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Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Record(s) o’ the Month – November 2025: We made it! It’s the end of yet another year, and we’ve reached the final Record(s) o’ the Month for 2025. Over the last 12 months, we’ve laughed, cried, burned posers and poorly… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Record(s) o’ the Month – November 2025
We made it! It’s the end of yet another year, and we’ve reached the final Record(s) o’ the Month for 2025. Over the last 12 months, we’ve laughed, cried, burned posers and poorly performing n00bs at the stake, and we’ve all grown as people (except the aforementioned victims of fiery doom). What better way to set the stage for the looming Listurnial celebration than to look back at the best things that hit the ears in November. That was rhetorical. There is NO better way. Onward! It shouldn’t be a big surprise that 1914 nets the top spot for the month, since Viribus Unitis [November 14th, 2025 by Napalm Records – buy it at Bandcamp!] was another stunning testament to the talent of this Ukrainian ensemble. It seems grimly appropriate to learn about the horrors of modern warfare from those forced to live through it in the present day. As with prior releases, Viribus Unitis is steeped in dark, melancholic atmospheres as tales of battlefield brutality and inhumanity spill over the speakers. It’s a masterful merger of black, death, and doom metal in service of emotional devastation that will transport you to a muddy, blood-soaked trench and fill your soul with existential dread. As a sobered Grin Reaper solemly summed up, “Viribus Unitis is a masterclass in no-bullshit metal storytelling that feels authentic, intimate, and anthemic for the entire runtime.” War is still Hell. Runner(s) Up: Qrixkuor // The Womb of the World [November 7th, 2025 | Invictus Productions | Bandcamp] — Symphonic death metal can be a sticky biscuit, and balancing the brutality with the bombast takes a steady hand. For The Womb of the World, Qrixkuor brought in an actual orchestra to lay down the symphonies of destruction that undergird the cavernous death metal that’s become the band’s gruesome calling card. Abrasive riffs come in bunches, horrific sounds are forced upon you, and discordance is the watchword. It’s a lot to process and absorb, but it’s very impressive. The Spongefren was all over the AMG Slack channels the last few weeks preaching the merits of this thing, and we couldn’t get him to shut up about it. As he gushed in his extremely gushy review, “Their sound and style won’t find fans in every corner. In fact, I’d go so far as to say The Womb of the World is liable to weed out prudish listeners more harshly than Poison Palinopsia already had. But it is an unqualified success all the same, a mastapeece for those to whom sanity is immaterial.” Symphomania! Oromet // The Sinking Isle [November 7th, 2025 | Hypaethral Records | Bandcamp] — Oromet came back with a vengeance on The Sinking Isle, delivering 3 long-form doses of funeral doom heavy enough to crack a tectonic plate. Opening with a 20-minute track takes Christmas ornaments of brass, but Oromet shows you how doom is done with crushing lows contrasted against dizzying highs. It’s the rare funeral doom album that won’t have you glancing at the clock, and that’s a symptom of success. Despair and hope, violence and tranquility, you get it all for the price of one album. As a stunned Beglassesed Man of Steel exhorted, “As monumental as Oromet’s debut was, this one is a step forward thematically and musically. It reinvents what funeral doom can be—not just a crushing sense of sorrow, but a genre that can raise your spirits as well.” Go down with this ship. The post Record(s) o’ the Month – November 2025 appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
dlvr.it
December 24, 2025 at 2:38 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 13 Metal Christmas Songs NOT to Play in Front of Your Family: Don't play these 13 metal songs in front of your family on Christmas (unless you really want them to leave).

Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
13 Metal Christmas Songs NOT to Play in Front of Your Family
Don't play these 13 metal songs in front of your family on Christmas (unless you really want them to leave). Continue reading…
dlvr.it
December 24, 2025 at 1:22 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 Newspaper Podcast Shreds 'Metal' Band for Worst Album of the Year: Strong opinions surrounded Sleep Token's 2025 album, 'Even in Arcadia,' with wide praise and immense ridicule often being shared about the record. Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
Newspaper Podcast Shreds 'Metal' Band for Worst Album of the Year
Strong opinions surrounded Sleep Token's 2025 album, 'Even in Arcadia,' with wide praise and immense ridicule often being shared about the record. Continue reading…
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 10:07 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 Three Days Grace Singers Name 3 Bands That They Loved in 2025: Three Days Grace's Matt Walst and Adam Gontier share the three bands that were heavy in their listening rotation for 2025. Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
Three Days Grace Singers Name 3 Bands That They Loved in 2025
Three Days Grace's Matt Walst and Adam Gontier share the three bands that were heavy in their listening rotation for 2025. Continue reading…
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 10:07 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Amalekim – Shir Hashirim [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: You may be wondering what on earth I am doing willingly touching a black metal album, let alone complimenting one. Well, you know what they say: never let them know… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Amalekim – Shir Hashirim [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
You may be wondering what on earth I am doing willingly touching a black metal album, let alone complimenting one. Well, you know what they say: never let them know your next move. Mysterious Polish-Italian collective Amalekim garnered praise in these hallowed halls with their 2023 release Avodah Zarah, our own Thus Spoke calling it a highlight during a weaker year for the genre. Naturally, I disliked the album, which tends to be a good sign for the average black metal fan. I was nevertheless surprised to see Shir Hashirim released to little fanfare or label promotion after such a positive reception 18 months prior. One look at the ‘melodic’ prefix reactivated my optimist instincts; maybe Amalekim was worth another shot. Two years is a long time in music, let alone fleeting personal tastes. Not much has necessarily changed with Amalekim’s vicious formula, but the refinements are significant. The core of the band’s sound still lies in the realms of early Gaerea but is also distinctly its own thing altogether. And contrary to Gaerea’s recent development,1 Amalekim isn’t planning to go metalcore any time soon. No, Shir Hashirim further improves on the band’s best qualities while retaining their identity, offering relentless speed and riffs for days (“Chant II: Shir Hashirim,” “Chant IV: Sodot HaYekum”). It’s what I like to call ‘violently melodic’ for all the right reasons, both the intense drumming by Ktulak and the demonic vocals of Mróz enhancing the spite present in the dueling guitars. Most importantly, Amalekim never lets their foot off the gas pedal on their mission to create hauntingly aggressive yet beautifully melodic music. Shir Hashirim by Amalekim Shir Hashirim’s success comes from its subversion of common black metal tropes without abandoning them. Gone is the overreliance on standard tremolo and blast beat abuse that I previously took issue with. Those elements are both still key to the album, but in a much more appealing and bite-sized, fresh context (“Chant III: Mesharet HaShilton,” “Chant VIII: Mishteh Malkhuti”). Amalekim’s songwriting has evolved into a much more varied beast with plenty of creative drum and riff patterns to show for it. It almost feels like there’s a bunch of death metal DNA in the band’s songwriting this time (“Chant VI: Tisha Daltot”); in this way, I could see it being the blackened mirror image of Dormant Ordeal’s newest. Where Shir Hashirim improves over Dormant Ordeal’s excellent release is the wonderfully warm and roomy production, a complete opposite of what many others in this scene go for. It once again shows that your album doesn’t need to be crushed or lo-fi to sound brutal—great production simply makes the performance all the more powerful and unyielding. Shir Hashirim is the first black metal record in ages to catch my interest, and one of the best albums of the year at that. Violent, melodic, and extremely fast all at once, its 38-minute package of eight chants simply leaves me wanting to immediately replay the experience all over again. It’s tight and consistent in a way few other records this year are, and its form of melodic fury makes the album unintentionally catchy. Amalekim’s oppressive and angry atmosphere should satiate the usual suspects, but the breakneck pace and no-nonsense songwriting on Shir Hashirim are sure to appeal to a wider audience as well. Track to Check Out: “Chant II: Shir Hashirim,” “Chant IV: Sodot HaYekum,” and “Chant VII: Haka’as HaNachash.” The post Amalekim – Shir Hashirim [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 8:36 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Species – Changelings [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: About once a year, I find a technical thrash album I utterly adore. 2023 graced me with Xoth, and 2024’s Dissimulator debut was my favorite album of the year. In 2025,… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Species – Changelings [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
About once a year, I find a technical thrash album I utterly adore. 2023 graced me with Xoth, and 2024’s Dissimulator debut was my favorite album of the year. In 2025, the premiere thrash platter belongs to Warsaw, Poland’s Species. Unfairly or not, thrash is an oft-maligned genre accused of being unserious and trite or stale and stuck in the past. On Changelings, Species’ sophomore offering, the band nimbly threads the needle between paying homage to thrash’s heyday while shaping a fresh sound that’s enchanting yet familiar. Changelings confidently walks the elusive path between influence and originality. From the opening moments of “Inspirit Creation,” Species treats listeners to hooks stretched taut between early Testament pluck (think “Burnt Offering”) and Countdown and Youthanasia-era Megadeth. It’s a curious combination, as The Legacy has a distinctly unpolished edge, while early-to-mid-90s Megadeth condenses the sheer technicality of Rust in Peace into glossy, efficient leads. Changelings takes the above reference points and channels the grit and chops of bands like Chemical Breath and Obliveon1 to economically distill its riffcraft into thrashy white lightning. The tight musicianship and melody-countermelody tandem of guitar and bass smack of Rush, Cynic, and Mekong Delta, but don’t let all the influences fool you. Species evokes these bands and others, but Changelings is no mere retread. The album glimmers with invention, where each track possesses its own devilishly charming character and mood. Changelings by Species Following in the footsteps of esteemed power trios like Rush and Coroner, Species exhibits an acumen for composing dense and exciting music that feels natural and organic. Though bursting with talent, no moment on Changelings serves to grandstand Species’ technical wizardry. Guitarist Michał Kępka wends his way through the album, unleashing snazzy flourishes and palm-muted muscle as songs demand. His licks are sharp and precise, yet Kępka imbues an improvisational aura to his axework that keeps the music alluringly unpredictable (“The Essence,” “Terror Unknown”). Bassist Piotr Drobina delights as he plays beside Kępka while laying down vocals. It’s an impressive feat, considering the ground he covers on the bottom end. From octave hopping (“Born of Stitch and Flesh”) to beefy bass power chords (“Inspirit Creation”), Drobina is the perfect complement to Kępka for Species’ give-and-take stringed approach. Meanwhile, Przemysław Hampelski provides the rhythmic foundation for the band. He’s not as overtly ostentatious as Peart or Hoglan, but Hampelski impresses throughout Changelings, from laying down the groove-laced intro of “The Essence” to the simmering timekeeping on “Born of Stitch and Flesh.” All told, Species constructs an intricate musical experience where distinct ideas meld together to navigate an undeniably engaging aural exploit. In a year where thrash’s harvest produced scant high-quality yields, Species delivered a cash crop of bangers.2 Changelings’ magic stems from the band’s penchant to zag when I expect them to zig. Finding moments to subvert listeners’ expectations keeps momentum and interest high, such as when the musical tension builds to an assumed climax, only to break to an understated solo before lurching back into high-intensity fulfillment. Species dazzles in this space, ever on the prowl to sink their claws further into your sonic psyche. In an efficient forty minutes, Changelings carves out an undeniable and relevant voice in a genre plagued by criticisms of stagnation and lack of innovation. If you crave music with originality, brawn, and fun, Species is a mandatory destination in your 2025 tour of metal. Tracks to Check Out: “Inspirit Creation,” “The Essence,” “Born of Stitch and Flesh,” “Biological Masterpiece” The post Species – Changelings [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 8:36 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 Blast Worship: Sulfuric Cautery: Ring in the holidays with the latest from Los Angeles goregrinders Sulfuric Cautery.

The post Blast Worship: Sulfuric Cautery appeared first on Decibel Magazine. LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
Blast Worship: Sulfuric Cautery
Ring in the holidays with the latest from Los Angeles goregrinders Sulfuric Cautery. The post Blast Worship: Sulfuric Cautery appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 5:42 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 DEAD HEAT to Release Exclusive Track, “Light Me Up,” via the Decibel Flexi Series!: You’ve got until Wednesday December 31 to secure an active deluxe Decibel subscription to ensure that a copy of crossover crushers Dead… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
DEAD HEAT to Release Exclusive Track, “Light Me Up,” via the Decibel Flexi Series!
You’ve got until Wednesday December 31 to secure an active deluxe Decibel subscription to ensure that a copy of crossover crushers Dead Heat's new single “Light Me Up” is yours. The post DEAD HEAT to Release Exclusive Track, “Light Me Up,” via the Decibel Flexi Series! appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 3:48 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 Video Premiere: Sidian – “Pendular | Amidst the Hysterics of Gloom”: After 15 years of carving a singular, emotionally lacerating path through underground metal, Sidian returns with new music—and, as it turns out, a… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
Video Premiere: Sidian – “Pendular | Amidst the Hysterics of Gloom”
After 15 years of carving a singular, emotionally lacerating path through underground metal, Sidian returns with new music—and, as it turns out, a definitive farewell. The post Video Premiere: Sidian – “Pendular | Amidst the Hysterics of Gloom” appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 2:50 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 Spotify Takes Action After Its Music Was Reportedly Pirated: The group claims to have access to Spotify's songs and metadata connected to each track. Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
Spotify Takes Action After Its Music Was Reportedly Pirated
The group claims to have access to Spotify's songs and metadata connected to each track. Continue reading…
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 5:57 AM
Noiecreep 🤘 The 11 Best Hardcore + Metalcore Albums of 2025 (Ranked): Get ready for a beatdown! These are 2025's best hardcore and metalcore albums. Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
The 11 Best Hardcore + Metalcore Albums of 2025 (Ranked)
Get ready for a beatdown! These are 2025's best hardcore and metalcore albums. Continue reading…
dlvr.it
December 23, 2025 at 5:57 AM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Panopticon – Songs of Hiraeth [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: I spent so long this summer submerged in Panopticon’s discography, once I came back up, I was overwhelmed by the amount of things I’d missed or needed to get a… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Panopticon – Songs of Hiraeth [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
I spent so long this summer submerged in Panopticon’s discography, once I came back up, I was overwhelmed by the amount of things I’d missed or needed to get a headstart on. Consequently, I didn’t spend a huge amount of time with Songs of Hiraeth when it first dropped; I listened, loved it, made a note to TYMHM it, and moved on. It was only as Autumn started to turn into Winter and the seasonal chill reminded me of not just my end-of-year writing obligations, but the snowy wildernesses of Northern America (and Northern Europe, where much of Songs of Hiraeth was conceived). I’m not necessarily suggesting that the shorter days and the colder temperatures made the music sound better—I spent a significant chunk of my ranking-preparation listening in the south of France, and it sounded excellent as always then. But in some way, mine, the environment’s, and the album’s auras aligned, and everything was set for Songs of Hiraeth to reach full power. Comprised of songs composed between 2009 and 2011,1 the album is a window into a hidden alternate microcosm within Panopticon’s discography. But it’s one that lays bare seeds of growth that were carried on into the actual, later sound and spirit. Slow, dreamy, gazelike soundscapes (“The Road to Bergen,” “The White Mountain View,”), and syrupy, forlorn guitars shrouded in atmosphere (“A Letter,” “The Eulogy”), express the later music’s gentler, more often reflective aspect that plays as significant a role as the raw black metal.2 You can also see the gradual maturity in experimentation, with transitions between that folk-tinged softness and wintry fury more natural than on the debut, and Collapse, albeit still less ethereally perfect than they would become (“From Bergen to Jotunheimen,” “The White Mountain View”). Songs Of Hiraeth by Panopticon Possibly the most brilliant thing about Songs of Hiraeth, however, is that it gets better as it goes on.3 This is not to say that the earlier parts aren’t good—they are; the solemn, then triumphant atmo-black of “The White Mountain View” could compete with any later fan-favourite and is really lovely. But from the first tumbling rollovers of “The End is Drawing Near” onwards, something shifts. The blackened ardour goes from a hum to a storm, and the mournful melodies pitch into urgency (“The End is Drawing Near,” “A Letter”), before they cascade down with exquisite sadness (“A Letter,” “The Eulogy”). That bewitching liquidity to the reverb-soaked tremolos—which was present from Panopticon, and which only grew in sublimity over time—dominates these three final songs. In them–particularly closing duo “A Letter,” and “The Eulogy”—you can hear and feel the heart of their creator beating in the expressive, pleasantly audible drumwork, the transcendent soaring of the guitars, and the literal grief and pain in the lyrics he screams into the haze. 2025 has been the year of Panopticon for me, with a discography deep-dive, two albums, and a surprise EP that knocked me off my feet.4 This has only sharpened my perception of the music’s strange magic: although my mind knows, my body forgets between listening sessions, just how good it is. Songs of Hiraeth is not just a coincidental window into the past; it’s another immersive offering of vulnerability revealed at a very specific time—just as crucial as the harrowing Laurentian Blue—and it is, as everything Panopticon creates, fantastic. Songs to Check Out: ”The White Mountain View,” “The End is Drawing Near,” “A Letter,” “The Eulogy” The post Panopticon – Songs of Hiraeth [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Starscourge – Conqueror of the Stars – Betwixt Sundered Seraphim, the Lands Between Bleed Review: Fromsoftware’s behemoth action-RPG Elden Ring is an enigma. How a game so obtuse, difficult, and uniquely itself in its visuals… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Starscourge – Conqueror of the Stars – Betwixt Sundered Seraphim, the Lands Between Bleed Review
Fromsoftware’s behemoth action-RPG Elden Ring is an enigma. How a game so obtuse, difficult, and uniquely itself in its visuals and storytelling became the blockbuster that it is baffles me, and it’s one of those precious pieces of art that simply makes me happy to live in the same world as it. It’s also metal as anything can be. Bands like Fell Omen have tapped into the game’s mythology for inspiration before and, now, the international blackened death duo Starscourge enter the fray with their debut Conqueror of the Stars – Betwixt Sundered Seraphim, the Lands Between Bleed. Promising serious riffage and an emphasis on storytelling, instrumentalist Zul Bharoocha (Sweden) and vocalist Mithun MK (Singapore) have already overcome one great obstacle by getting this thing made at all. But what did Starscourge achieve with Conqueror of the Stars…? I doubt you could even imagine it… Conqueror of the Stars…’s full title is comically verbose, but it foreshadows the sheer opulent regality exuded by Starscourge. The band masterfully captures Elden Ring’s demi-deific power struggle through massive riff-craft supported by extravagant (synth) orchestration and choir. “Ranni’s Requiem – A Night of Black Knives” imposes regal grandiosity through overwhelming choirs and guitar leads, while the weight with which “The Battle of Aeonia” heaves itself feels genuinely symphonic. “Athwart Hereditary Taint, Thence Doth the Valkyrie Ride” wields a wonderful balance of airy dueling guitars and piano and blistering, throat-shredding black metal, standing in contrast to the maniacal, overtly evil decadence of “Together, My Serpentine Valentine” immediately following. Even the Slayer cover “Spirit in Black” sounds opulent, imbuing MK’s Araya impersonation with the arrogant pomp suited to a Golden Order lord of Elden Ring. If you like your metal as haughty as it is heavy, Starscourge is your band and Conqueror of the Stars… is your album. Athwart Hereditary Taint, Thence Doth The Valkyrie Ride by Starscourge Conqueror of the Stars… may reek of vainglory and overwriting, but don’t be fooled: Starscourge are exhilarating. Bharoocha’s riffs tap into the fullest majesty of black metal (“The Shattering”) and melodeath’s sharpest hooks (“I Am the Starscourge”), even indulging in NWOBHM-isms on “The Battle of Aeonia.” MK’s growls resemble a mix of Aeternam’s Achraf Loudiy and Lamb of God’s Randy Blythe, while his cleans recall both Borknagar’s ICS Vortex and, when he breaks out the falsettos, King Diamond. Conqueror of the Stars… rages from start to finish,1 whether by propulsive chops on “Whereunto Frenzy Beckoneth” or furious tremolos on “Destiny’s Dastardly Dynasty,” and Bharoocha’s leads and solos approach Moonlight Sorcery levels of show-off-ness in their technicality (“Blessings Upon the Golden Throne”). Starscourge also prove expert editors, as everything but “The Battle of Aeonia” sits tight at three to four minutes of no fat, all muscle goodness.2 Starscourge could’ve afforded to put on some weight, as both “Blessings Upon the Golden Order” and “I Am the Starscourge” end somewhat anticlimactically. Like Elden Ring, Conqueror of the Stars… brings the goods in great quantity without resorting to padding. But there’s no avoiding Starscourge’s Achilles heel: insistence upon voice acting. Opener “Betwixt Sundered Seraphim…” sees Starscourge read off one of Elden Ring’s trailer scripts in an unconvincing Shakespearean inflection over boring synths, failing to either achieve the dramatic pulse of the original read or excite the listener. This is the least offensive spoken word moment on the album, however, because it at least doesn’t distract from a good instrumental. Too often, a bruising riff (“Destiny’s Dastardly Dynasty”), half a solo (“The Shattering”), or a slow build-up (“The Battle of Aeonia”) is buried under cringey monologue that doesn’t immerse the listener into the story any better than a compelling instrumental could’ve. Given voice acting’s prominent role in Conqueror of the Stars…, it’s clear that Starscourge think of it as an integral factor of their style. I don’t. It’s boring, a bit silly, and stands in conflict with the rest of the music. Conqueror of the Stars… is already an engrossing, deeply dramatic record without it, so why insist upon it?3 But even with Starscourge’s voice acting woes, not to mention less-than-thrilling mixing and mastering,4 Conqueror of the Stars – Betwixt Sundered Seraphim, the Lands Between Bleed is a monumentally entertaining record. Both grandiose and lean, the few but notable hiccups this album has just barely held my hand from shattering the Score Safety Box one last time this year. Whether you abide by the frenzy of black metal or live in death, or just really like Elden Ring, Conqueror of the Stars… is an easy recommendation. Bear witness! --- Rating: Very Good… DR: 6… | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps MP3… Label: Self-Release… Websites: facebook.com/official.starscourge | starscourgeofficial.bandcamp.com … Releases Worldwide: December 19th, 2025… The post Starscourge – Conqueror of the Stars – Betwixt Sundered Seraphim, the Lands Between Bleed Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 8:50 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 N.Y.C.: Ex-Warlock Guitarist Nods to NY Roots in Pulverizing New Power Trio: Thundering power trio N.Y.C., led by ex-Warlock guitarist Tommy Bolan, wrecks necks on new album, Built to Destroy.

The post N.Y.C.: Ex-Warlock… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
N.Y.C.: Ex-Warlock Guitarist Nods to NY Roots in Pulverizing New Power Trio
Thundering power trio N.Y.C., led by ex-Warlock guitarist Tommy Bolan, wrecks necks on new album, Built to Destroy. The post N.Y.C.: Ex-Warlock Guitarist Nods to NY Roots in Pulverizing New Power Trio appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 8:47 PM
Metal Blade Video 🤘 Shining the spotlight on some killer '25 MB release! Let's kick it off with some Killswitch!: New album, 'This Consequence' OUT NOW!
ORDER HERE: https://www.metalbla... LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal
Shining the spotlight on some killer '25 MB release! Let's kick it off with some Killswitch!
New album, 'This Consequence' OUT NOW! ORDER HERE: https://www.metalblade.com/killswitchengage/
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December 22, 2025 at 7:14 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 Video Premiere: Malthusian – ‘Delirium’: Worship at the altar of nothing with Malthusian.

The post Video Premiere: Malthusian – ‘Delirium’ appeared first on Decibel Magazine. LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
Video Premiere: Malthusian – ‘Delirium’
Worship at the altar of nothing with Malthusian. The post Video Premiere: Malthusian – ‘Delirium’ appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 5:57 PM
Decibel Magazine 🤘 Biohazard – Urban Discipline: Biohazard's classic sophomore slugger, Urban Discipline, earns a Hall of Fame induction.

The post Biohazard – Urban Discipline appeared first on Decibel Magazine. LinkInBio for More 🤘 #DecibelMagazine #Metal #HeavyMetal
Biohazard – Urban Discipline
Biohazard's classic sophomore slugger, Urban Discipline, earns a Hall of Fame induction. The post Biohazard – Urban Discipline appeared first on Decibel Magazine.
dlvr.it
December 22, 2025 at 3:05 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Sallow Moth – Mossbane Lantern [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: I don’t know if Garry Brents is the busiest person in metal, but he’s active enough that I worry for his work-life balance. In 2025 alone, Brents cranked out… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Sallow Moth – Mossbane Lantern [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
I don’t know if Garry Brents is the busiest person in metal, but he’s active enough that I worry for his work-life balance. In 2025 alone, Brents cranked out releases for multiple projects, including Sallow Moth’s latest platter, Mossbane Lantern. This is death metal for purveyors of the unrepentantly weird, especially those who indulge in sci-fi and fantasy. From a storytelling perspective, Mossbane Lantern takes an anthological approach in describing experiences that assorted characters have with the titular artifact.1 To capture these events through song, Brents casts a wide, chaotic net of sounds and influences. While it doesn’t fit neatly under either technical or brutal death metal, Mossbane Lantern cherry picks elements of each and infuses them with enough avant-garde, proggy nuttiness to trigger an allergic reaction. All told, Sallow Moth establishes a firmly singular take on death metal. Though Sallow Moth has consistently embraced the unconventional, Mossbane Lantern ratchets up the stylistic fluidity from previous outings. In particular, the band takes Artificial Brain’s off-kilter, melodic sensibilities and inhuman gutturals, then weds them with Igorrr’s knack for unpredictable stutter-stops and abrupt musical shifts. With this foundation, Brents injects jazz-riddled Ingurgitating Oblivion accents and Cynic aesthetics under accelerated paces, giving Mossbane Lantern so many dimensions that juggling them would be disastrous in less-capable hands. Fear not, for Sallow Moth’s execution achieves the daunting vision laid out, beguiling with wackadoo impishness that’s as sure to bring a smile to your face as make you ask yourself, “What the fuck am I listening to?”2 Mossbane Lantern by Sallow Moth Listening to Mossbane Lantern without context is a fun and brutal experience, but Sallow Moth’s true magic reveals itself once grounded in its world-building. Without getting too mired in lore, the eponymous Lantern allows users to teleport across distances great and small, though unexpected outcomes occur when the Lantern commingles with varied beings and enchantments. Musically, this allows a common thematic presence in the Mossbane Lantern itself while not strictly adhering to a single story. “Cauldron Brim Neurosilk” and “Runemilk Amulet” portray characters under chemical duress, urgently lurching between techy, fetid death metal and trip-hop, signaling when the pendulum of madness swings. Similarly, “Psionic Battery” and “Aethercave Boots” describe artifacts designed to aid with the Lantern’s use. When side effects emerge, psychedelic embellishments clue listeners in to the events’ warped natures. Through it all, Sallow Moth assaults listeners with fretless (and fretted) bass, guitar squeals, croaks, and more, keeping them off-balance as the music continuously evolves. Such an absurd concept shouldn’t work this well, but Sallow Moth’s unhinged melting pot of jazzy intonations, bowel-churning gurgles, and genre-bending mayhem makes Mossbane Lantern a can’t-miss romp. As a fan of the bizarre and grotesque within metal, there are few (if any) facets of Mossbane Lantern I haven’t heard before, but the way Sallow Moth chucks the pieces into an industrial-grade blender and sets it to ‘Liquify’ is utterly novel and rewards multiple spins. Some listeners may find the adventure too jarring for their liking, but after spending time with Mossbane Lantern, I don’t find its components haphazard or incidental. Just the opposite—there’s a method to Sallow Moth’s madness, though it requires patience to appreciate. So grab your gear, head for Mossbane Lantern’s light, and prepare to get weird. It’s a trip you don’t want to miss. Tracks to Check Out: “Icegorger Gauntlets,” “Psionic Battery,” “Cauldron Brim Neurosilk,” “Runemilk Amulet” The post Sallow Moth – Mossbane Lantern [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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December 21, 2025 at 8:09 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Moron Police – Pachinko [Things you Might have Missed 2025]: Moron Police is an odd band, if the moniker didn’t give it away. The first few albums were very comedy-oriented, but A Boat on the Sea suddenly saw the band tackling… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Moron Police – Pachinko [Things you Might have Missed 2025]
Moron Police is an odd band, if the moniker didn’t give it away. The first few albums were very comedy-oriented, but A Boat on the Sea suddenly saw the band tackling anti-war themes, without giving up the bright melodic sound that draws from progressive rock and anime soundtrack J-rock alike. Production on Pachinko was already on the way when drummer Thore Pettersen died in a car accident. After taking the time to mourn their friend, Moron Police soldiered on, aided by Dillinger Escape Plan drummer Billy Rymer. The result is an astounding album in every regard, an experience unlike anything I’ve heard in years. It’s also a concept album about a dude getting turned into a sentient gambling machine in Tokyo. Huh? Pachinko by Moron Police Everything about Pachinko is larger than life. It’s as colorful as its gorgeous cover, full of energy and possessed of an indomitable spirit, a quirky sense of humor, and endless love and compassion. The narrative, which seems to be inspired by isekai anime,1 is merely a vehicle for philosophical ruminations on the nature of life, fate and human connection in a world designed to wear you down to apathy. No two songs are alike or tackle these subjects the same way, and you can get snippets of darker lyrics dressed in bright colors (“King Among Kittens”), pure silly nonsense (‘Meee, I’m a techno boy’ in “Pachinko Pt. 1”) or melancholy reflections on the follies of power (the brilliant “The Apathy of Kings”). Despite its colorful outer layer, Pachinko is more than just feel-good vibes. It’s a masterwork of both composition and technical wizardry. The melodies are intricate yet catchy, and never go exactly the way you expect. Nor do the songs themselves, because the way they weave together different moods, genres, and tempos is nothing short of staggering. Violins over blastbeats in “Cormorant,” melancholy synthpop in “Okinawa Sky,” jazzy whirlwind intro leading into big band brass for “Alfredo and the Afterlife.” And the title track suite turns it up to eleven for a combined 16 minutes of head-spinning avant-garde genre-hopping madness. Yet for all this craziness, it’s remarkable how tightly woven and cohesive the hour-long album is. Songs frequently cross-reference each other to really emphasize the album experience, with “Pachinko Pt. 1” even referencing A Boat on the Sea directly. This peaks with the magisterial finale, which effortlessly binds snippets from across the album together into a gorgeous feast of reprise. It doubles as a heartfelt farewell to Thore, whose drums are used for the outro. Moron Police has taken their grief and turned it into a grandiose, madcap celebration of life and friendship with a wink, a smile, and a tear. An instant classic and one of the best albums I’ve heard this decade. Tracks to Check Out: All of them, front to back. Editor’s Addendum ov Steel: The author was very clear that this would have received a rare 5.0 if done as a full review. ---  The post Moron Police – Pachinko [Things you Might have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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December 21, 2025 at 8:09 PM
BazillionPoints 🤘 ROOTS of 2025 Metal Instrumentals | on SiriusXM: ROOTS of 2025 Metal Instrumentals | on SiriusXM Week of December 20, 2025 Sat 12/20, 6PM ET Sun 12/21, 1PM ET Mon 12/22, 9AM ET Tues 12/23, 4PM ET Thurs 12/25, 9PM ET As 2025… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #bazillionpoints #heavymetal #metal
ROOTS of 2025 Metal Instrumentals | on SiriusXM
ROOTS of 2025 Metal Instrumentals | on SiriusXM Week of December 20, 2025 Sat 12/20, 6PM ET Sun 12/21, 1PM ET Mon 12/22, 9AM ET Tues 12/23, 4PM ET Thurs 12/25, 9PM ET As 2025 comes to a fiery close, we wish you a happy holidays with a wide-ranging tour of the landscape of metal instrumentals in 2026. Know your Roots! Enjoy metal history in the words of those who created it with Swedish… Source
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December 20, 2025 at 10:52 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Dagdrøm – Schauder [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: To be perfectly honest, I no longer recall when or how exactly I encountered Germany’s Dagdrøm for the first time. There’s a pretty good chance it was a Discordian… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Dagdrøm – Schauder [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
To be perfectly honest, I no longer recall when or how exactly I encountered Germany’s Dagdrøm for the first time. There’s a pretty good chance it was a Discordian recommendation, or I discovered it organically while sifting through Bandcamp’s new releases feed. Either way, their debut Schauder regularly circulates on my listening rotation. Weirdly, it received very little fanfare from the commenters or other arenas of metallic discourse that I frequent. It’s a shame, because Schauder remains one of the coolest melodic black metal albums released this year. Unlike the traditional second wave stylings of Sarastus or the cosmic exuberance of Silent Millenia, Dagdrøm’s style is emotional, propelled by chunky post-metal riffs, and uplifted by hopeful atmosphere. That’s not to say Schauder is happy by any means. While its riffs are groovy and sophisticated and its melodies sparkling and brilliant, the overall tone of the record is one of deep yearning and of grieving. Without access to the lyrics, or any understanding of the German language, I possess very little ability to confirm this, but it’s crystal clear to me that Schauder is a deeply personal work fueled by a bleeding heart and a desperate soul. Schauder by Dagdrøm Schauder’s greatest strengths are balance and fluidity. In every aspect of its compositions, clever shifts in texture and tone follow the natural progression of human emotion as they move through phases of love, of pain, of grief, and of remembrance. I listen to highlights like opener proper “Ascheregen,” mid-album heartbreaking duo “Atme” and “Flüsse,” or blistering chills “Tagtraum” and “Freund,” and I revel in sublime transitions that bring ascendant tremolo melodies down to earth with caustic, crushing riffs and thrashing percussive rhythms, the next airy lead launching me back to the stratosphere in short order. These moments reprise themselves two or three times in many songs, but not without evolutionary developments or variations informed by the passages that led them there (see the spine-tingling harmonies introduced in the final moments sending “Flüsse” off). As a consequence of such intentional writing, Schauder flows through its expansive 50 minutes with striking ease and makes repeat spins an effortless endeavor. Don’t let Schauder’s beauty and smoothness fool you, though. Bursting at the seams with killer riffs of varying approaches, aggressive tempos, and venomous screams, Dagdrøm’s debut is a beast with claws and teeth sharp enough to rend flesh from bone. Early bangers like “Ascheregen” and late album rippers “Ära” and “Kalte Fliesen” handily demonstrate this, reinforcing that a black metal band in touch with their emotions is just as menacing, if not more so, than the aloof, the cold, and the distant. Schauder is none of these things. It’s intimate, vulnerable, and expressive while still delivering energetic, raucous, and compelling songs. That makes it special. If you are ever looking to recommend something to me, especially in the ashen realms of black metal, let this be your litmus. Dagdrøm may be new on the scene and they may eschew some of the classic melodic black metal tropes that made the genre a staple, but Schauder is not to be overlooked. You miss this, you miss out! Tracks to Check Out: “Ascheregen,” “Atme,” “Flüsse,” “Kalte Fliesen” --- The post Dagdrøm – Schauder [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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December 20, 2025 at 7:26 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Sold Soul – Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: Blah blah blah, deathcore sucks, blah blah, okay, we got that out of the way. Now, for everyone who likes it, come close and hear about one… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Sold Soul – Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
Blah blah blah, deathcore sucks, blah blah, okay, we got that out of the way. Now, for everyone who likes it, come close and hear about one of the bands doing shit right. Deathcore can be incredibly varied as a genre, and among the hundreds of doggy-doo bands out there, a few break the mold. As someone who listens to a lot of different deathcore groups (judge me, I don’t give a shit), North Carolina’s Sold Soul are out here making progressive deathcore that surprises as much as it crushes your skull. Even if you don’t like Lorna Shore or, like me, find their recent albums incredibly boring, Sold Soul is here for you. Their latest, Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely, is an amalgamation of slamming deathcore, inhuman vocals, raw emotion, and some true surprises. I wouldn’t go so far as to call it avant-garde deathcore, but it is close. One of the first things I appreciate about Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely, is the lack of repetitive breakdowns. Songs rarely slow to a crawl for chug-time; instead, much of the brutality so inherent to deathcore is found through the thick atmosphere, rich production, and slamming speed. “As Whisper, Or As Bellowing” takes a minute to writhe in its unsettling tone, with high leads and piercing riffs, only to drop into a ripping gallop that calls to mind slam more than deathcore. Stevie O’Shaughnessy’s vocals are varied and powerful, and in another point in this record’s favor, he rarely spends much time gargling into the microphone just for the hell of it. Other than an offhand snort in the opening track, Sold Soul avoids much of the vocal breakdowns that have infected modern deathcore like a plague. In fact, Stevie occasionally busts out unique clean vocals that add to the atmosphere and feel right at home with the rest of the album’s tone. Again, Sold Soul bucks trends by avoiding the typical fry, scream-singing so common in deathcore, or crooning cleans that kill momentum. The clean vocals are used sparingly and feel like an integral part of the album’s core without overstaying their welcome. Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely by Sold Soul Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely has a strong emotional core bolstered by the consistent use of stringwork and piano to add to the already dense song structures. In another rarity for deathcore, the production isn’t crushed by the weight of its disparate pieces. Guitars come through clearly, strings have space to breathe, and the vocals don’t overtake the whole mix; you can even hear the bass. “To Spit Contempt on the Tail of Every Uttered Word” features a twangy lead that charges into a blistering, grooving verse bolstered by Stevie’s brutal vocals. One of the rare breakdowns on the album punches you straight in the teeth over and over, and is done as soon as it arrives; nothing on this record overstays its welcome. Before you know it, staccato bass and guest vocals from Kukeille take you on a journey back into the unique lead work and Stevie’s crooning howl. Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely is rich, dense, and well worth delving into. The string work on “A Lament for an Abandoned Heaven All Us Who Lay Beneath” is downright gorgeous, and, despite the melodramatic song titles, the band isn’t afraid to have a sense of humor, as shown in a snippet of their recording session at the end of the album’s penultimate track. Sold Soul is doing deathcore right, don’t let the genre stop you from enjoying this monolith. Tracks to Check Out: “For I Can Endure No Longer,” “A Lament for an Abandoned Heaven All Us Who Lay Beneath,” “That Stranger in the Red Suit, and the Many Things He Promised Me.” The post Sold Soul – Just Like That, I Disappear Entirely [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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December 20, 2025 at 3:39 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 Metallica's James Hetfield Read a Classic Christmas Story: James Hetfield of Metallica narrates 'A Visit From St. Nicolas,' better known for its opening line, 'Twas the Night Before Christmas.' Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
Metallica's James Hetfield Read a Classic Christmas Story
James Hetfield of Metallica narrates 'A Visit From St. Nicolas,' better known for its opening line, 'Twas the Night Before Christmas.' Continue reading…
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December 19, 2025 at 11:01 PM
Noiecreep 🤘 Hear Original Pantera Singer Terry Glaze's New Supergroup: The supergroup will release its self-titled debut album next spring. Continue reading… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #noisecreep #heavymetal #metal
Hear Original Pantera Singer Terry Glaze's New Supergroup
The supergroup will release its self-titled debut album next spring. Continue reading…
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December 19, 2025 at 11:01 PM
Angry Metal Guy 🤘 Suotana – Ounas II [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]: Remember the Finnish melodic death and power metal fusion of the late ’90s and early ’00s? Bands like Children of Bodom,1 Kalmah, and Norther were all the rage for a… LinkInBio for More 🤘 #AngryMetalGuy #HeavyMetal #Metal
Suotana – Ounas II [Things You Might Have Missed 2025]
Remember the Finnish melodic death and power metal fusion of the late ’90s and early ’00s? Bands like Children of Bodom,1 Kalmah, and Norther were all the rage for a short while. You even had stuff like Ensiferum for a folkier interpretation, or Catamenia2 for the blackened side of things. The truth is that it never really left.3 Suotana is one of the bands keeping this sound alive and well, and they have more history than one might think. They spawned in the mid-2000s but took until 2014 to start putting out material. Now, over a decade later, they’re on their fourth full-length, and Ounas II continues right where predecessor Ounas I left off two years ago. Judging them back-to-back, it seems the collective is only growing in strength. Ounas II is chock full of great songwriting. Melodic death metal, power metal, and even bits of black metal collide in this crazy Finnish kitchen, with Children of Bodom remaining the clear number one influence. Founding members Ville Rautio and Pasi Portaankorva utilize the dual guitar attack in classic ’80s ways (“Winter Visions,” “Twilight Stream”), while Stratovarius sensibilities color their frantic touches of melodic power—both always positives in my book. The harsh vocals of Tuomo Marttinen are frosty and vicious, similar to their swamp brethren in Kalmah.4 Tommi Neitola’s keyboards are the cherry on top, adding a Bodomesque symphonic bombast layer that occasionally approaches Wintersun levels without going overboard (“The Crowned King of Ancient Forest,” “1473 Ounas”). Ounas II by Suotana Dealing with two-part concepts is always a challenging task, but Suotana came prepared. It feels like they’ve improved on all of Ounas I’s already strong qualities: the production has more breadth, the album’s layers delve deeper, and there’s more energy and variety in its songs (“Foreverland,” “Twilight Stream”). However, the most impressive thing about Ounas II is that it’s even denser than its sibling. The album clocks in at 39 minutes compared to the first part’s 41,5 which has the huge advantage of avoiding a bloated ‘B-sides’ feel so common with other double album concepts.6 And despite its tight runtime, the songwriting has plenty of room to flourish, as exemplified by “1473 Ounas.” Furthermore, to complement the Summoning cover that crowned the first part, Ounas II unleashes a cover of Children of Bodom’s “Hatebreeder” as its encore. Whether you imagine it as a proper track or a bonus, it’s a great way to end the record with a bang while honoring your influences.7 Suotana has had a long journey to get to this point, and it’s been more than worth it. Their songwriting is only getting faster and better, which further reinforces its catchy extremities. In many ways, Suotana feels like the melodeath-forward twin to Moonlight Sorcery’s excellent brand of power/black metal. Both bands dress to impress with big riffs, melodic violence, and keyboard bombast in all the right ways. Though the back-to-back experience is great, Ounas II is a package that works wonders on its lonesome too, and I think that’s another mark of success for the band. I’m excited to see what these self-aware wizards pictured above are going to summon from that lake next, Ounas or not. Tracks to Check Out: “Winter Visions,” “Twilight Stream,” “The Crowned King of Ancient Forest,” and a special shout out to the excellent cover of “Hatebreeder.” The post Suotana – Ounas II [Things You Might Have Missed 2025] appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.
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December 19, 2025 at 9:35 PM