Album Reviews

Line-up changes are always scary and don’t always turn out for the best… which can’t be said about Make Them Suffer.

On this debut full length, the Danish duo combines beautiful melodies and craft some of the most melodic/atmospheric albums of the year 2020. This comes as a high recommendation for the fans of semi-raw and lo-fi black metal.

Jaye Jayles third record is Evan Patterson’s most personal record. An electronically driven journal of three months on the road through spoken word snapshots.

Live Burial’s sophomore ‘Unending Futility’ boasts remarkable creativity and song installation in their take on old school death/doom.

Sometimes the songs are sung with whispering voices, sometimes they scream. It all matches the atmosphere of these songs. Combined with the visuals in the music videos, this album is one hell of a statement.

Atramentus has surely created their own niche, “Stygian” combines the somber qualities that define the dark aesthetics of funeral doom.

Primitive Man emerges once more from his cave, armed with his third bludgeoning of doom, noise and sludge: ‘Immersion’.

Venerate and fear the rope along with Rope Sect on their death rock debut ‘The Great Flood’ and celebrate the end of times.

The Swedish priests of The Funeral Orchestra have gathered after almost two decades for their second full length of doomed funerary rituals, ‘Negative Evocation Rites’, out on Nuclear War Now!.

‘Æequiizoiikum’ is an intense robotic foray into the sci-fi realms of the extra-terrestrial. With only six actual tracks Khthoniik Cerviiks are capable to get you all hooked on their outlandish trait.