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"Lose Your Delusion is a very welcome return that blasts straight to its points with machine gun rapidity."
"TLTSOL is the sound of a band attempting to transcend the turning of tides within their scene."
"Heavy Steps acts a beacon of how to bolster one's own basics and starting points so as to inject new life into one's own...
"This is death metal drenched in gore and brutality. The artwork and song titles say it all."
"Employed to Serve sounds like they’re playing the music they’ve always wanted to write, and it’s hard not to love them for it."
One of the few pearls of wisdom my parents bestowed upon my sibling and I outside those rare moments they weren’t allowing the boob...
Somewhere, someone writing or YouTubing (or however kid's today get their point across) a review of Cannibal Corpse’s 15th album is kicking it off...
As if the grey in my beard and pubes and the number of times per night my parasympathetic nervous system rouses me in order...
With Product of My Environment, Jarhead Fertilizer becomes the kick in the teeth the extreme metal underground needs in 2021.
Beyond the disgusting distortion and primitive violence of Gravesend lies an unflinching look at the dark side of the city that never sleeps.
Välde is a fantastic blackened deathcore assault, one that brings Humanity's Last Breath to the top of the growing sub-subgenre.
Weight of the False Self comes after 26 years Hatebreed beating the same horse. Is the horse dead? Well… define alive.
Under Sullen Skies begins a new epoch for New York's Tombs, presenting a diverse onslaught of frightening atmosphere, skull-caving heaviness and inexplicable catchiness—along with...
Sólstafir brings its massive arrangements and rustic grit to notably accessible territory, rounded off by some callbacks to a savage past.
Emma Ruth Rundle & Thou bring the best out of each other, with plenty of sonic staples for fans of both artists to chew...
The long-awaited fourth album from Mr. Bungle returns to the band's thrash metal roots, seeking to realize the potential of its first demo.
Endarkenment leans harder into overwhelming speed and aggression when it counts most.
33 years after the band made grindcore what it is today with Scum, Napalm Death continues its penchant for inspired brutality.
The Glorious Dead has accomplished a real feat here: they've captured the spirit of doom metal, while still playing fast death metal.
Though Kall originated from a band rooted in frigid misanthropy, the band's long-expected sophomore album brings vibrant warmth to the band’s tortured aura.
With a few notable detours, this self-titled album is a solid reminder of why Lamb of God rose to the top of the New...
Dream Squasher doesn't stray too far from the path -(16)- has blazed for the past 29 years—one marked with addictive arrangements and inexorable anger.
In The Company Of Serpent’s first album as a trio explores light as the prima materia—in other words, the core building block of existence....