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Dios Carne is one of the most sinister offerings from Looking for an Answer yet.
Not many long-in-the-tooth metal bands manage to shake things up this late in their careers, but 25 years after their first album Body Count...
Mastodon return with their long-awaited new effort, Emperor of Sand. What stylistic twists will they throw at us this time?
Throughout highschool, I was sucked deeper into the black hole of the Marilyn Manson universe. As I researched each band member, I remember stumbling...
The High Heat Licks Against Heaven blends its disparate elements into an absorbing listen, and as such makes it one of the stronger releases...
When death metal began in the 80's, it was fresh and innovative. Fast forward to today and I feel as though tolerance has left...
This crossover delight is an incredible start to the new year. Iron Reagan successfully boosts moral, along with the speed in the pit.
Former Kyuss singer John Garcia returns with a solo mash-up of acoustic Kyuss covers and new electric material
Code Orange deliver an excellent record in Forever. It captures two sides of a great beast: its massive devastating heft, and the darkness lingering...
If you were expecting any amount of originality from Ranger’s second full length, you’ll definitely want to check that expectation at the door. If...
Geezer meld Hawkwind and Motorhead on this latest trippy artsy stoner rock masterpiece.
Basically, Animals as Leaders have transitioned from being a band capable of touring with After the Burial to an act more equivalent to Intervals'...
Whether you think positively or negatively about Hammerfall, the Swedes have to be respected for being one of the initial bands to break heavy...
While They Were Sleeping is a strong return statement by a band that has overcome adversity, of both the personal and professional varieties, and...
Imperium Dekadenz touch on the post-black metal trend, but they also borrow from old school black metal. Sure there are elements of transcendence, but...
Winter's Gate is very carefully wrought; it envelops the listener like the blazing hearth-fire in some long-ago Nordic hall.
Brain Tentacles obviously has connections to the jazz world, though they’re tempered with spines of noise rock, ambient, sludge, doom, progressive weirdness and space...
Trap Them basically shoves your head into a mulcher and keeps on grinding with Crown Feral.
The Sword double done on last year's experimentation with an album full of acoustic versions of High Country cuts
What's this? Another band name that I cannot read because their music is so brutal and heavy, the name/logo has to be too?
Surgeon are back and better than ever with an album that takes their sound to new, more epic extremes.