The Scrolls of Akhenaten: May 3rd, 2024

Having returned from tour with my band Ratpiss in the United States this past week I encountered a ton of cool bands who definitely deserve mention on this here segment on the Heavy NFLD blog. If any of these band names, album covers, or descriptions entice you then you definitely need to check them out!

Black

Atomic Cretins – Day of Torment
April 12th, 2022
Blackened Thrash Metal
Independently Released
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Day of Torment”

Emerging from the depths of Philadelpha to join the ranks of other Philly metalpunk rebels like Zorn and Devil Master, Atomic Cretins are exactly what I want from blackened thrash metal. Their debut EP is both heavy and ripping while maintaining a spooky, vampiric atmosphere, the perfect mixture for this style of extreme music. The riffs are fast and unrelenting, the vocals are absolutely atrocious (complimentary) and the drumming is pulverizing. All of this is combined with devilish guitar solos that conjure comparisons to Sarcofago and early Mayhem, while the occasional synth passage drapes the EP in a morose quality. With a name like Atomic Cretins it’s no surprise that the band sounds as nuclear as they do, with comparisons to Teutonic thrash outfits of old like Sodom and Kreator also being apt. Don’t sleep on this Philly four piece.

Death

Aroma – Adenocarcinoma
July 14th, 2023
Goregrind / Slam / Death Metal
Independently Released
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Desiccated Scalp Slowly Rotting”

Upon my band’s return route to the frozen northern wastes of Canada we made a stop in the city of West Chester, about 45 minutes west of Philadelphia, where we played in a VFW hall called The Moose Lodge. Among the bands that graced this bill was Aroma, who opened up the show. Their brand of slamming goregrind was honestly a lot more interesting than most bands who I’ve heard in this genre. Instead of relying exclusively on slow, downtuned chugs and pig squeals or gurgles like most slam does, Aroma had a lot of variety in their music. They mixed higher tempo death metal riffs in with the chugs, changing things up on a dime, while the vocals transformed back and forth between deep guttural lows and pained mid-range highs. They were easily one of my favourite bands we played with on this tour.

Doom

Messe – Connemara PL
May 1st, 2021
Psychedelic / Stoner Rock
Independently Released
Bathurst, New Brunswick, Canada
Standout Song: “Cette Étoile Inconnue”

Not a band that my band played with on this tour, but a band that one of my other bands played with on a previous tour from last year. Messe, hailing from the far eastern town of Bathurst in New Brunswick, are pure Acadian rock and roll through and through. Mixing elements of Black Sabbath together with other groups from the same era like Led Zeppelin, Iron Butterfly, Blue Cheer, and more, these guys really embrace that old school 60’s and 70’s sound on this debut EP. While the band has released a new EP this year, this is the one I’m more familiar with so I chose to represent this one instead. It’s loud as hell, with the guitars reverberating and echoing across the boreal landscape all the way to the coast. While the music is all sung in French I think anglophones can still find a lot to enjoy from the instrumental aspect regardless.

Prog

Serling – The James Bevis Chronicles
August 16th, 2021
Mathcore / Technical Deathcore
Independently Released
Bowdoin, Maine, USA
Standout Song: “Time Enough at Last”

Admittedly this isn’t usually the kind of thing I’d be into these days. I had a huge phase in which I was super into mathcore and progressive / technical deathcore about 10 years ago, but the style doesn’t do much for me these days. However we did play alongside a band called Serling at a huge beachside fest in Boston called Weedviolence Fest during this tour, and when I found out that their whole deal is that their music is all inspired by The Twilight Zone I knew I’d have to give them a fair shake. It’s still not really the kind of stuff I personally go out of my way to listen to, but this is music that was made for people who love bands like The Tony Danza Tapdance Extravaganza, Car Bomb, Rings of Saturn, The Dillinger Escape Plan, and The Red Chord. Mathy and heavy as fuck.

Punk

Corrupt World – Watch it Burn
December 16th, 2023
Crust Punk
No Time Records
Burlington, Vermont, USA
Standout Song: “How Can You Justify?”

Ratpiss’ old touring mates in Corrupt World were kind enough to set up the final show of our recent run in the ol’ U.S. of A. in Burlington, Vermont and it was a pleasure to share the stage with them again. If you like noisy as hell, relentless, d-beat crust punk that incorporates elements of grindcore and harsh noise into the mix then this band is for you. This is unrepentant and raw as fuck music that pulls no punches when it comes to grinding your eardrums to dust against the pavement. Just because it’s noisy as hell, though, doesn’t mean that Corrupt World is without a degree of catchiness to their music. Quite the opposite. Many of the songs on this EP have fairly catchy guitar riffs and ripping solos that are derived straight from the Motorhead-adjacent rock and roll stylings of old school hardcore punk.

Thrash

Artificial Scarcity – Empires to Ashes
July 14th, 2023
Grindcore / Thrash Metal / Death Metal
Independently Released
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Free the Land”

While Artificial Scarcity are definitively a grindcore band, it would be remiss of me to ignore the copious amount of thrash metal influence in their music. Perhaps given that guitarist Sam Agnew has played in thrash bands before, it’s a bit unsurprising. It would also be remiss of me to not mention the band that I had just spent the past week and a half on the road with, ripping up venues all across the east coast of the States. Do not skip out on Artificial Scarcity. Not only are they musically impressive, featuring unabashed ripper after ripper across this debut record, but politically they hit the nail on the head. Appropriately calling out the state-imposed capitalist depravity of the modern world, from minimum wage slave labor to the government’s ignorance towards indigenous sovereignty, to the genocide of the Palestinians, to fighting back against state oppression. It’s all gloriously wrapped up in unbridled shred.

Trad

Goblet – Bastard Thrash
September 25th, 2020
Speed / Thrash Metal
Independently Released
Pittsfield, Massachusetts, USA
Standout Song: “Wing Fling”

While Goblet’s music is also undoubtedly rooted in thrash metal, there are elements of other genres present here as well. We get the occasional black metal tremolo-picked riff, while some of the riffage veers into death metal territory. They’re somewhere at the intersection of multiple genres while still feeling very much like just a Capital M “Metal” band. The music contained on here feels just as much influenced by bands like Municipal Waste and Metallica as it does 3 Inches of Blood and other power metal bands that draw upon that NWOBHM sound. We performed alongside these guys at the aforementioned Weedviolence Fest in Revere, Massachusetts and they were easily one of my favourite bands of the night. If you want fucking killer riffs, over-the-top vocals, and speed that kills, then Goblet is for you.

Non-Metal

The Pentagram String Band – Blood Blood Blood
August 9th, 2023
Bluegrass
Independently Released
Kansas City, Missouri, USA
Standout Song: “Mother of Babylon”

Perhaps one of the most interesting bills on this tour was a show we played in Atlanta, Georgia with a couple of bluegrass and folk bands at a venue called The Catacombs. It turned out that both our tours were hitting the same city on the same date so the bookers put us together for a bit of a mixed bill, which I was skeptical of at first, but came to enjoy quite a bit by the end. We performed alongside Johnny Lawhorn, the frontman of The Pentagram String Band, who performed his band’s material solo that night. His music was honestly kickass as hell. This man can play the banjo with a speed I’ve never before witnessed. Describing themselves as “suspicious of traditional bluegrass”, The Pentagram String Band draws inspiration from Satanism, the occult, and traditional Appalachian folk music to create a pastiche of darkness over the typically upbeat genre.

~ Akhenaten

The Scrolls of Akhenaten: April 26th, 2024

Despite being on the road in a completely different country I still will find the time to provide you with eight killer album recommendations because music is what makes the world go round. On that topic I’ve encountered a number of bands over the past week that definitely deserve a bigger audience.

Black

Infant Island – Obsidian Wreath
January 12th, 2024
Post-Black Metal / Skramz / Blackgaze
Independently Released
Fredericksburg, Virgina, USA
Standout Song: “Another Cycle”

The first time I was exposed to Infant Island it was when they were added last minute to a huge mixed bill that featured the likes of Gatecreeper and Fearing. It was odd but given how mixed the bill was I guess it made sense to toss a screamo band on there. Admittedly I wasn’t all that into them for this live show but decided to check out their new record when it dropped earlier this year and was shocked to find out just how damn much I liked it. This album is fucking phenomenal, featuring tons of atmosphere, triumphant guitar work that screams out over relentless blast beats and passages of intense, cathartic screaming. Screamo and black metal may seem at polar ends of the musical spectrum but bands like Infant Island manage to bridge that gap almost flawlessly and this record is proof of that. Obsidian Wreath is a phenomenal release that deserves your attention.

Death

Eyecatcher – Eyecatcher
December 13th, 2023
Death Metal
Independently Released
Baltimore, Maryland, USA
Standout Song: “Blood Carnival”

Eyecatcher is a four piece death metal outfit that my own band Ratpiss played with while on tour in Long Island City, New York. This Maryland quartet was amazing in the live setting and their brand of Obituary / Power Trip worshipping death metal was right up my alley. Checking them out on the recording side of things I am happy to report that their first self-titled release is just as good sounding as the live versions of these songs were. This is ripping death metal with thrash metal and grindcore influence that would not go unwelcome on a playlist next to bands like Frozen Soul and Sanguisugabogg. While this EP is “blink and you’ll miss it” short, it’s packed with more killer riffs and drum beats that you can shake a disembodied leg at. If the cover art doesn’t sell you on it already, let the song titles like “Blood Carnival” and “Wormtongue” entice into the grotesque nature that awaits.

Doom

Horndal – Head Hammer Man
April 19th, 2024
Progressive Sludge Metal
Prosthetic Records
Stockholm, Sweden
Standout Song: “Calling: Labor”

I was first introduced to Horndal through my friend Tyler. Admittedly when I first checked it out I wasn’t sure about it but after numerous repeat listens it dawned on me: this album is fucking incredible. This thing combines elements of the bright, harmonized guitar work of groups like Thin Lizzy or Kvelertak along with the progressive riffing nature of bands like Mastodon as well as the raw sense of urban decay ushered in by bands like Tombs or Morne to create a sound I’ve never quite heard before. This thing is a beast of modern metal, and not in the same way that people describe Lamb of God. This is the pinnacle of modern metal music, utilizing every aspect of heavy music that I personally love in such a way that I’ve never been privy to. It’s experimental while also being catchy as fuck, all while the gruff caveman vocals detail stories about the history and legends of the band’s hometown for which they are named.

Prog

Orbs – Asleep Next to Science
August 17th, 2010
Nu Prog / Post-Hardcore / Space Rock
Equal Vision Records
United States
Standout Song: “A Man of Science”

Orbs was a band of particular interest to me back in 2010 when they first emerged onto the scene of modern, nu-progressive artists that had readers of the blog Heavy Blog is Heavy fawning. Featuring such notable names as Dan Briggs from Between the Buried and Me, Adam Fisher of Fear Before the March of Flames, and Ashley Jurgemeyer of Abigail Williams, this was a supergroup of sorts that existed to blend elements of jazz, prog, and space rock with a post-hardcore affectation and approach to songwriting, and holy moly did they ever knock it out of the park. Almost 15 years after the fact I still come back to this album and can sing along to all the words like no time at all has passed. Relentlessly interesting and masterfully composed with hooks for days both on the vocal front as well as the instrumental front, it’s a shame Orbs hasn’t been more active in the intervening years.

Punk

Diuretic – Martyrfucker
May 14th, 2023
Grindcore / Hardcore Punk
Independently Released
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Nepo Baby”

Another band that Ratpiss has shared the stage with, multiple times now. Philadelphia’s Diuretic absolutely fucking rule. Not only are they super cool people, but their music fucking rips too. The band has released one EP and a demo as of their existence so far, with Martyrfucker being the most recent effort. Pissed off, aggressive, loud and nasty, this is grindcore as it should be. Along with the general angry vibe of the music it also sounds raw as fuck. It’s not really “pure” grindcore in a sense since most of the music on here doesn’t rely exclusively on blast beats, and there are a lot of groovier sections with two-step parts that lean them a little bit more towards the hardcore punk side of grindcore. That said Diuretic is still full of angst, piss, and vinegar, and this EP is a prime example of just what the Philadelphia grind scene has to offer.

Thrash

Drowning in Blood – Crush the Weak
December 20th, 2021
Thrash Metal / Crossover
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Crush the Weak”

This Montreal thrash trio, which has since evolved into a quartet, have been slowly making a name for themselves over the past year in Quebec and the wider Eastern Canadian scene. Taking influence from both the realms of old school thrash metal legends like Slayer and Anthrax as well as newer crossover institutions, the band doesn’t really fall squarely into one category or another. There’s a hefty amount of hardcore punk influence going on here, especially on the EP’s opener “Chernobyl”, but the ripping thrash doesn’t take long to kick in. Guitarist Christophe Michaud has one goal in mind and that’s to rip your head from your neck by making you headbang like a fucking lunatic. He accomplishes that goal in spades on here, while making sure the punk influence keeps things fun and upbeat.

Trad

Gatekeeper – From Western Shores
March 24th, 2023
Power Metal / Traditional Heavy Metal
Cruz del Sur Music
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Standout Song: “Western Shores”

Vancouver’s Gatekeeper are the best kept secret in the world of the New Wave of Traditional Heavy Metal originating from Canada. This band embraces every classic metal cliche, taking as much influence from bands like King Diamond and Mercyful Fate as they do bands like Blind Guardian. They straddle the line between old school heavy metal outfits like Dio as well as pure power metal that emerged from Europe in the 80’s and 90’s a la Helloween. Delightfully melodic and impossibly catchy, every song on this record is absolute fucking banger and deserves to be blasted at max volume. With lyrics inspired by the works of famous fantasy and horror authors like Robert E. Howard and H.P. Lovecraft, listening to this album makes me feel like Conan the goddamned barbarian, riding a mighty steed across the plains of uncharted wilderness, a great broadsword strapped across my back.

Non-Metal

Com Truise – In Decay
July 16th, 2012
Synthwave
Ghostly International
Orlando, Florida, USA
Standout Song: “Data Kiss”

Have you ever been on a long-ass drive that you started early in the day, like before noon, and you keep on screaming down the highway, still having not reached your final destination as the sun goes down behind the hills and it seems like night is going to last forever? You’ve had one too many energy drinks and you’re wearing sunglasses to minimize the glare of the searing lights of the construction zone you’re passing through? Well this album is the soundtrack to that vibe. This is a night driving album if there ever was one. Much like other synthwave artists like Perturbator, Carpenter Brut, or Filmmaker, Com Truise has made a career off of perfectly encapsulating the atmosphere of the liminal space that is a highway after dark. That said Com Truise’s music is a bit more chillwave-leaning than the retro and horror inspired vibes of those other artists, but the comparison is still apt.

~ Akhenaten

The Scrolls of Akhenaten: April 5th, 2024

This week’s installment of The Scrolls of Akhenaten is going to turn up the heat because some of these records ended up being some of my top reviewed albums of the past several months (last year into the first few months of this year) over on our sister blog at Where Strides the Behemoth. Seriously, these are some of my favourite albums from recent memory, so even if you don’t like them, you might get a better idea of my own taste and why the albums I review here get the scores that they do (if you’ve ever been curious about that, that is.) Onwards!

Black

Bloody Keep – Rats of Black Plague
January 17th, 2024
Black Metal
Grime Stone Records
Los Angeles, California, USA
Standout Song: “Imbibe”

If ever there was a black metal project that just filled you with joy because of how utterly silly and full of whimsy the music is then this record is for you. I couldn’t believe upon first listen just how relentlessly catchy this record is. Every riff, every keyboard melody, every drum beat, just burrows into your brain and infects you like a virus. I kept coming back for more, re-listening to it again and again and again because I just couldn’t get enough of the addictive sound this record provides. Don’t let the frankly terrible cover art fool you. This album knows exactly what it wants to do and accomplishes it in spades. I can scarcely think of a black metal record that has invigorated this much energy and magnificence in me in recent memory, and for that reason Bloody Keep managed to craft what has easily become one of my favourite records of 2024 so far.

Death

Paratomb – Nocturnal Spirit Rituals
March 1st, 2024
Blackened Death Metal
Independently Released
Charlottetown, Prince Edward Island, Canada
Standout Song: “Ancient Embodiments of the Red Planet”

Paratomb are a four piece death metal band who hail from Charlottetown on Prince Edward Island. Their first EP, while great, felt a little too adjacent to groove metal to really hook me in, especially in the vocal performance. With this new EP, however, Paratomb have absolutely outdone themselves. For one, the production here is immensely improved, sounding much more akin to old school death metal and first wave black metal instead of the more modern sound their debut EP had. Secondly the songwriting and musicianship on display has obviously matured. The songs sound way tighter and contain much more dynamism than their first effort. Paratomb had already made me a fan by virtue of being a band playing this kind of extreme music from such an isolated place, but with this new EP they’ve made me excited for whatever they’re going to get up to next.

Doom

Green Lung – This Heathen Land
November 3rd, 2023
Doom Metal / Occult Rock
Nuclear Blast Records
London, England, UK
Standout Song: “The Forest Church”

This record almost squeaked by me at the end of 2023 and I’m glad I checked it out because it wound up making my best of list at the end of the year. I would describe this record as being an album for people who thought Ghost’s first album was great but couldn’t really vibe with everything else they did after. It’s occult-themed doom metal with a flair for the theatrical, combining huge, epic Hammond organ instrumentation with fantastic riffs and incredibly infectious vocals. Every song on this thing is a certified banger (in my opinion), chronicling the bizarre world of Albion occultism through a series of heavy, melancholy, and ultimately just mercilessly fun tracks. If any of what I’ve said sounds like this album might peak your fancy then you owe it to yourself to check this one out. It’s mesmerizing and I’ve found myself coming back to it time and time again.

Prog

Naxatras – IV
February 25th, 2022
Progressive / Psychedelic Rock
Independently Released
Thessaloniki, Greece
Standout Song: “Omega Madness”

The Greek band Naxatras has some of the best album art in the psychedelic rock genre, as evidenced by the absolutely badass and glorious cover art for IV, their fourth full length record. Naxatras’ music kind of falls somewhere in between the worlds of psychedelic rock, stoner rock, and progressive rock, all of which converge to create a sound that is spacious, atmospheric, and grandiose, like I’m on a hotboxed spaceship slowly cruising through the farthest reaches of the galaxy. If the phrase “far out” was an album, this would be it. The raucous drums and chunky yet sublime riffing are joined only occasionally by the vocals, which remain largely in the background, taking a back seat to the instrumentals which are front and center, in your face, ready to make you feel like you’re about to lift off into orbit, never to return.

Punk

Stand Alone – Mobbing Down the Block
September 5th, 2020
Skate Punk / Melodic Hardcore
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Stand Alone”

This Montreal trio have been buds of mine for a long time, and if you think I’m gonna not shout them out just because they’re my friends well, that’s where your wrong. Skate punk has never really been my thing. It’s a genre that has always kind of turned me off with its whiny vocal approach and saccharine instrumentation, but Stand Alone have never quite fit that mould in my opinion. They’re unapologetically fast, ripping through these songs with intensity and an ability to write really catchy hooks. With drums that careen forth, unstoppable, and an attitude full of piss and vinegar and shouty vocals that are both raspy and melodic, Stand Alone definitely stands apart from the rest of the skate punk outfits I’ve personally been exposed to in Montreal. They’re a lot of fun, and if you ever get a chance to see them live I recommend you do it.

Thrash

Evil – Possessed by Evil
February 1st, 2021
Blackened Thrash Metal
Nuclear War Now! Productions
Tokyo, Japan
Standout Song: “Raizin”

With an introductory track that opens with a blistering double bass assault you should have an idea of what you’re in for with this sophomore effort from Japanese black thrashers Evil (appropriate name). This album pulls no punches as it seeks to accomplish its only goal: complete and total sonic destruction and the pillaging of the corridors of thought inside your mind. This stuff is unapologetically evil, brash, and violent, fitting in rather well with the early pioneers of extreme metal who sought to kick the already blazing tempo of thrash metal up a notch. Notes of Sodom and Kreator adorn this album as much as the more rock n’ roll adjacent outfits like Judas Priest and the even more raucous first wave black metal acts like Bathory and Hellhammer. If any of those bands are up your alley then this record is definitely for you. It shocked me with its quality and I hope it does the same for you.

Trad

Leather Heart – Comeback
October 1st, 2015
Heavy Metal
The Fish Factory
Madrid, Spain
Standout Song: “The Crow”

I’ve definitely recommended this album in the past when this segment was a bit more of a regular feature on the blog, but it bears repeating because this record is a complete and total masterpiece. Whenever anyone brings up the genre of traditional heavy metal or the modern NWOTHM movement I am always quick to tell them about this album. It’s a masterpiece of classic heavy metal revivalism that combines all the best tropes of the genre into one explosive cocktail of perfected, glistening steel. This is the only album that Leather Heart ever released and, to my knowledge, they’re not really doing much these days. The irony of the record being called Comeback is not lost on me, but don’t let the cliche album art and self-referential nature of the record’s title dissuade you. Every song contained within here is a brilliant piece that so perfectly encapsulates everything great about this genre.

Non-Metal

Antoine Dufour – Development
2006
Acoustic Fingerstyle / Progressive Folk
CandyRat Records
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Spiritual Grove”

The first time I heard “Spiritual Grove” by Antoine Dufour I would’ve been in high school and I remember very vividly being completely shocked that an acoustic guitar could sound like this. Dufour is an undeniably talented and skilled guitarist for whom the acoustic guitar feels more like an extension of his person than just an instrument that he picks up and plays. Far from the typical sounds of acoustic-centric folk music, Dufour adds a technically complex edge to his playing by approaching the acoustic guitar with the fingerstyle method of playing, plucking strings with pitch perfect accuracy. This approach to folk is somewhat progressive and even jazzy at times as the playing manoeuvres through different movements, never slowing down, always rolling forward to the next segment, ready to dazzle you with the beauty found within the complexity.

~ Akhenaten

The Scrolls of Akhenaten: March 29th, 2024

Welcome back, dear readers, to The Scrolls of Akhenaten, the weekly segment in which I, your titular host, deliver unto you recommendations of brazen, heavy, and aggressive music spanning across seven different sub-genres, as well as one non-metal recommendation for those of you who don’t like to bludgeon your ear drums into pulp on the regular (but who am I kidding, we all do that all the time anyways, right?) Read on, and consider giving some of these albums, both old and new, a listen. Perhaps you’ve already heard of them? Well, in that case, why not consider a re-visit?

Black

Valdrin – Throne of the Lunar Soul
November 24th, 2023
Melodic / Blackened Death Metal
Blood Harvest
Cincinnati, Ohio, USA
Standout Song: “Seven Swords (In the Arsenal of Steel)”

Cropping up right at the tail end of last year, this record almost squeaked right by me. When I saw the frankly beautiful album art though I knew I’d have to give it a shot, and I’m so glad that I did because this album rules. It isn’t pure black metal, but neither is it pure death metal, resting somewhere in between, both genres in pure harmony with one another. This album contains a great deal of symphonic elements but never do they feel unwelcome or overbearing as they so often do in the midst of other projects that attempt this sound. It feels rather like an addition to the metal rather than forcing the guitars to take a back seat. Speaking of guitars, the riffs on this thing? God damn. They’re glorious. If you’re a fan of old school melodic black metal like Dissection or even folksy melodeath bands like Wintersun then this record is absolutely for you, though perhaps is significantly darker in tone than the latter.

Death

Concrete Caveman – Feral
November 10th, 2023
Death Metal / Grindcore
Strange Mono / Frozen Screams Imprint
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Mental Epidemic”

If the album art and logo are anything to go by then you’ve probably already got an idea of what you’re getting into with this record. I first became aware of Concrete Caveman when my own band was booked on a bill with them during a tour last year that brought us to Philadelphia, and woah did they ever blow my mind. Easily one of my favourite bands that we shared the stage with during that run, they were energetic, violent, brutal, charismatic, and ultimately just a hell of a lot of fun. Musically the ape-like creature on the cover art is a pretty accurate depiction of what you should expect from this thing: utterly heavy and ignorant, knuckle-dragging riffs with a bit of a grindy, punk-adjacent edge that gives them the extra oomph to stand out in the crowd. Every riff, every guttural vocal, every scream, every pulverizing punch of the drums, feels like getting smacked upside the head with an iron shovel. Brutal.

Doom

Seum – Double Double
February 2nd, 2023
Sludge / Doom Metal
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Razorblade Rainbow”

Eschewing the standards laid down by the godfathers of rock n’ roll, Montreal’s Seum forgo the typical addition of an electric guitar in their mix, relying solely on the smooth tones of a fuzzed-out bass guitar to provide their bombastic, heavy riffs and catchy songwriting throughout this sophomore effort from the trio. While all three of the band’s members, Gaspard, Piotr, and Fred, originally hail from France, they have settled in nicely to life in Canada, a fact which comes across in their music. Both their first record, Winterized, and this 2023 follow-up, contain references to Canadian culture, as well as the culture of Montreal specifically both in the music itself as well as their artistic direction. Outside of that though, I cannot emphasize just how gosh darned catchy their music is. For a band who relies exclusively on the bass to lay down the foundation of their sound, they absolutely crush every track on this record.

Prog

Cave Sermon – Divine Laughter
January 18th, 2024
Progressive / Technical Death Metal
Independently Released
Melbourne, Australia
Standout Song: “Beyond Recognition”

This album sort of came out of nowhere for me when I was first recommended it by somebody on the metal side of Twitter. The second full length effort from Australian multi-instrumentalist and solo musician Charlie Park, Divine Laughter is a monumental slab of progressive and technical death metal that occasionally straddles the line between death metal and post metal. It feels like their are equal shades of both Cynic and Isis at war with one another behind the Jackson Pollock-esque cover painting that represents the chaos contained within this record. I’ve always had a bone to pick with tech death as a genre for so many bands having a stunning lack of ability to write memorable parts. Cave Sermon does the opposite. This record, for all its disharmonic, atonal, experimentation, has so many riffs that stand out and get stuck in your head. It’s not exactly an easy listen, but every time I go through it I find something new to love.

Punk

Zorn – Zorn
March 25th, 2023
Crust / Blackened Punk / Metalpunk
Sorry State Records
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “The Spell of the Fairy Tree”

Around the same time that I was getting into Devil Master (2018/19, shoutout to Adam Giles for that life changing recommendation) I was also put onto a few other bands from the New England metalpunk world, Zorn being among them. Their brand of sci-fi and horror-themed metalpunk was instantly addictive, to the point that when their first full length record came out I played it almost on repeat for months. Little did I know that my own band would get a chance to open for them not long afterwards. Seeing these guys live was an unforgettable experience, but even so I still come back to this album time after time. Nothing else really scratches the itch for this type of blackened punk that has ridiculously shreddy guitars, quick and to the point, no-nonsense song structures, and vocals that sound like an unhinged madman just going brazenly feral on the mic. This was easily one of my favourite records of 2023 and it should be yours too.

Thrash

Dissimulator – Lower Form Resistance
January 26th, 2024
Progressive / Technical Thrash Metal
20 Buck Spin
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Automoil and Robotoil”

Montreal is a city that has long been known for the cornucopia of progressive and technical extreme metal bands that have emerged from it, to say nothing of being the home of legendary prog-thrashers Voivod who originated from neighbouring Jonquière. Dissimulator are the latest in this long tradition of Quebec prog and tech metal, though they’ve taken a noticeably thrashier edge than some of their contemporaries. Evoking comparisons to other tech-thrashers like Vektor and Watchtower, Dissumulator absolutely floored me with this debut record of theirs, which only dropped in January of this year. When looking at the body of work from the various members of this band, which includes such lauded acts as Chthe’ilist, Beyond Creation, First Fragment, Worm, and Phobocosm, it should come as no surprise that the music here is made by musicians at the top of their craft, combined with a catchy edge.

Trad

Sonja – Loud Arriver
September 23rd, 2022
Traditional Heavy Metal / Goth Rock
Cruz del Sur Music
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Nylon Nights”

Forged by Melissa Moore following her departure from the black metal band Absu, Sonja is a significant departure from her work in the previous band, but one that is completely and totally welcome. Loud Arriver feels like the perfect mixture of old school heavy metal with goth rock, twisting the heavy, fist-pumping awesomeness of the former with the moody brooding atmosphere of the latter to forge a sound that is, in my opinion, wholly unique within the New Wave of Traditional Heavy Metal movement. The second I heard the first single from this record, “Nylon Nights”, I was immediately hooked and have not looked back since. This album is filled to the brim with absurdly catchy hooks, brilliant melodies, and an infectiousness that I just can’t shake. Everything about this album just kicks fucking ass. I literally get goosebumps when listening to it sometimes. If that isn’t enough to get you to check it out, I don’t know what is.

Non-Metal

Holy Locust – Beneath the Turning Wheel
June 17th, 2023
Folk Punk / Gothic Country / Dark Folk
Flail Records
USA
Standout Song: “Dead Wake”

I have long been a disliker of folk punk. The vast majority of the stuff I’ve heard from the genre did not appeal to me in any way, leaving me longing to either never hear the genre again or to hear something that would truly catch my ears. Enter Holy Locust. While not the first folk punk band I’ve found myself enjoying in recent years, they are the most recent that I’ve been put onto, and I can confirm that they absolutely rule. This newest album of theirs is an incredible piece of modern folk music that, unlike most of the folk punk I’ve heard, is incredibly dark and mournful, brooding in its apocalyptic misery and commands that you take it seriously. It’s less of a folk punk record and more of a proper folk album, in my opinion, drawing upon the same sort of dark, gothic atmosphere as a band like Wovenhand, who I’ve shared in this segment before. If you’ve got a hankering for banjos, accordions and fiddles, this may be the album for you.

~ Akhenaten

The Scrolls of Akhenaten: March 22nd, 2024

Welcome back to The Scrolls of Akhenaten, the weekly blog segment in which I recommend a bunch of albums in different sub-genres of metal and punk, as well as few non-metal releases that strike my fancy. This week I’ve got some absolute bangers up my sleeve that everyone who reads this should absolutely give a chance at the very least. If you like your music fast and hard as fuck (with perhaps the exception of our prog selection for this week) then this is the bundle of records for you! Read on and consider giving these records a shot.

Black

Spite – Bathe the Babe in Bats’ Blood
May 18th, 2022
Blackened Punk / Metalpunk
Hells Headbangers Records
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA
Standout Song: “Spider Biter”

I first became aware of Spiter through following the band’s guitarist and vocalist Richard Spider on Instagram, where he goes by the name Sexman Leather on account of his various leatherworking creations. I later saw the band perform live at Turbo Haus and holy shit did they knock my socks off. This power trio (which also features members of Devil Master) rip forth with the ferocious terror of a blackened assault that combines elements of black metal and thrash metal together with hardcore punk and speed metal to create an unstoppable sound that crushes all in its path. This album is absurdly fast, unrelenting, and violent in every aspect, from both the mesmerizing music to the bloody imagery present on the album cover. If you want badass music about vampires and castles that pulls no punches when it comes to speed then Bathe the Babe in Bats’ Blood (say that 10 times fast) is the record for you.

Death

Øbelisk – The Architecture of Suffering
July 30th, 2023
Death Metal / Sludge Metal / Grindcore
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Maggot Christ”

Some of you are likely already very familiar with Øbelisk thanks to their tour in August of last year which landed them several shows across Newfoundland, including a date in Corner Brook and three dates in St. John’s. The band has been around since at least 2022 (though likely earlier), with The Architecture of Suffering being their first full length record, and boy does it fucking crush! Having seen these guys live a ridiculous number of times over the past couple of years I have become intimately familiar with these songs and they still hit just as hard now as they did when I first heard them. Like Spiter, Øbelisk is a power trio, and together they have composed a series of kickass songs that blend elements of death metal, sludge metal, and grindcore together to create a devastatingly heavy brand of concrete-heavy extreme metal that obliterates everything in its wake. Don’t sleep on Øbelisk.

Doom

Bison B.C. – Dark Ages
April 13th, 2010
Sludge Metal
Metal Blade Records
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Standout Song: “Stressed Elephant”

Taking things back to the past, I revisited this album from my youth recently and found that it still hits just as hard as it did way back then. Bison B.C. have released two albums in the intervening years since Dark Ages was initially released but this album just has something special about it that none of their other work really touched. It’s dark and brooding and even progressive at parts. Some of my favourite moments come when the band interject mournful synths into the otherwise purely metal instrumentals, making the whole piece sound like some sort of messed up funeral dirge. This record has a lot of variety and also feels like the perfect sonic representation of the kind of atmosphere that comes with living in cities in the great white north. It’s hard to describe exactly, but the vibe of Canadian urbanity is often expressed through the music of those who live in it in a way that bands from south of the border don’t quite tap into, and Bison is a great example of that.

Prog

Vulture Industries – Ghosts from the Past
June 16th, 2023
Avant-Garde / Progressive / Gothic Metal
Karisma Records
Bergen, Norway
Standout Song: “This Hell is Mine”

I’ve been aware of Vulture Industries for years but never really dove into their work until the release of this record. This album is what you get when you combine the expected black metal atmosphere of a band from Norway with a Gothic vocal affectation and aesthetic and a penchant to experiment with different sounds and melodies. Equal parts Opeth and ICS Vortex, as well as Devin Townsend and Unto Others, Vulture Industries have landed on a sound that is wholly unique within the world of progressive metal, and I’m completely and utterly addicted to it. I think this album in particular will probably appeal to fans of old school goth rock like The Sisters of Mercy or Siouxsie and the Banshees while also attracting fans of the more dark and atmospheric side of heavy metal, a la a band like Cellar Darling or perhaps even Paradise Lost. The influences here are too numerous to truly list, but if you like any of the bands mentioned above this record is worth checking out.

Punk

Mulch – Nothing Grows Out of Dried Flowers
February 19th, 2024
Hardcore Punk / Noise Rock
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Prudent Breakdown”

Yet another band coming to you from the city of Montreal is Mulch, a relatively new band who dropped their first EP a scant month ago. Nothing Grows Out of Dried Flowers is what you get when you put a guitarist and drummer who are approaching punk from a decidedly more eclectic side of the music world with a bassist who primarily plays hardcore and grindcore and a vocalist who has never been in a band before. This EP is absolutely brimming with energy and exudes a feeling of pissed off angst and vitriol, yet at the same time there is an experimental edge to it that I feel a lot of other Montreal punk bands don’t quite have. Parts of this record, from the off-kilter guitars to the tone of the bass, have a slight noise rock vibe to them, which at times reminds me more of bands like Lightning Bolt and Melt Banana, despite still being a hardcore punk band. Definitely an EP worth checking out for those with a flair for the experimental!

Thrash

Void – Horrors of Reality
February 1st, 2023
Thrash Metal
Independently Released
Lafayette, Louisiana, USA
Standout Song: “Feeding Frenzy”

Thrashing their way out of the bayou of Lafayette, Louisiana, Void are a relatively newer band, having been active since 2019, and Horrors of Reality is their first full length effort in that time frame. I first became aware of them through their campy and old school music video for the song “Voodoo”, which immediately drew me in through the visuals alone. It was a pleasant surprise then that the music was quality enough to bother checking out the full record, and I greatly enjoyed what I heard beyond the anachronistic cover art. These guys clearly love the thrash bands of yore and conjure a lot of comparisons to some of the greats, with Megadeth and Anthrax perhaps being the most obvious comparisons. The guitars absolutely rip and tear, the drums are punishing, and the compositions are creative. That’s saying something in a subgenre where most of the bands sound either like a low rent Metallica, Slayer, or Municipal Waste.

Trad

Significant Point – Into the Storm
February 7th, 2021
Speed Metal
Dying Victims Productions
Tokyo, Japan
Standout Song: “Heavy Attack”

I came across the Japanese speed metal quintet Significant Point through the NWOTHM Full Albums channel on YouTube and I am so glad I clicked on that video because good lord this thing fucking rips! Japanese metal bands have always had a flair for pomp and theatrics, and Significant Point is no different. While I can’t speak to what the band’s live performances look like, the music on this record is evidence enough of how much effort and skill these guys put into their craft. The drums are ridiculously fast, never taking a second to slow down. The guitars shred with unbelievable fury, and the vocals consist almost exclusively of high pitched falsetto wailing that carries across the music like the fighter jets depicted in the cover art. If ever there was music to engage in a dogfight with enemy aircraft to, this record would absolutely be it. It’s glorious and magnificent in every aspect, including the old school style of production that gives it all an air of authenticity.

Non-Metal

Mama’s Broke – Count the Wicked
June 1st, 2017
Celtic Folk / Americana
Independently Released
Halifax, Nova Scotia, Canada
Standout Song: “The Vein Braider”

Growing up in Newfoundland I admit that there was a certain resentment that I built up against folk music since it was all that I was exposed to as a youngin’ out around the bay. As an adult though I’ve cultivated more of an appreciation for folk, especially the Celtic kind, and Mama’s Broke may be the apex of what I’ve heard in this style from Atlantic Canada. First showed to me by one of my partners who hails from Nova Scotia, I immediately fell in love with their style of music that combines the traditional Celtic instrumentation with a degree of Americana influence. It’s obvious upon a first listen to this debut record from the duo that Lisa Maria and Amy Lou Keeler are absolute experts of their craft and their chosen instruments. Fiddles, banjos, mandolins abound on this masterpiece of the genre that only gets better with each subsequent listen.

~ Akhenaten

EP Review: Glitterglue – Friends Club

Glitterglue – Friends Club
September 13th, 2023
Powerviolence / Beatdown
Independently Released
St. John’s, Newfoundland

Last year there was a lot of activity in the Fogtown punk scene. One of the stand out releases was Glitterglue’s Friends Club. This EP dropped September 13th, 2023 and is a brief, brutal surge of violent hardcore coming from a place of true aggression. 

Glitterglue is raw, angst-ridden powerviolence with the approach of beatdown hardcore. Each track is a flurry of pummeling, high velocity blasts and stomping breakdowns. The vocals and attitude also show a skramz influence that while subtle gives their sound an additional edge.

Two highlights of Friends Club would be “What Is The Need?” and “Eat This Vegan Dick”. These two tracks really capture the overall sound of the EP as well as the group’s views and sense of humor.

Friends Club is a solid debut from a very exciting new group. 10 minutes of fresh, ferocious hardcore for those that want their punk fast and heavy. With a Friends Club like this, who needs enemies?

Final Verdict: 8.5/10
Awesome

Favourite Tracks:
“What is the Need?”
“Eat This Vegan Dick”

~ James Titford

Album Review: Needle Crafts – Frow’d Up

Needle Crafts – Frow’d Up
October 27th, 2023
Pop Punk / Power Pop / Skramz
Independently Released
St. John’s, Newfoundland

Needle Crafts’ debut album Frow’d Up is an album I missed when it first dropped in October 2023 and after having it on heavy rotation for a while makes me wish I got to it sooner. The St. John’s pop punk four piece has crafted an exceptional work that deserves to be heard.

The first thing that really grabbed me about this record is the quality of the songwriting and musicianship. This is the band’s first album and it sounds like they’ve had at least a few behind them. They know how to make pop punk fueled by youthful angst but never comes across as juvenile. There’s a maturity and self awareness to these songs that makes them so engaging. The tracks are also very distinct from one another but still all fit together with nothing feeling out of place. The massive power pop hooks that make their way into most of the tracks are excellent, and the heavier moments that bring things into skramz territory are very well done and gives the album an abrasive edge.

The production on the album is also top notch. Very clean and professional sounding while retaining the natural energy and emotional rawness of the music. I especially like how the harsh vocals sound. They fit in perfectly to the mix feeling at home with the cleans.

There’s lots of highlights on this album but “Worried Sick”,“I Was Thanked On The Da Slyme Album And All I Got Was To Live Below The Poverty Line”, and “Thousand” are three that really stood out to me. “Worried Sick” paints such a vivid picture with those first few lines and the acoustic guitar sounds fantastic. “I Was Thanked…” is an anthemic barn burner with on hell of a title. Then there’s “Thousand” which is the perfect song to end the album on. It’s got a chorus you’ll catch yourself humming to yourself long after you’ve heard it.

Frow’d Up is a fantastic album. Easily one of the best pop punk albums I heard in 2023, not just from the St. John’s scene but in general.

Rating: 9/10
Awesome

Favourite Tracks:
“Worried Sick”
“I Was Thanked on the Da Slyme Album…”
“Thousand”

~ James Titford

The Scrolls of Akhenaten: March 15th, 2024

“Ever thus from the sands of time, I return, with pestilence and famine bequeathed to all.”

Ages ago I used to do a segment on this blog called The Scrolls of Akhenaten in which I would recommend a series of albums or EPs from different genres of heavy and extreme music that aren’t from Newfoundland and Labrador. I did this simply in an effort to spread awareness of other music that I really like and to hopefully put some people on to artists they’ve never heard of. This concept was also inspired by one of our former contributors, Jonathan Simms, aka Abraxas the Reclaimer, who did a similar segment under the title of The Abraxas Decree.

All that said, I’ve decided to bring this segment back in an effort to continue spreading the good word about awesome music and also to diversify the kind of content that our readers have become used to on this blog. I would like to try to do this segment on a weekly basis, ever Friday, but for now we’re starting off with just one. The way it’s going to work is that each entry in this column will be from a different genre of heavy music, including: black metal, death metal, doom metal, prog, punk, thrash metal, traditional heavy metal, and one non-metal release as a palette cleanser.

Ergo, welcome to the resurrection of The Scrolls of Akhenaten! I hope you enjoy reading these as much as I enjoyed writing them.

Black

Skumstrike – Deadly Intrusions
March 17th, 2023
Blackened Speed Metal
Caligari Records
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Blood Red Vision”

Some of you may already be aware of Skumstrike due to the band’s association with Profane Order and Spectral Wound, both of whom share an association with Newfoundland through their shared band member Illusory. Skumstrike is the primary project of L.A. who formed the band with Serpent Corpse drummer Z.S. Based purely on the cover art and logo alone you should already have an idea of what the music on this thing sounds like. It is unrepentant, unrelenting blackened speed metal the likes of which I haven’t truly heard before. That said if you’ve ever perused the wares of underground labels like Hells Headbangers or the band’s current home at Caligari Records then you know that what they provide is quality. This album is liable to rip your head clean off your shoulders with wretched vocals, savage riffage, and an unforgiving percussive assault from behind the kit. Raw!

Death

Serpent Corpse – Blood Sabbath
July 5th, 2023
Old School Death Metal
Temple of Mystery Records
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Let the Rats Feed”

Speaking of Serpent Corpse, why don’t we bring them up for the death metal segment this week? These guys have fast grown into one of Montreal’s premiere old school death metal revivalist acts. While the city may primarily be known for the more technical variety of extreme metal, Serpent Corpse are at the forefront of the movement to revive the sounds of classic 80’s death metal spearheaded by bands like Obituary and Morbid Angel, and they do a damned good job of it too! There’s no bullshit to be found here. This whole album is just riff after riff after riff on top of groovy drums from Skumstrike’s own Z.S. While I would question a band’s decision to name one of their own original songs “Electric Eye” when one of the most famous metal songs ever written shares that title, it doesn’t get in the way of the quality meat n’ potatoes brutality that goes on beyond the album cover.

Doom

Völur – Death Cult
November 13th, 2020
Atmospheric Folk / Doom Metal
Prophecy Productions
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
Standout Song: “Inviolate Grove”

I was first introduced to this band by a partner of mine who is a fan of one of the folk projects that the group’s violinist and vocalist Laura C. Bates worked on. Taking one look through Bates’ page on Metal Archives and its clear that she’s got some serious chops, having worked with other names in the metal world that may be familiar to you such as Blood Ceremony, Witchrot, and Thantifaxath. In listening to this band however we’re gifted a much more somber, brooding, and atmospheric helping of melancholy doom that feels heavily inspired by nature and fantasy. If anyone is old enough to remember when the Saskatchewan band Black Tremor made the trek to St. John’s for a show at CBTG’s back in 2016, well, this band sounds like them but way more intense and with more of a focus on vocals. Völur may not be the first band to incorporate violin in their doom, but they do it damn well.

Prog

Closure in Moscow – Pink Lemonade
May 9th, 2014
Nu Prog / Progressive Rock / Alt Rock
Sabretusk
Melbourne, Australia
Standout Song: “Seeds of Gold”

This kind of record really isn’t for everybody. It’s mixture of progressive rock elements with aspects of pop music, alternative rock, funk, and avant-garde music could certainly be off-putting to people whose taste leans more towards the heavy and extreme. That said if you’re willing to give this record a shot you could be pleasantly surprised. I know I was. Perhaps it’s the theater kid in me that loves the ostentatious presentation and the theatrical grandeur this record provides but god damn do I ever love it. When it comes to the genre of “nu prog”, which is crowned by artists like Coheed and Cambria, a lot of it can be hit or miss with me. Closure in Moscow manage to be one of the best groups in the genre simply for their musical acumen and their ability to craft absurdly catchy tunes through an experimental haze and willingness to genre-bend. Let yourself love the poppy hooks that its full of.

Punk

Glowing Orb – Subterranean Prison
November 10th, 2023
Hardcore Punk
Independently Released
Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Standout Song: “Line Goes Up”

The Montreal hardcore scene, much like that of Newfoundland’s, has exploded in the post-pandemic world. There have been so many new bands that have emerged in the scene lately that it’s been hard to keep track sometimes. That said, with the cornucopia of new groups that pop up, some of them are bound to rise to the top. Enter Glowing Orb. These guys are easily one of the most ferocious and aggressive punk bands in Montreal, at least when it comes to their music and their live shows. If you ever get a chance to see them live, do it. You will not regret it. As for their recorded material, they’ve got a demo and a split, and then this most recent release, Subterranean Prison, which, in my opinion, contains their best tracks yet. Listen to the song “Line Goes Up” and tell me you don’t want to scream along with that chorus in the live setting. Heavy, relentless, and full of piss n’ vinegar.

Thrash

Pizza Death – Slice of Death
November 1st, 2021
Crossover / Thrash Metal
Disdain Records
Melbourne, Australia
Standout Song: “Super Special Supreme Commander”

Have you ever heard of pizza thrash? If you have there are probably a few bands that come to mind with the name. Municipal Waste and Iron Reagan are up there. D.R.I. perhaps. Well, allow me to introduce you to the pinnacle of this so-called sub-genre. The creme de la creme, folks. Pizza Death. This band sings exclusively about pizza, death, and death by pizza. It doesn’t get any more laser-focused than this. Normally I’d roll my eyes at such a concept, but if I’m being honest, this album absolutely fucking rips. The band has released more music since this one but this is the album that I always come back to. It’s a glorious mishmash of crossover, thrash metal, hardcore punk, and fastcore that intersperses absolutely nuclear riffs, unrelenting drums, and vicious vocals with a sprinkling of samples of various characters from pop culture talking about pizza. It’s as hilarious as it is utterly gnarly. It makes me want to shred a half-pipe while holding a pizza box in one hand and a PBR in the other.

Trad

Tower – Shock to the System
November 12th, 2021
Power Metal / Traditional Heavy Metal
Cruz del Sur Music
New York City, New York, USA
Standout Song: “Blood Moon”

Do you ever long for the glory days of heavy metal? Back when the music was real? Like the 70’s? Nah, like the early 70’s? Well, yearn no further my fellow appreciator of the old school sounds. Your search ends here. New York’s Tower are perhaps the most impeccable example of the New Wave of Traditional Heavy Metal that I have been seeking. Other groups like Leather Heart will always have my, well… my heart, but Tower does this style with an unmatched pizazz that I have yet to encounter in my endless sifting through this sub-genre and movement. Whether it’s vocalist Sarabeth Lindon’s incredibly powerful and expressive voice, or the glorious riffs, or the creative, energetic, and commanding drumming, this album has everything that an old head could ever ask for. To match that, I saw this band live back in 2023 at Foufounes Electriques in Montreal and they ruled that stage like true professionals. I can’t speak highly enough of this album and this band.

Non-Metal

Wovenhand – Ten Stones
September 11th, 2008
Alternative Country / Goth Rock
Glitterhouse Records
Denver, Colorado, USA
Standout Song: “The Beautiful Axe”

I have been a long time fan of Wovenhand, the band led by singer-songwriter David Eugene Edwards. The group’s atypical approach to the country genre that they have often found themselves lumped in with immediately caught my ears the first time I decided to check them out, with their record Consider the Birds. However, throughout their discography, it was this album, Ten Stones, that really solidified itself as my personal favourite. Combining elements of country music and Americana folk with the darkness of goth rock and the Southern Gothic aesthetic makes this album a must-listen for fans of any of the musical genres or aesthetics I just listed off. It is gorgeous, emotionally gripping, and darkly unsettling. No doubt this record appeals to metalheads in part because it is heavy, but without an overt reliance on distorted electric guitars. Rather it feels heavy in the same way a pregnant rain cloud feels heavy. There’s a certain atmosphere here, a darkness that cannot be described.

~ Akhenaten

EP Review: Carnage – Free at Last

“No importance held, never will, wait forever, suffer still.”

Carnage – Free at Last
July 23rd, 2023
Hardcore / Beatdown / Powerviolence
Independently Released
St. John’s, Newfoundland

As far as capital H “Hardcore” goes, I’ve never been the biggest fan of the genre. I’ve been a fan of NYHC bands like Sick of it All and Agnostic Front and such for years, but it’s only within the last couple of years since hardcore has really exploded in the post-pandemic world that I’ve started to get into it. This shit is everywhere these days to the point that it’s almost impossible to avoid, and so I’ve been exposed to tons of bands that have shifted my perspective on the whole genre. When it comes to Newfoundland, the scene of Fogtown Hardcore has, in particular, bursted with an obscene amount of new bands, and at the forefront of the heap is Carnage.

The band released a slew of demos throughout 2022 that were uploaded to YouTube and streaming services, but all of those demos pale in comparison to the awesomeness contained on this first proper EP from the band, Free at Last. Featuring seven tracks of pure, distilled sonic aggression, you’d be hard pressed to find another EP from 2023 that contains as much explosive energy within it than this one.

The vocals from Steve are heinous, throaty and vile. He sounds completely unhinged on this thing, screaming with a really high pitched rasp that reminds me of a lot of the hardcore bands I’ve seen live in Montreal (especially groups like Zooman and Glowing Orb). There’s so much piss and vinegar in these screams and it oozes over the entire recording. I love that it sounds like the audio recording is peaking at multiple moments, especially near the end of “These Chains”.

The riffs from guitarist Kendrick and bassist Mark are heavy, crushing, and distorted to hell, but on top of all that they’re super catchy. When the bass comes in on the intro track alongside the drums you know you’re in for a hell of a kick to the nuts as the rest of this EP chugs along. Some of the riffs here feel akin to something you might hear on an older NYHC recording, while others embrace the sporadic chaos of powerviolence, like on the track “Lifetime of Shit”. I also love the few moments where the guitars get real dissonant with it, like on the song “Stressed” or the lead-in to the bridge section on “Proud”.

Speaking of drums, Elijah is a force to be reckoned with behind the kit. There’s a lot of variety to be found here, from the double-bass-centric beat found on the intro to the “jump-da-fuk-up” grooves found on “Separation Anxiety” and other tracks here. There are also plenty of moments where he launches into brief passages of ultra-fast, one-two punk beats that steamroll the listener with little to no remorse.

Where this album shines aside from the composition though, is in the recording and production department. Recorded and produced by Bazooka frontman and Barely There Media founder Liam Ryan and mixed by the incredibly prolific Jacob Cherwick, these guys worked together to give this EP the best possible production job they could, and they killed it. The sound of the drums on this thing is fucking phenomenal. I love how cavernous the snare and toms sound, how full the bass drum is, and just how crunchy every cymbal hit is. The guitars and bass are loud as hell and pack a serious punch while the vocals, as mentioned before, are peaking, but in a way that actually suits the music instead of detracting from it.

This is a chaotic, noisy cavalcade of extreme hardcore mixed with elements of beatdown and powerviolence that no doubt inspires some serious violence in the live setting. I’ve fawned a lot over this EP throughout this review because it deserves it. It’s genuinely a fantastic piece of hardcore, and that’s coming from someone who isn’t really from this particular side or niche of underground extreme music. Don’t miss out on Free at Last.

Final Verdict: 4.5/5
Awesome

Favourite Tracks:
“Intro”
“Separation Anxiety”
“Stressed”
“Proud”
“These Chains”

~ Akhenaten

Album Review: Falter – Salt in the Soil

Falter – Salt in the Soil
November 26th, 2023
Black Metal
Independently Released
St. John’s, Newfoundland

In late 2023 St. John’s black metal alumnus Adam Sharr, perhaps best known for his position as vocalist of the blackened melodic death metal band Grenadier and as the sole creative force behind Nocturnal Prayer as well as the now defunct Oxygen Chapel and Bone Alley projects, returned with a new solo project. This time performing under the name Falter, the project released its first record, Salt in the Soil, at the tail end of the year. Coming out in November, this one almost squeaked by me, but I’m grateful to have caught it because this thing is monumental.

Lyrically focusing on the hardships of pastoral life, Falter melds elements of atmospheric black metal together with elements of rural folk instrumentation and classic black metal to produce a sound that plays into the lyrical subject matter, comparable to a project such as Panopticon or perhaps Agalloch. The record opens with a beautiful but simplistic clean guitar melody playing over a sample of trickling water on “The Trickling of Rain”, before launching into the plodding slog that is “Strife”.

The vocals here are harsh and screamed, though they don’t often venture into the high pitched shriek that is so common in most black metal. Sharr instead prefers to remain somewhere in the mid-range or even going a bit lower than that. His vocals are harsh, pained in agony, and doubtlessly powerful. As a treat, however, the record ends with a rendition of “The Old Sunday Dinner”, a cover of a song by The Martin Family, in which Sharr demonstrates his ability with clean vocals. Those who have been Sharr’s musical output will know that he released an EP of neofolk tunes earlier in 2023, and so it will come as no surprise to you that he’s a great singer aside from showing command over the harsh side of his voice, and “The Old Sunday Dinner” is a great example of that on this record.

The riffs here are mournful, melancholic, and full of grandeur, really dipping into the kind of melodies that emerge from the so-called Cascadian black metal scene, of which Panopticon and Agalloch are both a part. It’s epic and grandiose, but comes with a sense of loss, struggle, and nostalgia for a time long gone. That’s not every song, though. The track that follows “Strife”, entitled “Mattock”, contains a lot of variety in it, and showcases Sharr’s ability to embrace blackened punk riffs in a manner similar to perhaps some of Darkthrone’s work or even some riffs cooked up by the band Watain. It’s dark, shit-kicking, and makes me want to stomp heads. The song “Devout” continues these ideas, adding a bit of a jaunty, melodic twist on the whole atmosphere in a way not dissimilar to Sharr’s contemporary in Grole. I also love how the bass here stands out and cuts through the mix. Every now and then Sharr will throw in a little flourish on the bass at the end of a measure that in my opinion greatly enhances the flavour of the whole composition.

The drums are actually full of a lot more energy and creativity than I initially expected them to be. Atmospheric black metal of this nature tends to rely a lot on meditative drumming styles that lull the listener into a state of hypnosis through constant repetitiveness. That said, I think Sharr put a lot of thought into the drumming here. The types of rhythm patterns will change and transfer multiple times throughout the same track, greatly switching up the vibe of each song as they twist through different movements. There’s a lot of energy here, and I also think the fills are creative.

The production here is great too, if perhaps with the exception of the drums. The snare to me sounds a little weak and I wish that it cut through the mix a little bit more. But then again this is black metal. I’m just glad that the drums here are real and not programmed, as is the case with so many one man black metal bands and one man bands of other genres these days. Still the guitars are beautiful and the vocals sit well in the mix amidst everything else.

This is an excellent new record to add to the ever-growing canon of Newfoundland black metal, and easily one of the best releases to come out of the province this year with regards to extreme metal. I’ve been a fan of Sharr’s musical output for many years and he’s rarely if ever disappointed my expectations, and Salt in the Soil is no different. This record is chock full of variety, beautiful melodies, and ravenous punk-infused passages. It’s basically a pastiche of everything that makes black metal awesome, and I couldn’t ask for more than that.

Final Verdict: 9/10
Awesome

Favourite Tracks:
“Strife”
“Mattock”
“Devout”

~ Akhenaten