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“We know that we are entering the final years of our career as musicians: the winter of our lifetime.” – says frontman Fernando Ribiero....
Beyond the disgusting distortion and primitive violence of Gravesend lies an unflinching look at the dark side of the city that never sleeps.
“To climb these stairs again,” are the words that open the latest release by The Body. It is a reading of the poem “The...
Where Gloom Becomes Sound creeps in like a ghost in the hall. “In Remembrance” sets the tone for Tribulation’s most gothic record to date....
I love the original Star Wars trilogy, like most people who are alive and not assholes. I was born too late to see any...
A Whisp of the Atlantic is a testament to the benefits of quality of quantity, as it never outstays its welcome because it accomplishes...
Doomy death metal has a history and pedigree that spans from the rich and vibrant on one end to the so-boring-it-might-as-well-be-clinically-dead on the other....
The British death metal butchers return to glory on a terse and raging EP.
Holland’s Celestial Season is a bit of an obscurity, even on the doom/death scene, which dominated the band’s sound throughout their early works. They’re...
Lament feels like it’s been scratched in the upper corner of a high school desk. Touché Amoré have never really fit into any scene,...
Transitus is an enjoyable and representative Ayreon album, but it can't help but disappoint when compared to virtually all of its predecessors.
The solo, raw, black metal act embraces the most demented parts of the genre on its newest album.
The second half of The Ocean's Phanerozoic dualogy uses kaleidoscopic heaviness to relate the human condition to a 541-million-year cosmic tragedy.
A good chunk of May You Be Held finds Sumac leaving metal behind in favor of non-linear, textural explorations.
Pharos is perhaps the most succinct yet powerful example yet of Ihsahn's knack for crafting beautifully dense, emotional, and intense compositions.
New York City Trio Imperial Triumphant heralds the return of the Roaring ‘20s with a dystopian labyrinth of black metal and jazz.
Perhaps because the band had to recover, hunker down and hammer it out against the odds, Palimpsest contains some of Protest The Hero's most...
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...
For those with the patience to fully submerge in the proceedings, Geist & The Sacred Ensemble appeals on a wavelength similar to Swans’ The...
Bringing together some of the most dangerous minds in extreme music, Umbra Vitae makes the meanest music possible and throws it at listeners like a javelin.
If you’re looking for some new metal that’s consistently guttural, fast, and absorbing, Old Smoke will definitely satisfy.
The last time Cirith Ungol recorded an album was before the Internet was invented. Strange as it seems, there really was a time before...