “Lust” has the bass chugging and keys whirring, howls showing steely resolve as the drumming bustles. The singing soars as the guitars snake though pools of silver, disappearing into glimmering keys. “Gluttony” starts with tricky guitars and growls scraping flesh, the singing settling in and growing more intense, harsh growls exploding from the corners. The guitars race and trample as speed becomes a factor as they dash by colonies of stars. Closer “Wrath” brings menacing wails, darkness that grows into your cells, and sweltering melodies that increase the temperature. Things get dirtier and faster, Viruet’s singing bellowing, the pressure building, rampaging as the drums smash through the final gates.

Moths not only continue to expand their sound on “Septem,” but they also dig deeper into humanity’s darkest inhibitions and behaviors that are a part of all of us. This is a hard band to categorize, as they fit into so many different areas but never completely. That likely means they can’t be pigeonholed somewhere, and it might be hard for them to find a natural place to exist, but it also means their possibilities are limitless. Their next record could sound like anything, and that’s pretty exciting.

For more on the band, go here: https://mothspr.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://mothspr.bandcamp.com/album/septem

Ancient Torment stoke blazes with furious black metal fury on ‘Follow the Echo of Curses’

When you think of the New England region of the United States, you likely think of people too rich to ever acknowledge you (even if you’re on their side politically), and when it comes to metal, it tends to be of the more atmospheric bend. You don’t think of mental torture and black metal destruction, but perhaps it’s time to change that.

Ancient Torment, hailing from Rhode Island, have been doing their thing in one form or another for almost the past decade, and now we finally have their debut full-length “Follow the Echo of Curses” to behold. Taking on their infernal, beastly version of black metal makes it feel like landscapes burning to the ground, torment subjected on your soul. The band—vocalist Stygal, guitarists Tormentum and Apparition, bassist Czarnobóg, drummer Zealot—applies all their might to these six tracks and 42 minutes that take you apart and forever blacken their home territory forever.

“Hanging from a Dead Star” rips open, melodies raining, shrieks crushing amid a drubbing fury. Black metal spirits rise and ravage, the playing splattering guts, spirited chaos peaking and coming to an unforgiving end. “Spectre at the Crossroads” opens the blast furnace, shrieks powering as the guitars flex, agony spilling at flood levels, blazing forces pulling you under the havoc. Screams crush as the pace strangles, the leads cascading into further audio violence that is swept into the sea. “Sorrow Verses” starts in abject darkness, the vocals destroying as emotionally blistering insanity strikes. Colorful guitars dash hellish colors, the energy exploding from all seams, the keys giving off a gothy undertone, lathering in flooding punishment.

“Dejected Dreams Molested in Purgatory” is surprisingly melodic yet still gut-wrenching, grim howls and sharp shrieks pairing up, the playing bludgeoning. The pace turns fluid as shrieks rampage, the fire aggravated to mountains of ash. “Under the Guise of Virtue” lets loose and comes out swinging, guitars boiling over as the drums attack, the tempo drilling into your chest. The leads light up the sky as warbled singing drags you under the surface, the vocals taking their turn to blacken eyes before fading. Closer “Rotting Temperament” runs 8:59 and opens with corroded screams, a speedy gush, and an attack that’s channeled and vicious. Melodies spill as the drums overpower, the pace firing up harder and even feeling catchy in spots, carnage accumulating. The leads torpedo as feral screams echo, flooding the senses with final storm blasts.

Ancient Torment apply the pressure fully and ruthlessly on “Under the Guise of Virtue,” a record that can be nasty and also infectious within a matter of seconds. The band has done their job honing their craft and carving out a sinister sound in what can be a flooded world of black metal, and this album proves it. This is mean, hellacious, and completely powered by the most sinister of forces.

 For more on the band, go here: https://ancienttorment.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://eternaldeath.storenvy.com/products/36936707-ancient-torment-follow-the-echo-of-curses-cd

For more on the label, go here: https://eternaldeath.bandcamp.com/

PICK OF THE WEEK: Grayceon take wrenching bends through loss on wrecking ‘Then the Darkness’

Photo by Jackie Perez Gratz

Loss comes in many forms, not always in the death of an important person in your life. It could be the dissolution of a relationship, an artistic partnership ending, a personal defeat. The result can be devastating, especially if it does revolve around one’s demise, and the grief and tumult can be overwhelming.

Grayceon’s amazing sixth record “Then the Darkness” feels like you’re diving right into the middle of a sea of madness, trying to figure out a way to carry on in the midst of a life-changing event that shakes you to your core. Over 11 tracks and nearly 70 minutes, the band—vocalist/cellist Jackie Perez Gratz, guitarist Max Doyle, drummer Zack Farwell—pours its progressive darkness in generous amounts, leaving hearts exposed, blood flowing from ravaged veins. There also is time for reminiscing, wondering, hoping, and mourning over an album that feels half as long as its running time and finds Grayceon as explosive and richly expressive as ever before. It’s a gem.

“Thousand Year Storm” opens warbling and spacey before things detonate, Perez Gratz’s shrieks peeling back bone, her singing floating along with the carnage. The cello ices as the playing grows more progressive, Perez Gratz wailing, “Tell them I am not well at all,” as the final punches land. “One Third” crunches, the singing sweltering, piling up rugged corners as melodies work to smooth the jagged edges. The force is blistering, howls punishing, the struggle cresting and lapping. “Velvet ‘79” has the cello wrenching, fluid playing coating your mind, Perez Gratz calling, ” It’s like a hazy dream, it’s like a velvet touch,” over the alluring chorus. Things feel fuzzy and psychedelic, the electricity charring as old memories work through dreams, an emotional pull gripping before dissipating. “3 Points of Light” dawns with metallic riffs, the crunchiest so far, and things swamp and swagger, adding a true rock n roll sense to the concoction. The singing swells as the riffs charge up, the more upbeat tempo and tones giving off a sense of nostalgia. “Mahsa” is the 20:02 centerpiece, a track that starts sorrowfully, Perez Gratz repeating, “I … I will kill … whoever killed my sister.” The playing plods as darkness falls and the tempo bruises, cello bringing an elegance and a power surge, guitars tracing as Perez Gratz sings, “When you find me, you’ll know I am the sun.” The playing is wondrous and also digs deeply, the pace changing and toying, slipping into the shadows. The melodies sail before the playing jars again, the guitars glimmering and fading into time.

The title track is an instrumental piece with cello powering, dark and melodic strains getting into your bloodstream, and everything swimming into 12:29-long “Forever Teeth” that immediately pulls you to a new vision. ” I stand on this shaky ground, but I want to stand up for my beliefs, and it’s all oh so bittersweet,” Perez Gratz levels, continuing to add different hues. The tension builds and grows more fiery, Perez Gratz howling, “Love! Lies!” as the pathway turns doomier, angling through existential wounds, coming to a sweeping and dramatic end. “Song of the Snake” sneaks in, dusty pathways pummeled, the heaviness taking charge and squeezing hard. “Ceasefire!” Perez Gratz howls, surely unaware when she wrote those words how relevant they would be right now. The storms hit harder, the drums crumble, and the tension rises before disappearing. “Holding Lines” has the drums bruising and strings teasing, the playing chugging as Perez Gratz calls, “I’m here where you are.” The blows land harder as Perez Gratz asks, “Why can’t we hold the line?” which could be taken as why can’t we make an effort to keep people safe? It’s ominous and cosmic from there, washing into the distance. “Untitled” has gentle, hushes tones, cello rippling, the melodies gliding and easing into a rustic atmosphere. Things get heavier as the strings stitch everything together, the guitars finally liquifying. Closer “Come to the End” blasts in, immediately grabbing your attention, Perez Gratz wailing, “Do you really think I would ever walk away from you, my love?” There are easier moments and other where the force bustles anew, shrieks tearing, the elements giving off thick smoke, Perez Gratz declaring, “As above, so below,” as the tornadic elements cool and fade. 

“Then the Darkness” is one of the most ambitious and, at the same time, heartfelt records in Grayceon’s illustrious catalog, and this is for anyone lost, looking to pick up the pieces, and simply trying to survive. It might be tough to dedicate an entire listening session to this album, but you really should make time, put away everything else, and absorb this. The music is heavy and enchanting, the emotions are human and raw, and this is a journey we’re all going to take at some point, so it’s a gift to have music that so brutally relates.

For more on the band, go here: https://grayceon.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://translationloss.com/collections/grayceon-collection

For more on the label, go here: https://translationloss.com/

Re-Buried unearth disgusting forms of death, fry senses on gut-blasting ‘Flesh Mourning’

Photo by Chad Kelco

Death metal that feels particularly gruesome is a nice way to treat the brain after enduring countless real-life atrocities driven by having the gall to try to keep up with daily events. That feeling of horror and bloodshed that isn’t playing out on your phone or television can be weirdly comforting, taking your mind to somewhere morbid in a different way?

Seattle-based death metal destroyers Re-Buried provide the perfect diversion from daily chaos and instead import you into the world of blood-splattering horrors and gruesome skullduggery. “Flesh Mourning,” their second album, is pure, real death metal that makes your insides feel disgusting and that would make anyone new to this type of music recoil in horror. This isn’t Hot Topic shit. No offense. The kids need a gateway after all. Instead, the band—vocalist Chris Pinto (also of Fõrn), guitarists Paul Richards (who also add Wurlitzer, if you can believe it), Ed Bingaman, and Daniel Racines, bassist Clayton Wolff, drummer Alex Bytnar—rubs your face in the blood and guts and delivers an ugly battering that will warp your brain.

“Obitual Illusion” drills open with guitars scuffing and growls retching vomitously, smothering with ugly hammering. The dire mentality continues as the punishment grinds, the howls blur, and everything bleeds into a gutter. “Jagged Psyche” rushes with guitars blistering, guitars cutting into flesh, growls hissing in horror. The leads swelter as beastly carnage accrues, the growls belching into eerie keys and abject horror. “Rotted Back to Life” has the bass buzzing and a slow, doomy storm rumbling, eventually turning headlong into battering guitars work. Deep growls gut as the heaviness pierces organs, crushing with menace. “Chainsaw Ritual” starts with, obviously, a saw firing up, howls mauling, and an infernal, sooty attack choking. The brutality floods dangerously, torture peaking, crushing to the final gory moments.

The title track has guitars encircling, the growls sickening, and the pace decimating, the playing slowly picking up steam. The punishment crawls but mangles, the humidity grows to unmanageable levels, and growls spit stomach acid from the guts. “Pestilence Fog” starts with guitars carving through flesh, doomy waters lapping with blackness, death stirring and driving into madness. A calculated beating drags bodies over the earth, and growls snarl, the playing cutting down everything before it. “Putridity in Existence” slowly unfurls, the heat rising noticeably, growls boiling in blood as the muscular chaos flexes. Pained howls jar as the guitar work tangles brain wiring, the tempo swaggers, and the growing ash collects and heads into sinister instrumental closer “Cold Blood.” This is a fitting, unsettling end with visions of strange horror conjured by the guitars, the spirit getting blacker and uglier before being pulled from your imagination.

Reburied certainly make their best effort at claiming the mantle of one of death metal’s most disgusting, destructive bands on “Flesh Mourning.” Strains of their doom past make things icier and more nausea inducing, and they succeed with every inch of terror folded into this creation. This is not easily digestible death, it’s not polished, and it goes right for the jugular, which  should find favor with anyone looking for something gruesome and unforgiving.

For more on the band, go here: https://re-buried.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://translationloss.com/collections/re-buried-collection

For more on the label, go here: https://translationloss.com/

Chicago crushers Bloodletter put acidic mark on thrash with vicious ‘Leave the Light Behind’

A good thrash record should serve up a lot of different things to you while your brain is being ground into a paste. As noted too many times, having cut my teeth on thrash, I’m terribly particular about this style, and I don’t think the subgenre has grown well. But there still are a lot of bands doing it right, and Bloodletter is one of them.

As I said, thrash records often spray you with songs about various topics, most of them grim, many times horror based. “Leave the Light Behind,” the Chicago-based band’s fourth band, jumps out of the gates immediately lamenting the rotting state of the world and visiting fantasy elements, pestilence, mental issues, and nightmares among other things. The band—vocalist/guitarist Pete Carparelli, guitarist Pat Armamentos, bassist Tanner Hudson—delivers the goods over and over on 10 tracks and 35 minutes, reminding of the power and ferocity of thrash metal when it’s goddamn done right.

“A World Unmade” opens as a total assault, punchy and screamy, feeling a lot like Kreator, which it does throughout. Which certainly isn’t a bad thing. “The is the ruin of our making,” Carparelli howls, a lava-rich solo overflowing, mashing to the end. “On Blackened Wings” is urgent and furious, melodic leads ripping, an attack rising that threatens your well-being. Howls stretch as the colors burst, guitars adding more drama to the end. “Eternal Winter” has guitars flooding, the band leaning toward death, the drums blasting in areas. “The wind is its voice, the snow is its will,” Carparelli wails, adding a freezing menace to the song and the story, the guitars blurring and spreading out the madness. “Terminal” brings creaky howls, jarring melodies, and  Carparelli calling, “Trapped inside a prison of my mind.” The track gets more morbid, digging into mental wounds, burying bones in the dirt. “Unearthing Darkness” is speedy as hell, the vocals spat, warnings of violence plowing through the verses. The chorus flexes as the soloing unloads, guitars glimmering and making you shield your eyes from the pressure.

“Hunting Horror” trudges through the weeds, the guitars bubbling, Carparelli screaming, “Blood red eyes glow in the night,” the playing pressing against veins. The words vow revenge as their teeth sink in, the shouts of, “Devour! Destroy!” bruising. “The Black Death” is a little too uncomfortable for our own good considering where we are in 2025, and it’s a punisher, Carparelli wailing, “Life is the debt, suffering is the payment.” The playing is fast and mashing, strong soloing tearing through the void and into bone. “Call of the Deep One” has tricky riffs and darkness spreading, monstrous growls squeezing with all their might, moody soloing melting away thickening ice. The playing is a full force as the vocals terrify, the back end plowing into damnation. “Night Terrors” brings nightmares to life, the playing growing in strength, Carparelli howling, “Each breath grows heavier, I may not last.” The power rumbles through the ground, the guitars galloping and ending in ashes. Closer “The Burial” opens with eerie keys, and then everything tears open, screams mashing, the playing smashing pavement. “Wishing I could wake from this hell,” Carparelli shouts, the playing continuing to splatter (guest Nate Madden’s soloing adding more electricity), the keys that greeted you luring you into a mesmerizing fog.

Bloodletter’s classic sound, smearing brutality, and mix of real-life and fantastical horrors makes for a high point on “Leave the Light Behind.” This is a real step up for a band that already was operating at a high level, but this album should really open up a lot of eyes, especially for those who have fallen asleep on thrash. It’s a bruiser from start to finish, and it’s one that’s easy to revisit over and over.

For more on the band, go here: https://bloodlettermetal.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album (U.S.), go here: https://wisebloodrecords.bandcamp.com/

Or here: https://wisebloodrecords.8merch.com/

For more on the label, go here: https://wisebloodrecords.com/

Cleveland’s Atomic Witch mash death, classic metal with vile morbidity on ‘Death Etiquette’

We’re here at the tail end of July, and while Halloween and the darker, colder evenings still are a ways off, that doesn’t mean we can’t look ahead and plan accordingly with the music we hear. There are certain sounds that feel the most alive during those decaying days, and when you hear it, you absolutely know it fits that timeframe perfectly.

Cleveland mashers Atomic Witch have a stranglehold on a lot of the spookier sounds, with their mix of death metal and vocal flourishes that reek (in a great way) of King Diamond. It’s tailor made for autumn, but it still sounds pretty great while we’re sweating through totally not human-generated heat that makes just going outside a chore. The band—vocalist Greg Martinis, guitarist/vocalist Jesse Shattuck, guitarist Jonah Meister, bassist David McJunkins, drummer Nick Amato—hammers and brings morbid tidings on “Death Etiquette,” their molten second record that is a metallic joy from start to finish. This is a goddamn metal record, and no one could think otherwise. It’s fun, it’s furious, and it’ll ravage you until dead leaves are decayed.

“Morgue Rat” tears open, vicious screams eating away at you, banshee wails coming over the chorus and scorching flesh. Guitars smear and an off-kilter attack rattles, leads raging to a fiery end. “Of Flesh & Chrome” chars and thrashes, the guitars maiming as the screaming/singing combo strikes again. In fact, the higher vocals sound like an air raid siren, nastiness working into a spacious solo, striking with utter force. “Worms & Dirt” flattens, the vocals powering, guitars lighting fires, a ’90s-style thrash force flexing its muscles. The soloing flows with energy as crazed singing stings, jarring to a blistering end. “Dream Rot” has the drums rousing and the guitars sweeping, shrieks raining down like blades. The leads flurry as the tones darken, the playing opens new tributaries, and guttural viciousness bleeds away.

“Sabbath Breaker” unleashes a death-like fury, the power crushing and bruising faces, the pace slowing but remaining furiously heavy. Gutting fury scrapes flesh, growls burrow into the dirt, and vicious gurgles circle the drain. “Death Edging (Come to the Light)” fades in from the outside, and it’s not long until the playing envelops, the howls maiming and stretching muscle. Melodic leads sweep, high singing scorches the flesh, and then the leads turn warm, flowing like muddy river water. “Skelecidal” has riffs toppling and a blisteringly heavy assault under taken, screams digging under fingernails. The guitars rise and scorch, acidic singing lathering, blasting home. Closer “Vicious Mistress” is smothering and bendy, trudging over meaty verses, the chorus swimming in blood. Wails destroy as the guitars aggravate, high-pitched screams piercing your ears viciously.

“Death Etiquette” is a bruising record with flashes of classic heavy metal, bruising as hard as anything in Atomic Witch’s admittedly smaller catalog. This is fun and fiery, a crushing display that’s full of electricity and horror, music that will remain a blast to hear until Halloween arrives. This is fun and violent as fuck, an album that should leave you plastered to the ground.

For more on the band, go here: https://atomicwitch.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album (U.S.), go here: https://redefiningdarkness.8merch.us/

Or here (Europe): https://redefiningdarkness.8merch.com/

For more on the label, go here: https://www.redefiningdarkness.com

PICK OF THE WEEK: The Long Hunt’s sun-stained doom crawls into cool corners on ‘Natural Order’

Evolution is a concept that, for some reason, is controversial to a lot of people. That’s what happens when people try to defy science, a thing they cannot (or choose not to) understand. But we watch it through our and other species, the planet, and even our scientific and artistic endeavors. We grow in so many ways, which keeps us alive.

The Long Hunt, the Pittsburgh-based instrumental drone/doom trio that long ago planted its roots, add new shades and colors to what they do with each release, and the same goes for their new fourth album “Natural Order.” The album isn’t a radical departure by any means, but another phase of growth, a continual development into a deeper, more varied beast. The band—guitarist Trevor Richards, bassist Allison Kacmar Richards, drummer Mark Lyons—has morphed over time and gradually built into what they do, and each release gives you a newly refined vision. This one is perfect for once cooler summer evenings arrive or on a sun-splashed walk through the woods where you can pay homage to your surroundings and be overcome by the power of this band’s music.

“It Hunts the Shadows” opens with guitars quivering, opening sunburnt visions, then the bass follows behind, thickening. There’s a dusty electric feel going through your veins, the sludge coming at you harder, the final strains blasting out. “The Cosmic Egg” feels properly spacey when it enters, guitars echoing and treading, a desert vibe chilling your anxieties. Guitars pick up as things feel doomier and heavier, the melodies blazing, the bass snaking into oblivion. “Assiduous Gnaw” begins with a nice blanket of psychedelic warmth, working into swampier terrain, the murmuring fires stoked to full gush again. The playing feels fiery and more forceful, the bass numbing as the drums pace, the guitars leaving blisters that fester in the sun. “Spine of the Dusk” is slow and humid when it dawns, gliding through the bones of summer, guitars spreading sun-bleached memories. The playing gets dreamier as the lights emerge, making your brain feel stoned, thoughts dividing into new ideas.

“Tooth and Claw” starts ominously, the bass slowly climbing rocks formations, a mechanical push turning chunkier, the drums pacing along, cowbell gently prodded. The elements begin to pile on top of one another, noise scraping as the riffs chew, a final burly attack fully overwhelming. “The Liminal Flow” moves at a deliberate pace, luring you in, the guitars growing more agitated and landing blows. Melodies encircle as the playing bruises, guitars taking control and pulling each corner of the journey, buzzing energy dissipating and merging with the ground. “A Narrow Path” is warm and jazzy at the outset, feeling like a cool Western evening, the bass popping and riffs lulling. The playing gently flows as the guitars simmer, heated leads turning hypnotic, looping to a pillowy landing spot. Closer “Pillar of Dawn” has guitars smearing and flowing, the elements liquifying and flowing over tested muscle. The riffs begin to spark as vintage melodies rain down and flood with dream-state nostalgia, the bass lighting the path forward, woodsy chill blurring vision and ending the journey.

“Natural Order” is the logical next step for the Long Hunt, as their psyche doom always seemed headed in this direction, therefore this album flows perfectly and induces new visions. This is an imaginative, immersive record that’s ideal for the upcoming late summer evenings, when your flesh is cooling from a day in the sun, and the cooler air and dusk are your truest companions. The Long Hunt never veer too far from their path, but they always add new colors and inspirations they find along the way to make their art more infectious and inviting, music that always feels like a spirit that never leaves your side. 

For more on the band, go here: https://thelonghunt.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://thelonghunt.bandcamp.com/album/natural-order

Polish crushers Clairvoyance bring world-crumbling death with furious ‘Reign of Silence’

Photo by Damian Dragaski

It feels like we either live in some sort of hell or that the world is disintegrating before our eyes as swaths of leadership around the globe delve further into authoritarianism. Yeah, that’s good for the power structure that answers to no one, but if you have your head screwed on straight, it is agony waking up every day.

Polish death crushers Clairvoyance’s debut full-length “Chasm of Immurement” doesn’t address that directly, that being the crumbling state of the world. But the dread and hell and misery that’s attached? Yeah, they serve that up in abundance with devastating, doom-infested death metal that feels like it collects all its disgust to hurl back at whatever target these choose. The band—vocalist Maciej Cesarczyk, guitarist/vocalist Denis Didenko, guitarist Kacper Pawluk, bassist Vlad Levchenko, drummer Adrian Szczepański—piles pressure and madness into six tracks and 34 minutes that ravage fully and make a case for them being hailed as one of the next new death metal bands to help carry the banner.

“Eternal Blaze” opens in buried growls and then begins to trudge with force, guitars punishing as the burly attack gets under way. The fury mounts as growls corrode, speeding up as the carnage ravages in full, leaving ash behind. “Hymn of the Befouled” has guitars tangling and battering, cavernous growls reaching into your guts, spacious leads taking off from there, infusing atmosphere. Leads snarl as the drums come unglued, the band churning and smothering until a fiery end. “Fleshmachine” is a driving menace, the drums marring as the growls engorge, the guitars electrifying and dominating. The leads blaze as the drums splatter, guttural growls taking you apart as the pace rushes, and feedback burns everything to a crisp.

“Reign of Silence” is doomy as hell, growls turning things more vicious, the playing blistering and pulling you through the mud. The death strains flex harder, mauling as the growls churn, the leads attain a nuclear glow, and everything ends in a deadly downward spiral. “Blood Divine” erupts, growls gurgling, the leads intensifying the heat, mangling into a bloody assault. The band goes thrashier, the pace destroying as growls boil and the guitars add an extra bed a flames to the proceedings. Closer “Monument to Dread” enters amid violent drumming, mashing growls, and a monstrous push into daggers and cragged rocks. The bass drives as the pace mauls slower, the guitars tearing through flesh walls, sinking in their teeth. Growls maim as the drums pulverize, the last scorching wave of power eating through bone.

“Chasm of Immurement” might be Clairvoyance’s first full-length, but it lands mightily, confidently, morbidly, like a band that’s been at this longer than they have. The darkness and the physical and mental torment that helped inspire these songs are deep and entrenched, helping you get a taste of each swath of suffering. This is a devastating debut that should carve a path for this band to sit among death metal’s up and coming leaders.

For more on the band, go here: https://www.facebook.com/clairvoyancedeathmetal

To buy the album, go here (U.S.): https://carbonizedrecords.merchtable.com/search?q=CLAIRVOYANCE%2F

Or here (Europe): https://carbonizedrecordseu.com/

For more on the label, go here: https://carbonizedrecords.bandcamp.com/

Swedish death crew Filth maul with doomy carnage on morbid, face-bruising debut ‘Time to Rot’

The blazing hot summer is a strange time for death metal for me. I absolutely listen to it the entire three-month span, but it’s a time when my head isn’t always in the right place for all new releases. This summer has been different, and maybe it’s my frame of mind, but it feels like it’s all hitting when everything feels miserable.

Swedish death squad Filth arrive with their debut album “Time to Rot,” and that’s fitting as there are a lot of elements of our world that could stand to decay forever. This is grinding, slowly dealt death that hits you right in the chest and is ideally proportioned. At six tracks and 29 minutes, the band—vocalist/drummer Per, guitarist/bassist Sebastian, guitarist Ismael—gives you just enough to fill your rotting guts and leave you wanting more. That’s incredibly welcome. I’m sure they could have tacked on another two or three tracks, but this hits harder as is. It’s smoldering and dark, and nasty, and it demands replay, which its running time makes easy to do. Repeatedly.

“Odious Obsession” bristles with industrial-style noise, paving the way for filthy death, a crushing tempo, and growls that serve menace. The band hammers hard, proving to be a massive force with snarling riffs and a mighty power surge. The title track has weird echo out front, then furnace-like heat immediately greeting you, growls engorging as the guitars come to a boil. The playing rips ever harder, stampeding over unsuspecting victims, barreling into endless mud pits and charring your senses along the way. “Flesh Dress” initially delivers strange racket, and then gruff guitars begin to mash, growls choking on noxious fumes, the tempo absolutely unloading. Guitars spit fire before settling back a bit, and then the attack is mounted anew, surging to a devastating finish.

“Live in Agony Die in Pain” spills boiling lava, the guitars cutting through fiery tributaries, the growls burying all hope beneath the flames. There’s a section of hypnosis that sets the stage for doomy, sooty punishment that is doled out generously, an attack taking calculated turns, everything ending in blinding carnage. “Decrepit Womb” starts clean, hinting at some calm, but it’s devoured by doomy death and howls that smother, the savagery continuing to find new levels of pain. Monstrous chaos bleeds into the picture, growls strangling, the final moments coming at you suddenly and violently. Closer “Emaciated” has guitars encircling and then unloading, ugly growls crawling down your back, skull-dragging madness dragging cinders across your face. Guitars layer as doomy frost begins to accumulate, the power haunting and bringing a freezing finish.

“Time to Rot” is an effective, economical serving of classic death metal with a little bit of doom burned around the edges for taste, and Filth have a great launching-off point for diving deeper into the void. This is properly brutal and doesn’t overstay its welcome which, trust me, is incredibly refreshing among the sea of over-bloated records. This album gets in, crushes your will to live, and fades before you really know what hit you. 

For more on the band, go here: https://filthdeath.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: https://www.mesacounojo.com/shop/filth-time-to-rot-lp/

Or here: https://www.rottedlife.com/rotted-life-releases

For more on the label, go here: https://www.mesacounojo.com/

And here: https://www.rottedlife.com/

PICK OF THE WEEK: Hell sojourn through existential dread, drive into doom storm on ‘Submersus’

The human experience is a miserable one for so many people, and it’s about to get more difficult and blatantly unfair. In very few other times were people this beaten down by the power structure, some ignorantly so, and there is no one coming anytime soon to change that fate. A lot of times, it’s hell.

Which brings us to Hell the band, a one-man project helmed by M.S.W. that long has travelled through a world of existential suffering. “Submersus,” the project’s fifth full-length, and first in eight years, pours more of that into five tracks that batter with doom, sludge, and pain. There aren’t a ton of new twists and turns on this record, and there doesn’t need to be. M.S.W. has a way of churning you mind, heart, and body, helping you get a tiny glance at the emotions that went into making this music. It’s always destructively heavy, musically and lyrically, and the path you take will leave you battered and torn.  

“Hevy” opens in a hail of feedback before the tempo begins pummeling, M.S.W. wailing, “What have I become?” We head directly into grime and pain, drubbing as the screams fry, the playing shifting heavier into sludge, guitars building a swelling atmosphere. Gazey fire expands its grasp as the tempo blows open, spacious chaos spreading, guitars conjuring a fog that blankets everything. “Gravis” chugs, slowly bathing in the increasing pressure. Agonizing screams ripple down your spine as the playing is dragged through madness, the fuzz accumulating, drone thickening and blocking out all light. Wordless calls float as the electricity scorches, screams burn as cleaner notes rise, mournful melodies looping into a hopeless oblivion.

“Factum” has guitars quivering and a sunburnt feel wilting and bleaching color. A lonesome aura fills your chest as guitars cry out, slowly picking up the intensity before finally bowing to solitude. “Mortem” feels swampy and thick, shrieks maiming as sounds spread deeper into the darkness. Morbid leads moan as the battering delivers a calculated attack, leads suddenly glimmer, and we’re driving into fury as feedback drowns, and cold water freezes your flesh. Closer “Bog” emerges from the shadows, developing a cosmic bend, hellish screams choking you in the void, wrenching as the bruising continues. Sounds grow more immersive and fierce, the drone returns and buzzes, and dreams are warped, bleeding into a bizarre timeline in another dimension.

“Submersus” arrives at a unique, and miserable time in human existence, and anyone already struggling existentially likely isn’t doing much better these days. M.S.W. captures that suffering in these five songs that, yes, also attach nicely to his previous work where the search for some relief from excruciating personal efforts that often end up feeling feeble and pointless. This is music for searching within oneself for the remaining drops of strength we have when the outside world aims to drain it from our lifeless bodies.  

For more on the band, go here: https://loweryourhead.bandcamp.com/

To buy the album, go here: http://sentientruin.com/releases/hell-submersus

For more on the label, go here: http://sentientruin.com/