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Rheia is a record thick with atmosphere and poetry that one can only call ethereal.
Trap Them basically shoves your head into a mulcher and keeps on grinding with Crown Feral.
Neurosis are back, expanding their soundworlds and proving once more that they are among the greats.
It’s been almost sixteen years to the month since Brujeria has delivered product to the masses. That’s awhile for cartel boys to be out...
This new supergroup featuring members of Mastodon, Dillinger Escape Plan, Alice in Chains and Mars Volta takes listeners comfortable with those bands down a...
In The Woods are back and in prime position to become one of the biggest bands in dark progressive metal all over again.
Black metal and doom collide on a split between two of the undergrounds sickest acts.
Like most good trends, the popularity and presence of metallic hardcore has been at a constant ebb and flow. Peaking with the momentum from...
By the time it’s over, you might be able to feel the scraping of bare branches on your skin.
Polar Similar is the perfect title for an album such as this; it's as much a polar opposite as can be from Norma Jean's...
Sorceress is a peculiarly strong album, but not heavy in any traditional sense, and Åkerfeldt often seems to have merely broadened his influences rather...
Album number seven sees Inquisition both pushing for new horizons while also showing signs of growing a bit too comfortable with their own formula
What Decision Day gives Sodom is the ability to add new songs to their set-list. Likewise, it gives fans new songs to mosh and...
Paying no heed to the controversy/drama presently simmering beneath this band’s surface, the fact of the matter is Beelzefuzz do an excellent job of...
After half a decade of waiting prog metallers Hammers Of Misfortune are back. The question remains - was it worth the wait?
This doom metal massif is as heavy as the Himalaya's, and the passion involved is next to none.
Russian Circles have done it again, once more expanding their sound and forcing us to recognize their blazing glory.
The sophomore effort from the Reading, PA based progressive death metal quartet sees the band continuing their consistency in delivering rock-solid and forward-thinking music.
Deny the Cross is friggin' bestial, and one of the alphas amongst the powerviolence crowd.
This album gets to the heart of what extreme music is: an artistic expression of the dark, ugly side of existence (whether in this...
Some combinations are just inevitably fantastic. Peanut butter and jelly. Chocolate cookies and milk. Black Sabbath and Clutch. With vocalist Neil Fallon and drummer...