Every day it feels like stories like this, "NEW: Open AI intends to sell digital versions of your children to Society Paedophiles, a $10 fee to opt your child out."
#EpsteinClass #TechBros #GrokAI #OpenAI #Depravity #CSAM #Patriarchy #Technology
Every day it feels like stories like this, "NEW: Open AI intends to sell digital versions of your children to Society Paedophiles, a $10 fee to opt your child out."
#EpsteinClass #TechBros #GrokAI #OpenAI #Depravity #CSAM #Patriarchy #Technology
Epstein's NM Zorro Ranch -- an Even Deeper Level of Disturbing Depravity?
Alon Mizrahi:
âI want us to understand, I want all of us to understand, that when politicians, academic, high tech people, senior journalists & others from Western elite told us
'We have to stand with Israel'
What they really meant was 'we have to protect the international networks of human trafficking, satanic abuse, sacrifice and rape, cannibalism, and antisocial criminality of all sorts we are neck-deep in'â
See more âŠ
Alon Mizrahi:
âI want us to understand, I want all of us to understand, that when politicians, academic, high tech people, senior journalists and others from #Western #elite told us
'We have to stand with Israel'
What they really meant was 'we have to protect the international networks of human trafficking, satanic abuse, sacrifice and rape, cannibalism, and antisocial criminality of all sorts we are neck-deep in'â
[More ⊠https://substack.com/@alonmizrahi/note/c-211190525]
âThe #Epstein case points not to isolated #depravity, but to structured leverage: an architecture of #blackmail in which sexual crimes become instruments of power rather than grounds for prosecution. That is why the fixation on individual scandal â princes, parties and gossip â functions as #misdirectionâ
in âEpstein, #Mossad, and the question we are not allowed to ask but must doâ by Rares Cocilnau in The Canary
A Dark Place
Iâm in a dark place. We are in a dark place. Living with our eyes wide open in a darkness. No light needed to know what we see. ICE thugs. Minneapolis. Journalists arrested. Public corruption. Wars. Corporate capitulation to evil. And âThe Epstein Files.â
I have not written much about that entire depraved episode. I will today.
In what seems like a backhanded, boomeranging, and backfiring way to distract from all of the other despicable things this administration has been doing to distract us from the Epstein files, the Justice Department released about three million of those files today. Apparently there are millions more. But in some ways weâve probably seen enough.
Or at least to my mind we probably have. Some of the files, either mistakenly or on purpose, were leaked. They include descriptions of what horrible men did to young girls. I wonât post or describe the specifics, beyond saying how utterly depraved they are.
Theyâd get an XXX rating if those acts were included in a movie. If you want specifics you wonât find them in the government release of the files because the DOJ actually deleted the links to some of the worst, which do indeed finger the president of the United States as a participant. But Iâm sure you can find them all over the Internet.
Let me say this. The fact that there are going to be people trying to brush past and brush over what weâve long suspected but now seen makes those horrible acts of cruelty almost pale in comparison. You have to be some sort of sick to try and rationalize it as anything other than evil. But Iâm sure there will be too many willing to throw their souls under the bus they continue to ride on.
When and where I grew up, it was a small rural community, populated with many who had some of the same political and social leanings of those we call MAGA today. I donât care how much of an exalted office anyone held, how much money they made, or what pulpit they preached from. If they were accused of the things mentioned in those files they would have been quietly disappeared from the earth, never to be heard from, and mostly not spoken of again.
If this crowd of criminals and pedophiles and their supporters keep talking about Making America Great Again, I assume they are referring to that period of time when I was growing up. Thereâs a large part of me that thinks in despicable cases like these that perhaps we should. If only to mete out punishment the way it was done then.
You can also find more of my writings on a variety of topics on Medium at this link, including in the publications Ellemeno and Rome. I can also be found on social media under my name as above.
Five years ago, I highlighted Invictusâ 2020 debut LP Catacombs of Fear as part of our year-end death metal roundup feature. Since then, the Japanese death metal trio toiled under the ground with a brutal live schedule and steadily wrote what might very well be my most highly anticipated follow-up in the death metal realm. Hot on the heels of killer releases from personal favorites like Depravity, and jumping just ahead of another highly anticipated salvo from Eximperitus, Invictusâ upcoming Nocturnal Visions has big shoes to fill and stiff competition to combat. But if anybody has the chops and the balls to do it, itâs Invictus.
Having only one previous album and a few scattered demos/singles to their name, Invictus havenât messed with their formula very much since their inception. Boasting a killer combo of Demolition Hammer nastiness and Consuming Impulse-era Pestilence attack, Nocturnal Visions pushes 35 minutes of pure adrenaline. Nary a second faffs about with filler, fluffy atmosphere, or anything else that could be construed as something other than devout reverence to The Almighty Riffâą. With each twist of phrase or shift in movement, guitarist/vocalist Takehitopsy Seki tears through an unrelenting assault of intense grooves, speedy thrashes, and writhing rhythms that donât just open up pits, but rather rip open dimensional rifts straight to hell itself (âAltar of Devoted Slaughter,â âWandering Ashdreamâ). Instead of relying on blasts for intensity, Haruki Tokutakeâs percussive strategy focuses on machine-gun double-bass runs and thrashy skanks so brutally exacted upon my spine that I needed a back brace and headgear just to approach the second halfâaccommodations which in no way deterred my summary bodily encrushment (âPersecution Madnessâ). Bassist Toshihiro Seki clunks and clangs beneath the surface with a violent, hammering tone that, while not always as audible as it ought to be, nonetheless deepens the tonal quality of the recordâs warm, slightly swampy production (âNocturnal Visionsâ). Unlike many of those acts from whom Invictus draws inspiration, Sekiâs vocals operate squarely inside the Incantation/Tomb Mold school of subterranean monstrosity. Counterintuitively, this sets the trio apart from their influences by hiding in plain sight with their contemporaries.
Regardless of where you fall in the greater scope of metallic fandom, Nocturnal Visions is a magnificent showcase of energetic songwriting and devastating hookcraft. While the formula opener proper âAbyssal Earth Eradicatesâ utilizes feels and sounds familiar, Invictus executes it with a youthfulness, voracity, and dare I say exuberance that makes me forget for a moment the entirety of death metalâs history. As Nocturnal Visions progresses through its early movements, boasting killer tracks in âAltar of Devoted Slaughter,â âLucid Dream Trauma,â and âPersecution Madness,â my ability to care about anything other than banging my head, grimacing like a gargoyle, and stomping my poor abused feet against the floor vanishes. Whatâs left is a mind-broken sponge reduced to primal instincts, with a vocabulary of one word, âFuck!â exclaimed exclusively with each new swaggering groove or pummeling riff. Even after several dozen spins, pit monsters âPersecution Madness,â âDragged Beneath the Grave,â and later highlight âWandering Ashdreamâ received such frequent and aggressive verbal confirmation of their sheer awesomeness and perpetual energy that my coworker had to perform a wellness check. Even the daunting eight-minute closer âNocturnal Visionsâ earns its keep here, switching up themes and reprising refrains just enough to keep my interest up and my engagement high.
That doesnât leave much room for negatives, and indeed, few found purchase in my evaluation. Obviously, Nocturnal Visions exhibits nothing new or innovative; itâs simply doing classic death metal far better than most. Consequently, Invictus left some creativity and novelty on the table. They could easily pick up bits and bobs from that stack of potential ideas and bring an extra dimension to future efforts without sacrificing their core sound. Additionally, pacing Nocturnal Visions at such a blistering rate of speed so consistently across 35 minutes leaves a little to be desired in the way of songwriting dynamics. Tokutake in particular makes the most of his arsenal of patterns, fills, and tumbles to alleviate this condition, but not quite enough to cure itâsee the otherwise ripping âFrozen Tomb.â Sekiâs somewhat one-note vocal approach doesnât always help matters in that respect, but his performance is rock-solid and dependable enough not to hurt either.
Of course, these critiques amount to mere nitpicks in the truest sense of the term. Nocturnal Visions is, simply put, a staggering monument to old-school death molded for the modern era. Invictus blasted my skull apart with their debut, but this sophomore effort is more than a worthy successor. Hear it!
Rating: Great!
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
Label: Me Saco Un Ojo Records
Websites: invictus3.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/Invictus
Releases Worldwide: January 26th, 2026
lest you've forgotten...
here's an example of the types of peeps that will be discovered in the #ice #detentioncenters when #accountability of the #TrumpRegime occurs.
#nazis #dhs #detention #crimes #kristinoem #gregbovino #stephenmiller #tomhoman #evil #SabrinaHarman #depravity #cruelty #crueltyisthepoint ##dueprocess
When you get away with Paedophilia the bored Elites will be searching for new depravities to dominate us with....Public Murder next?
#ClanOfPaedophiles #Oligarchs #Trump #NoBillionaires #Depravity #Politics
A quotation from Thomas De Quincey
For if once a man indulges himself in murder, very soon he comes to think little of robbing; and from robbing he comes next to drinking and Sabbath-breaking, and from that to incivility and procrastination. Once begin upon this downward path, you never know where to stop. Many a man has dated his ruin from some murder or other that perhaps he thought little of the time.
Thomas De Quincey (1785-1859) English writer, essayist, literary critic
Essay (1839-11), âSecond Paper on Murder Considered as One of the Fine Arts,â Blackwoodâs Edinburgh Magazine, Vol. 46, No. 289
More about this quote: wist.info/de-quincey-thomas/81âŠ
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #escalation #depravity #goingdownhill #thomasdequincey #corruption #crime #downwardspiral #gateway #sin #slipperyslope
Before I was press-ganged into the Skull Pit, I, Ferox, began curating an exercise playlist named Heavy Moves Heavy. For a decade, I alone reaped the benefits of this creationâmany were the hours spent preening aboard my Squat Yacht, mixing oils so that I could marvel at the glistening gainz unlocked by the List. My indentured servitude is your good fortune, because a new and improved version of the Heavy Moves Heavy playlist is now available to all readers of AMG in good standing.1 The lifters among us have spent countless hours in the Exercise Oubliette testing these songs for tensile strength and ideological purity. Enjoyâbut donât listen if you are being screened for PEDs in the near future. This music will cause your free testosterone levels to skyrocket even as it adds length and sheen to your back pelt. ~ Ferox
A year has passed, and now the barbell of honour has been placed on my (regrettably smaller) shoulders as Ferox steps back from the AMG side-quest to focus on his main story. Our leader may be absent, but our search for gains continues with an otherwise full house and new recruits to boot. The songs that guided and shaped our workouts are compiled here in a playlist guaranteed to boost yours, whether you listen on shuffle or straight the way through.1 So what are you waiting for? Down your pre-workout, grab your straps and your knee-sleeves, and get ready to get massive. ~ Thus Spoke
Thus Spoke Enters Muscle Mommy Mode:
âSilence like the Graveâ // Paradise Lost (Ascension) â Straightforwardly solid, catchy, sharp, with a killer atmosphere. Insta-playlist save when the single dropped. Paradise Lost back on top-form and just time to give you the energy for moving heavy things.
âMagnoliaâ // Deafheaven (Lonely People with Power) â Oh yeah, Iâm dead serious. Sorry not sorry to any haters out there. This is four minutes and change of unqualified emotion and racing thoughts and it gets my blood running hot every damn time.
âAgainst the Dying of the Lightâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â Unironically motivating in a way presumably not intended. Just when you want to quit, that roar of âraaage, RAAAAAAGGGE,â and the impeccable drum and guitar work come in to see you through.
âCondemnesiaâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â The devastation of a currently-occurring nuclear disasterâcomplete with a frantically clicking geiger counter and a witnessâ agonised moansâportrayed through slick, punchy tech-death. Do I need to explain?
âPerfida Contracçao do Açoâ // Filii Nigrantium Infernalium (Perfida Contracçao do Aço) â I wouldnât normally go for something like this; the vocals are kind of horrible. But the energetic ridiculousness is so fucking feral it takes you beyond pumped and into crazed maniac territory; which is obviously ideal for the gym.
âDNA (Do Not Amputate)â // To the Grave (Still) â Mean, melodic, and with a message, thereâs nothing about this that doesnât work while lifting. If Iâm going to include any deathcore in the playlist at all, then it has to be To the Grave.
âEunuch Makerâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If your resting-murder-face, hoodie, and headphones arenât enough to keep people from having the audacity to speak to you, then listening to this could help. Itâs massive, and fun as hell, and will make you look extra mean through osmosis, I guarantee.
âArchitects of Extinctionâ // Psycroptic (Architects of Extinction) â Banger alert. The change in vocals makes this a smidge less strong than it otherwise would be, but câmon; a riff that good has got to be anabolic.
âAmaranthâ // Nephylim (Circuition) â My dopamine-fixation song for the best part of a month. Itâs uplifting, itâs catchy, itâs infinitely replayable. What more do you want?
âNatural Lawâ // Primitive Man (Observance) â Itâs not too long, itâs a very important, massive chunk of overwhelming heaviness that makes me feel ten times the size and heft I actually am. You can get through all three (or however many) sets with spare time to admire the pump.
âDeathlessâ // Phobocosm (Gateway) â Monstrous, massive, intense. Fast and furious isnât always it; more and more, I crave slow, oppressive, and malevolent. Itâs just what I crave to dig deeper.
â1918 Pt 3: ADE (A duty to escape)â // 1914 (Viribus Unitis) â It took less than a single complete playthrough for this to end up on this list. Itâs heavy enough for leg day, and itâs atmospheric and moving in that perfect way that helps you dissociate from how much your body hurts. Iâve had it on repeat through many a tough session since.
Kenstrosity Bursts Through His Own Workout Gear:
âRot in the Pitâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â If there was ever a song that eradicated mental blocks to that next rep, that next PR, that next push, itâs âRot in the Pit.â Boasting mountain-moving swagger and a center riff that risks greater injury to my body than any ego lift could ever approach, Depravity penned a bona fide gymstormer with âRot in the Pit.â
âSummoning Sicknessâ // Pedestal for Leviathan (Enter: Vampyric Manifestation) â Imagine getting legs so powerful and swole they force your gait to changeâbut youâre doing it in the basement of your Transylvanian vampire castle with Igor loading up weights on the bar for your next PR. Thatâs what âSummoning Sicknessâ feels like when Iâm pushing
âNachthexeâ // Bianca (Bianca) â You wouldnât expect something that dabbles so heavily in atmosphere to possess such meaty muscle as this, but Biancaâs âNachthexeâ proves the might of the sleeper build. Once they take of the airy, soft pump cover, a devastating topology of deadly power ripples just under the skin.
âThe Insufferable Weightâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â Donât let the lighter weights Iâm lugging around fool you. Volume days are fucking brutal, and a challenge for both my mind and my body. Barren Pathâs âThe Insufferable Weightâ adrenalizes me with itâs speed and brutal rhythms just enough to survive those endless reps.
âGranfalloonâ // Unbirth (Asomatous Besmirchment) â Unbirth is the pool from which some the nastiest, grooviest, and most deceptively complex riffs spawn. This is great fodder for those compound movements that build strength and density. You could pick anything off of Asomatous Besmirchment for such gains, but my preference is âGranfalloon.â
âKollapsâ // Jordsjuk (Naglet til livet) â Black metal? For the gym? You fucking bet. Guaranteed to pull you back from the brink of absolute failure, Jordsjukâs âKollapsâ thrashes and shimmers with enough vibrancy and verve to make whatever load Iâm pushing feel like light weight.
âInfestisâ // Igorrr (Amen) â You wouldnât expect something as weird and wacky as Igorrr to fit in the land of iron and steel, but here we are. With stomping riffs and vicious roars, âInfestisâ is top tier workout gear. Great for keeping pace and supporting breath control, youâll find much progress with Igorrr by your side.
âFlashback (ft. Strawberry Hospital)â // Blind Equation (A Funeral in Purgatory) â Every year I open up one slot for those high intensity workouts where cardio and strength meet. This year, my spotter cheering me on when Iâm doing sprints and weighted jumps is Blind Equationâs intense and lightning-fast âFlashback.â Gotta go fast!!!
âLeave the Flesh Behindâ // Ashen (Leave the Flesh Behind) â Probably the underdog in the litter, Ashenâs âLeave the Fleshâ behind is all muscle, and a mountain of it at that. These riffs represent both the immovable object and the unstoppable force. One day, I hope to be like them.
â12 Worm Woundsâ // Death Whore (Blood Washes Everything Away) â It was difficult to narrow down a selection from Death Whoreâs lean and mean debut, but I keep coming back to the swaggering riffs of â12 Worm Woundsâ went I need motivation for that next lift. It just makes everything Iâm doing seem like the most fun Iâll ever have.
âThe Fire in Which We Burnâ // âŠand Oceans (The Regeneration Itinerary) â Boasting what I consider to be the single best black metal riff of 2025, âŠand Oceans greatly surprised me with a swaggering barnstormer of a track ready made to stoke the fire in my chest for a second wind. Hand me another set of plates, itâs time to go up for one more set!
âNever Difiledâ // Serenity in Murder (Timeless Reverie) â Who needs to spell correctly when you have hundreds of pounds to push on the bar? This is the question I ask whenever the adrenaline-soaked âNever Difiledâ plays as I rack up the plates for my next set. Nobodyâs ever been able to give me an answer.
âThe Twisted Helixâ // Mutagenic Host (The Diseased Machine) â They say genetics play a huge role in what kind of gains you can expect to achieve naturally in the gym. Well, Iâm an ectomorph so itâs toughâand takes a lot more timeâto build and maintain muscle. The solution? Twist my helixes and instantly quadruple my gains. Mutagenic Hostâs âThe Twisted Helixâ is just the tool for the job!
â+++Engine Kill+++â // Ruinous Power (EXTREME DANGER: Prototype Weaponry) â Sometimes you just need something threatening to rip the rails right off the track to hype you up for a grueling session. Thatâs what songs like Ruinous Powerâs â+++Engine Kill+++â are for. Short, to the point, and vicious, it will get your blood surging and your body raring to go.
âFemtoâs Themeâ // Flummox (Southern Progress) â Something so theatrical doesnât sound like a natural fit when working out, but the sheer heft and chunky rhythms of Flummoxâs âFemtoâs Themeâ defies those expectations. Iâve been using it for leg days and the results are crazy town! Donât believe me? Try it for yourself!
Steel Druhm Trains His Ape Arms to Crush the Empire State Building:
âAbandoned Feretrumâ // Sepulchral (Beneath the Shroud) â Blending old school black and death noise, Sepulchral mainline pure badger adrenaline and rattlesnake venom into your major muscle groups. Handle those power chugs with care, Brah.
âNecrobotic Enslavementâ // Glorious Depravity (Death Never Sleeps) â Taking discarded Morbid Angel riffs and repurposing them to turn a peaceful man rabid is why we have science. Take 2 doses of âNecrobotic Enslavementâ 30 minutes before throwing 45 lb plates at people who sit on exercise machines and chat.
âA Scream in the Snowâ // Black Soul Horde (Symphony of Chaos) â Trve metal can embiggen the innate desire for strength and raw power like no other, and âA Scream in the Snowâ will have you swinging olympic bars to get that sword arm ready for bloody constraint and weightroom glory.
âEyes on Sixâ // Biohazard (Divided We Fall) â Loudmouthed tough guys from Brooklyn scream at you to watch your back as they try to snap it with angry riffs and bad attitudes. This is for the caveman living in your reptile brain.
âCarry Onâ // Nite (Cult of the Serpent Sun) â Badass riffs and Manowar-esque demands that you carry on despite hardships are the crucial things that separate a routine workout from a Herculean trial that transforms you. Carry on to bigness.
âCrusadersâ // Starlight Ritual (Rogue Angels) â A dirty, greasy 80s metal anthem that sounds like proto-Iron Maiden is what you need to evolve from tubby baby to a fucking WRATHCHILD. Join this crusade and tip your templar.
âIron Signâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â Unraveling the Riddle of Steel requires a long, hard journey guided only by iron signs. This cut will set you on the right path toward your ferric destiny.
âBending the Steelâ // Ambush (Evil in All Dimensions) â If youâre out there bending the steel, why not get moral support from Ambush with this massive aggressive dose of testosterone and primal motivation? When the singer shouts, âLetâs go, boys!â youâll feel your strength grow 3 times (plus two!). With an iron will, you gotta keep bending the steel!
âGaruda (Eater of Snakes)â // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm write heavy metal for leg day, and Garuda is your feathery guardian iron eagle compelling you to crush that feeble PB. The strong can tell their eagle where to fly and what snakes to eat.
âBeyond Enemy Linesâ // Brainstorm (Plague of Rats) â Brainstorm ainât done with you by a damn sight! If the thundering drums and beefy riffs here donât get you chalked up and ready for iron warfare, you should take up underwater doily knitting.
Steel-Jacketed Olden Bonus:
âSpark to the Flameâ // Winterâs Bane (Redivivus) â One of the greatest gym/workout songs EVER. Lyrics that speak of creating a better version of yourself as you burn in the crucible of effort will help you rise high as those burly riffs hammer your inner coward into moist gum paste.
Grin Reaper Gets Down with the Fitness:
âNo Pain, No Gainâ // Majestica (Power Train) â Metals of Power and Heft are a must for my workouts, especially stretching and pre-lifting calisthenics. Majesticaâs cheesy anthem is perfect montage-fodder, and even though the track is rife with clichĂ©d chestnuts, it features kinetic hooks that gird my gears for whatâs to come.
âStorm the Gatesâ // Soulfly (Chama) â Once Iâm limbered up, itâs time to sweat. Max and the boysâ bouncy grooves peddle just the right combination of chest-thumping swagger and ferocity to make sure my next rep sets the tone for a simmering sesh of glorious gainz.
âSkullbatteringâ // Werewolves (The Ugliest of All) â Thereâs no better way to keep momentum hurtling forward than with a good olâ fashioned ode to smashing braincases. Setting the right tone for a workout is paramount, and here Werewolves does not fuck around. Thereâs nothing pretty or flowery about âSkullbattering,â but if swole is your goal, you need to exorcise the Ugly.
âAnodyne Rustâ // Blood Red Throne (Siltskin) â I hurt my shoulder a few years ago, and though stretching and (prescribed) drugs didnât help much, bulking up did. Exercise slipped out of my routine as work and family commitments grew (as did my waistline), but as Iâve recently knocked the Rust off my dumbbells, Iâm reminded of the palliative restoration that comes from pumping iron and death metal.
âRavenous Leechâ // Guts (Nightmare Fuel) â Scuzzy, groovy, and unapologetically fun, Nightmare Fuel is filled to the gills with mid-paced chugs that make a great soundtrack for AMRAP workouts. While most of Gutsâ bloody remnants will Fuel your workout, spinning âRavenous Leechâ is sure to leave you hungry for even more punishment.
âBy Lead or Steelâ // Barbarous (Initium Mors) â Does Cannibal Corpse feature heavily in your gym listening? If so, consider Barbarous, who channels similar vibes and vitriol with less viscera. Itâll make you want to drink motör oil and punch babies, and thatâs the kind of shove you need when youâre out on swole patrol.2
âKaltfrontâ // Eisbrecher (Kaltfront) â Something about heavy distortion, dance-adjacent electronics, and gravelly vocals makes âNew German Hardnessâ prime listening for calculated and efficient movements. With near imperceptible head bops and a commitment to perfect form, this âKaltfrontâ leaves me focused and hard as a block of ice.
âHope Terminatorâ // Cytotoxin (Biographyte) â Plenty of great death metal jams spurn gym-list inclusion with slow-build intros, not getting to proper stankinâ until theyâre well into the track. Cytotoxin knows better, immediately flaying you with technicality. âHope Terminatorâ is the perfect mid-playlist piece to curb fatigue and keep your spirit engorged.
âLet There Be Oblivionâ // Ade (Supplicium) â Romeâs Ade lays down a banger of a riff on âLet There Be Oblivion,â and itâs long and strong enough to push me through a set or two. If Iâm struggling during a workout, whether in motivation or physically, I need every ounce of energy I can muster, and songs like this one can be the tipping point.
âBlinding Oblivionâ // Depravity (Bestial Possession) â Like Gutsâ Nightmare Fuel, Bestial Possession boasts track after track of gym-ready scorchers. I chose âBlinding Oblivionâ 1. to maintain consistency with âLet There Be Oblivionâ and 2. because something about the subtle melody in the song gives it an air of refreshment that I need as the demands of my workout ramp to a frothing climax.
âElevator Operatorâ // Electric Callboy (Elevator Operator) â Itâs dumb, itâs trite, and itâs so devastatingly catchy that it sticks in my head for days on end. Most importantly, it makes me want to move things up and down, and I wonât apologize for that.
âSunlight Covenantâ // Spire of Lazarus (Those Who Live in Death) â I donât dabble in deathcore often, but when I do, itâs usually technical, symphonic, and anthemic. Spire of Lazarus crafts just the right blend of their core components to make âSunlight Covenantâ a certified HMH banger. As a bonus, try to time it so that the track hits on your last set of the dayâthe melody and backing swells make a triumphant send-off as you clinch the last rep and wipe down the bench. You wiped the bench, right?
âFossilizedâ // Ăltra Raptör (Fossilized) â This song has stayed close since I first laid ears on it, and not once has it failed to engage the hype machine. Whether warming up, working out, or cooling down, the classic retro riffs and sunglasses-at-night nonchalance define a cool I strive for, and motivation like that is the key to gainz.
Dolph Does Heavy This Time:3
âMortuary Ritesâ // Mörtual (Altar of Brutality) â Blood boils fastest with a roto-tom take off followed by a death-thrash pummel. As churning pit energy converts to flared nostrils, focused vision, and engorged fibers at the crack of a incessant stick, find a slow and steady breath as your body prepares for war.
âTlazolteotlâ // Kalaveraztekah (Nikan Axkan) â The beat of a clanging snare threatens whatever weighted structure exists in your path. âTlazolteotlâ marches ever forward through growling twists, hardwood clack, and flute-led guitar abandon. A brief respite of acoustics awaitsâbut so does the real bulk of this journey.
âBlack Scrawlâ // Pupil Slicer (Fleshwork) â Feedback, growling bass, pneumatic kicks, and an urgent snarlâPupil Slicer demands your full thrust. With this affixing hardcore anchor, âBlack Scrawlâ will carry you to your first peak push with a dragging breakdown coda.
âSwamp Mentalityâ // The Acacia Strain (You Are Safe from God Here) â Rest does not come to those who push only once, though. The burn of your resolve will light the path in the angst and mire and core-fluid whiplash of âSwamp Mentality.â And Vincent Bennettâs tattered and spit-riddled mic will provide an extra OUGH to your exhale.
âOrphansâ // Dormant Ordeal (Tooth and Nail) â If you could tether your pulse to the relentless kick assaults that Chason Westmoreland brings to âOrphansââall of Tooth and Nail reallyâyour spotter wouldnât be able to find dial emergency fast enough to save you. Instead, search for the heavier weighted tempo that exists between the pitter-patter as your guide. In this space, relentless and emotive riff runs and lead wails coalesce into one of the most threatening thrash-pit breaks of the year. Harness this power.
âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ // Blindfolded (What Seeps through Threads) â In vicious harmonized splendor, Blindfoldedâs neoclassical scale hopping riffage possesses a buoyancy that is vital to remaining invigored. And whipping around bleating and squealing mic energy with resplendent solo work, âThe Great Day of His Wrathâ both maintains your demanding schedule and restores a lightness to your being before the heaviest pulls come to play.
âRetinaâ // Pillars of Cacophony (Paralipomena) â Neoclassical drama, however, doesnât always seek to restore with its airy play. âRetinaâ arrives, rather, with a mechanical and and programmed structure that functions as a scaffold upon which ascending scale iterations match your own gradual and gravity-creating climb. As the pinch-happy shuffle sneers in precision stank-face deployment, resist the urge to discharge your steel load into the earth.
âLunar Tearâ // Barren Path (Grieving) â In any routine, no matter how structured, a moment of ferocious release can provide a benefit. Before this playlist enters its most grueling minutes, a lightning-speed romp in the grips of endless blasts and riffs exists to shake off the inertia that can result from testing your limits.
âHeaping Pile of Electrified Goreâ // Pissgrave (Malignant Worthlessness) â We are all filthâcorpses brought to life by the signals we create. Synapses creating chains from proximal to distal drive our movements from concept to power. Through squelching refrain and lockstep death metal assault, fibers at the edge of their load-bearing capacity persist and persevere in the midst of Pissgraveâs shifting and grimy rhythms.
âBursting with Lifeâs True Fruitâ // Umulamahri (Learning the Secrets of Acid) â Guttural expression unlocks the last inches of a tough pull. As we channel Doug Mooreâs garbage disposal tier phlegmanations into our own tidal vibrations, we visualize the final set. We are victorious. And in a celebratory expression of might, we slip into Umulamahriâs enlightened synth dissolution. Those who float cannot collapse.
#AndOceans #1914 #2025 #Ade #Ambush #Ashen #Barbarous #BarrenPath #Bianca #Biohazard #BlackSoulHorde #BlindEquation #Blindfolded #BloodRedThrone #Brainstorm #Cytotoxin #Deafheaven #DeathWhore #Depravity #DormantOrdeal #Eisbrecher #ElectricCallboy #FiliiNigrantiumInfernalium #Flummox #GloriousDepravity #Guts #HeavyMovesHeavy #Igorr #Jordsjuk #Kalaveraztekah #Majestica #Mortual #MutagenicHost #Nephylim #Nite #ParadiseLost #PedestalForLeviathan #Phobocosm #PillarsOfCacophony #Pissgrave #PrimitiveMan #Psycroptic #PupilSlicer #RuinousPower #Sepulchral #SerenityInMurder #Soulfly #SpireOfLazarus #StarlightRitual #TheAcaciaStrain #ToTheGrave #ĂltraRaptör #Umulamahri #Unbirth #Werewolves #WinterSBaneFirst things first: 2025 was not what I consider a lodestar of great metal. I was much more miserly than usual with my high scores, and though there were a lot of albums I liked, there were not many I truly loved. I had fewer issues curating my Top Ten than usual, with a smaller pool of contenders jockeying for slots. That likely means 2026 will be an overwhelming pornocopia of metal goodness, as flat years are usually followed by market booms. Letâs hope the historic trends continue.
On the AMG front, we had a great many seasoned staffers bow out and take time away from the site, which is always a sad event, but we got a healthy infusion of new blood, too. Hopefully, the blend of new and old will provide new perspectives, but itâs sure to result in some awful takes, too. We apologize for that in advance. Fear not, though, for I have it on good authority that a few long-absent writers will be making a shocking return in the new year.
Personally, 2025 was my least productive year in a while as far as the sheer number of reviews churned out. This was mostly due to my taking on the enormous duties of promo sump management, which takes up a significant amount of time weekly. Iâve gotten faster and more efficient at the promo herding over the year, so I hope to push my review production back up to massive aggressive levels in 2026. I love this little blog, and I invest a lot of myself in it each day. It gives me peace and comfort through challenging times, and more importantly, it keeps me off the streets looking for seedy, low-rent metal blogs to write for.
As I do every year, I want to extend a big thank you to all the readers who grace our pages, comment on our reviews, complain about scores, and generally raise a ruckus. We appreciate you, tolerate you, and continue to do our best to entertain you. Behind the scenes, though, we think you are a bunch of overrating, high-maintenance, diva do-nothings. Keep up the good work and tell your friends about us!
Iâd also like to thank all the old and new staff members and AMG Himself for their efforts to keep AMG the bastion of high opinions that it has become. Itâs easy to suffer burnout here, and there are times when the words all seem to blur together, and it becomes a battle to formulate new ways to describe shitty, lo-fi death metal. Thereâs something highly satisfying about the work, though, and doing it with a bunch of lovable rejects makes it all the more so. We have a good group of misfits here, and though we bicker and argue, we love one another most of the time. Because of all this goodwill and affection, I hope none of them make me sabbaticalize them this year. The wood chipper is still clogged from last yearâs bonanza of retirements, and Iâm just too busy to take cadavers apart the old-fashioned way. Onward to new horizons we fly!
#ish: Nite // Cult of the Serpent Sun â Nite is a strange band that challenges me to look past some very one-dimensional vocals to find the beauty in their guitar-driven righteousness. The music they create is so perfectly in my wheelhouse, mixing the classic 80s sound of Mercyful Fate with the burly badassery of Grand Magus, then they slather their compositions with a blackened snarl that rarely shifts or adapts to the epic music. Sometimes it seems this choice holds them back from greatness, but I just kept returning to Cult of the Serpent Sun time and again in 2025. Songs like âCrow (Fear the Night),â âCarry On,â and âThe Winds of Sokarâ got spun to death this year, and the guitar work across the album is stellar and so metal it hurts. In a nutshell, Iâm hooked on this weird little album despite the shortcomings in the vocal department. Give yourself to the Nite.
#10. Disembodiment// Spiral Crypts â One of the death metal albums that really stuck to ribs this year, Spiral Crypts just wouldnât unstick itself or go away. Disembodiment brings the OSDM hammer down on you with a stinky, putrid sound that rips organs from all the big names to create a shambling monstrosity all their own. Itâs Incantation and Autopsy up front, with a vaguely Death-like prog sheen hidden in the back. Yet this wonât impress with techy wanking, because theyâre too busy fucking cadavers and eating human flesh. Nasty first wins in the House of Steel, and this shit is gross but so listenable and entertaining. The riffs are slithery, slappy, and powerful, and those vocals are as much like an industrial garbage disposal as you can get without permanent throat disaster. Get yourself some unsanitary napkins and blast this filth really loud. Itâs worth the revolting mess.
#9. Helstar // The Devilâs Masquerade â I grew up loving Helstar, and their Burning Star and Remnants of War albums were in constant rotation during my high school years. Theyâve had an up-and-down career since 1989âs Nosterfatu, so them hitting their stride again in 2025 on The Devilâs Masquerade was a huge thrill for Yours Steely. Their textbook blend of US power metal and prog burns bright once more, with nods to thrash mixed in liberally for added asskickery as the guitars shred and impress. Vocal legend James Rivera still sounds enormous and powerful, and the songcraft is shockingly good and consistent. Certain moments scream classic Helstar while also hinting at Riveraâs criminally underrated Destinyâs End project, and there are several nods to prime Nevermore as well. The Devilâs Masquerade does the Helstar legacy proud, and itâs easily the best thing theyâve done since Nosferatu. Let this one in for a bite.
#8. Brainstorm // Plague of Rats â Brainstorm have been one of, if not the most reliable metal acts of the last few decades. Album after album brings a muscular, burly blend of classic metal and power, and time after time they kill it with massive anthems and sick hooks you just canât shake. Plague of Rats follows the great Wall of Skulls and almost equals it in terms of memorable songs and metal magic. Andy B. Franck continues to be one of the best vocalists in all of metal, and when given tremendous songs to work with like âGaruda (Eater Of Snakes),â The Shepherd Girl (Gitavoginda),â and âBeyond Enemy Lines,â you get molten metal gold. The writing is rock solid with several Songs oâ the Year contenders, and the riffs and vocals are a thing of savage beauty. I love these guys more than I love red meat and hobo wine (almost).
#7. Under Ruins // Age of the Void â Formed by members of the highly underappreciated Lansfear and the cheesy King Diamond wannabes, Them,1 Under Ruins bring a polished, super slick form of epic power metal to the party on their Age of the Void debut. What makes their sound so immediate for me is how it ranges from Manowar-esque chest-thumping anthems to massive epic metal like Atlantean Kodex, and on to old-timey prog metal akin to the early days of Fates Warning, with some other interesting stops along the way. Itâs enough like Lansfear to hook me in, but Under Ruins operate with a much broader vision and scope. âWhispered Curses, Woe Unleashedâ is my Song oâ the Year, full of melancholic emotion but still bringing the thunder in the way vintage Tad Morose and Pryamaze did. The chorus has been ringing through my head all year, and I canât escape it. Nor should you. Get under these ruins.
#6. Ambush // Evil in All Dimensions â When traditional and power metal are done properly, they can kick your ass and provide a massive jolt of fun at the same time. Thatâs exactly what Swedenâs Ambush does all over Evil in All Dimensions. Taking equal measurements of trad and power, they craft rip-roaring anthems to thunder, fire, steel, and make sure the hooks are plentiful. I defy you to blast the title track, âMaskirovka,â or âBending the Steelâ and not feel a rush of power in your veins. The riffs are pure 80s magic, and let me just mention Oskar Jacobssonâs vocals, because they are HUGE. This shit is 100% balls-to-the-walls energy; the songs have legs and demand repeat spins. This is one of the most infectious albums of 2025, and I think I may have underrated it a tad. Get your sack to the partition, pronto.
#5. Anchorite // Realm of Ruin â Taking the classic doom template of Candlemass and Solitude Aeternus and injecting it with the burly machismo of trve metal usually works, and in the case of Anchoriteâs Realm of Ruin, it works extra hard! Beefy riffs drive the material to epic heights as doomy harmonies decorate the war wagon. Over the top of it all, Leo Stivala delivers strident, commanding vocals to embiggen the spirit. Cuts like the massive âThe Lighthouse Chroniclesâ merge Paradise Lost with Crypt Sermon and deliver emotional doom with a touch of Nevermoreâs moody power. Standout âThe Apostateâs Prayerâ is a top moment of 2025, and Stivala soars to grand heights, carrying the listener along with him, and âKingdom Undoneâ brings in a touch of power metal with grand results and a killer chorus. A surprisingly varied and nuanced album, and one of the top doom platters of the year.
#4. Professor Emeritus // A Land Long Gone â Professor Emeritus may have one of the worst names in the metalverse, but their take on trve epic metal and doom more than make up for that oversight. A Land Long Gone is everything a fan of the trve genre could want, with big, bombastic compositions with hooks, bells, and whistles aplenty. This stuff brings the Manowar to the Candlemass recording session, with big loincloth energy adding to the slow-burning doom power. There are hints of Doomsword and Manilla Road along the road to high adventure, and everything is kept sword-friendly and mighty. âA Corpseâs Dreamâ is one of my favorite songs of the year, and I love the blending of styles they achieve, and âZosimosâ brings in copious Iron Maiden influences to bedazzle the Crypt Sermon-esque doom they deliver with aplomb. This is the kind of Professor I wish I had during my school years, so listen and learn!
#3. Paradise Lost // Ascension â Iâve followed Paradise Lost since 1991s Gothic release, and I stuck with them until they became Depeche Lost circa 2000. I came back when they went metal again, and though none of their third-stage albums floored me, I liked them enough to keep buying what they sold. That pattern changed with Ascension, which is every bit as powerful, heavy, and vibrant as their glory days, while showing a maturity and sophistication even the classics lack. Let me just come out and say it: I underrated this album, and for that, I feel some degree of fault. Ascension plays like a grand tour of the varied Paradise Lost eras, but nothing ends up feeling recycled. âSerpent on the Crossâ is a killer opener featuring everything I ever loved about the band, and cuts like âTyrants Serenadeâ and âSalvationâ are amongst the best songs of their long-running career. Where I originally felt like the back half of the album was less stellar, Iâve come to love the complete package, and I think this is among the best Paradise Lost albums. Olde dogs can still bite!
#2. Fer De Lance // Fires on the Mountainside â Competing with Anchorite and Professor Emeritus for the best trve doom album of 2025, Fer De Lance brought the biggest sword to the warfield. Fires on the Mountainside has it all; massive trveness, battle-ready classic metal, nods to black and Viking metal, itâs all here and ready for action. Take one listen ot the mammoth title track, and youâll accumulate more back hair in 7 minutes than you did in all of 2025 as the music takes you from Crypt Sermon-esque classic doom on through Hammerheart era Bathory with touches of folk along the way.2 This is music for heroes who laugh in the face of death. When the black metal element comes forward, you get gems like âRavens Fly (Dreams of Daidalos),â and when they dial down to the epic doom side, you get monsters like âDeath Thrives (Where Walls Divide)â where vocal maniac MP Papai goes all in, and channels Lost Horizonâs Daniel Heiman. If you spin this thing and donât gain 2 inches on your biceps, you have Chronic Untrveness Disorder.
#1. Structure // Heritage â In a year when I was merely whelmed by much of what I heard, Structure came out of nowhere to drop an industrial earth mover of atmospheric doom on my life. The brainchild of Bram Bijlhout (ex-Officium Triste), Heritage finds him delivering a massive treatise on emotionally harrowing sadness and grief, aided by the killer vocals of Pim Blankenstein (Officium Triste, ex-The 11th Hour). Over the 50 minutes of Heritage, the duo drag you to the heart of sadness, loss, and despair as only thoughtful, well-executed doom can. Yet there are faint rays of light and hope in the inky black, mostly in the form of Bramâs beautiful, delicate guitar work, which weaves ethereal magic through the dour, downtrodden material. Heritage is a very dark album, but itâs rife with genuine beauty too, just as life often is. Iâve spun this thing more than any other 2025 release, and it keeps calling me back to its black womb. Thereâs something truly special here, and you shouldnât miss out on experiencing it. This is your Heritage now.
Honorable Mentions:
Triumph oâ the Year:
Our little blogworks received a glowing mention in none other than Rolling Stone Magazine, and no one was more surprised than we here at AMG International. Itâs nice to see our efforts getting noticed, even in the world of professional music journalism, which we donât discuss with fans.
Tragedy oâ the Year:
The passing of Ozzy Osbourne. We all knew it was coming, but not this soon. I didnât expect it to hit me quite as hard as it did, or for the feeling of loss to linger as long as it has. This marks the definitive end of an era and the loss of a Founding Father of metal without peer. At least he went out the way he wanted: with a loud bang and crash. Have a glorious journey into eternity, Ozzman. You will always be missed.
Song(s) oâ the Year:
Under Ruins â âWhispered Curses, Woe Unleashedâ â Massive epic goodness with big emotions.
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Brainstorm â âThe Shepherd Girl (Gitavoginda)â â So damn metal it gives me an iron hangover.
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Disappointment oâ the Year:
Dark Angel // Extinction Level Event â What a prophetic album title this was, eh? After 1991s Time Does Not Heal, Dark Angel promised a new album. They promised it while I was in college, then grad school, then law school, during my first marriage, after my divorce, and over the next several decades. When they finally deliver something, and itâs the equivalent of third-rate re-thrash with only vague nods to their original sound, calling it disappointing doesnât begin to cover it. We received the promo for Extinction Level Event in time to review it, and I was eager to do the job. After one listen, however, I realized the public was going to brutally savage this thing, and I didnât see the point in adding another head stomp to a band I grew up worshipping. This is now the primary example of why itâs best to leave a legacy safely in the past, where it can live evergreen.
#2025 #Ambush #Amorphis #AnTĂłramh #Anchorite #BlackSoulHorde #BlogPost #Brainstorm #DarkAngel #Depravity #Diabolizer #Disembodiment #FerDeLance #Guts #Helstar #Lists #Nite #ParadiseLost #Phobocosm #Plasmodulated #ProfessorEmeritus #StarlightRitual #SteelDruhmSTopTenIshOf2025 #Structure #UnderRuins #WytchHazelWell, here we are again! One of the longest, most eventful years in recent memory comes to a close. After all of the hardships my family, friends, and I endured at the end of last year, it was difficult to imagine what life would be like. For quite some time, it took everything in us just to continue our day-to-day existences, to reestablish or refresh our routines, and to build our lives back up. But we had tons of support, and we got through it. In fact, Iâd say that we came out of everything with a better understanding of who we are, what we want out of life, and a greater drive to live more fully, more intentionally, and without regrets. Personally, I learned the value of asking more questions, making fewer assumptions, and embracing the mess of being human in todayâs world. With practice in these areas, in time, Iâll grow into a better person, a better friend, and a better partner to my loved ones.
Musically, I experienced a bit of a shift. I donât know exactly when this shift happened, but I could feel my desire for unfamiliar or less-traveled territory build. I desired weird, long, or messy records that called to me on a more personal level above all else. I craved pieces that showcased artists who wrote what they wanted (or needed) to, regardless of what others might think or say. Authenticity, creativity, memorability, imperfection, and artistic integrity became my core values when approaching new music this year.
Aside from all of that, the thing I want to do most is offer my deepest heartfelt thanks to everyone whoâs stuck by me and been my support system this year. To Alex, a wonderful and gorgeous man who continually shows me more love, patience, and attention than I ever dared to ask forâand who challenges me to grow with every passing day. To Ally, Thea, Kaja, Ashe, Sophie, Chris (both of them), Sean, Malachi, Brandon, Michelle, and Jeff for being the best meatspace friends a guy could ask for, and who also show me more love than I ever dared to ask for. To new meatspace friends (Jhierry, Adrien, Forest, Logan, Nick, Zach, Brett, Blue, Brian, and Shawn) who further enrich my life with each interaction, I am excited to see how our relationships develop! To my therapist, Clint, who has helped pull me from the brink more times than I can count. To my family, Mom, Dad, and Kathy, I donât know what I would do if they were not here with me. To Lise and Victoria, who have been and continue to be the best supervisorsâand all-around cool, brilliant, creative, and inspiring peopleâIâve ever known. To AMG Himself, Steel Druhm, Dr. A. N. Grier, and Sentynel for running the greatest blog on the planet and being an invaluable resource for my continued growth as a writer and contributor. To all of my fellow writers and editors, both active and inactive, who make this blog the wonderland it is and whose contributions and company continually uplift and motivate me. To the readers, our Discord members, and the metal community writ large, we wouldnât be here without you!
Lastly, Iâd like to give a shout to all the bands who released awesome records this year that fought valiantly for a spot on my list/HMs, in alphabetical order: 1914, Ancient Death, âŠand Oceans, Astronoid, Aversed, Blind Equation, Bodybox, Buried Realm, Cave Sermon, Changeling, Death Whore, Gloombound, The Halo Effect, Havukruunu, Helms Deep, Inoculation, Maud the Moth, Mutagenic Host, Nephylim, Pedestal for Leviathan, Proscription, RothadĂĄs, Sarastus, Serenity in Murder, Structure, Tower, Tribunal, Vittra, Yellow Eyes. Despite these gems losing a place on my list proper for any number of reasons, I know Iâll return to them with great relish.
With all of that said, I invite all of you to bear witness to my absolutely unhinged Top Ten(ish) selections for 2025. May the rabble commence!
#ish. Epica // Aspiral â Epica is my favorite symphonic metal band. Itâs no secret. Theyâve been at the grindstone churning out quality records for almost 25 years with a remarkably stable lineup, and thereâs every reason to expect Angry Metal Guyâs Law of Diminishing Recordingsâą to catch up with them someday. Today is not that day. Aspiral is easily my favorite record since The Quantum Enigma, full of memorable songs and standout performances. It may be hookier and poppier than anything theyâve put out in the past, but accessibility looks great on Epica.
#10. Citadel // Descension â Every time I thought I knew how I felt about this record, Iâd go back to it and discover more reasons to love it. Descension follows the same school of melodic death metal with long-form constructions that bands like An Abstract Illusion practice, but thereâs a smoky, gothic twist to it that embodies darkness and light as a merged entity. Itâs a delicate balance that Citadel treads with grace and athleticism. That feat is what ultimately elevated Descension to my Top 10 proper.
#9. Depravity // Bestial Possession â Depravity really fucked around with my cutoff for list consideration, coming in clutch one week before Turkey Day. But I am the one who found out. Riffs made to break bones and minds alike, Bestial Possession is lean, mean, and bloodthirsty. And yet, itâs smooth, refined, and streamlined. This is the work of a band that understands exactly what they want to write, and knows how to execute that vision with devastating precision. Itâs death metal as we know and love it, weaponized for mass destruction.
#8. In Mourning // The Immortal âThe Immortal surprised me. I fully expected it to be good. After all, In Mourning havenât released a bad album to date. But against all odds, they managed to capture lightning in a bottle here, with songs that are impossible to resist and even harder to forget. It represents everything I love about the sadboi side of melodic death without skimping on hooks or on teeth. The Immortal might just be the pinnacle of In Mourningâs career. Who wouldâve expected that after 25 years?
#7. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City â In recent years, I often found myself gravitating towards concise, to-the-point records. I wanted hooks. I wanted brevity. I wanted unrelenting intensity. In 2025, that shifted. The long form became my home away from home. Epic yarns and gentle movements brought comfort and warmth to my listening schedule. With The Sleeping City, An Abstract Illusion managed to capture both the intensity I craved before and the sweeping arcs that I look for now. That it is beautiful without compromising either of those traits is nothing short of awe-inspiring. And so, here we are.
#6. Igorrr // Amen â When I look at my Top 10ish, I notice two things. Firstly, a fair number of these selections are, in some shape or form, weird or niche. Secondly, the gaps that separate one album from the other at this point are paper-thin, aside from my AotY. For French wild cards, Igorrr, accessibility ultimately put Amen here with my faves of 2025. Whimsically weird, savagely smart, and wholly unpredictable, Igorrr achieved a buttery smoothness and an unflinching confidence with these 12 absolute bangers that theyâve never shown before. A high-water mark for an act with an established reputation for excellence.
#5. TĂłmarĂșm // Beyond Obsidian Euphoria â My relationship with Beyond Obsidian Euphoria followed much the same trajectory as my relationship with its predecessor, Ash in Realms of Stone Icons. I felt confident in my score, then I started doubting its accuracy, then Iâd revisit the record and feel vindicated in my original evaluationârinse and repeat. Itâs a vicious cycle, but at the end of the day, Beyond Obsidian Euphoria was always destined for my Top 5. Its epic, sprawling constructs demand so many of my spoons; emotionally, physically, and spiritually. But it gives just as many back, plus just enough extra to compel me to spin it again. Itâs one helluva journey, but thatâs what makes it excellent!
#4. Qrixkuor // The Womb of the World â In the world of symphonic death metal, Qrixkuor is singular. Nobody else sounds like them, and Iâm convinced nobody else could. Dramatic, violent, and grotesque, but at the same time possessing a disturbing beauty, The Womb of the World sets a new standard for lushly orchestrated death metal. Itâs not for the faint of heart, nor for those looking for a quick fix. But once itâs infected your mind, you belong to it. An album to be feared as much as it is to be adored.
#3. Cam Girl // Flesh & Chrome â Deciding where to slot this was a difficult process for me. The people-pleaser that lives in my brainâwho is jacked, devastatingly handsome, and incredibly charismaticâtried to move Cam Girlâs sophomore LP down a couple of notches, purely to protect me from those who would (and likely will) tell me this kind of record is undeserving of such high placement here. But the reality is I donât fucking want to. Flesh & Chrome is a staggering improvement on Cam Girlâs already winning formula, with an invincible selection of super-sticky and subversive tunes that havenât left my brain since the first half of 2025. Itâs among the most fun records Iâve had the pleasure of covering on this site. Above all, Flesh & Chrome earned its rightful place in my Top 3. So it is, so it shall be.
#2. ByoNoiseGenerator // Subnormal Dives â This was not on my bingo card for 2025. I used to despise everything about ByoNoiseGeneratorâs brand of brutal jazzgrind. After spinning Subnormal Dives roughly 10^230049 times in the span of a few short months, with a mind-broken grin plastered permanently on my face, something snapped. It wasnât a gradual affinity borne of a studious and painstaking process. It was a total, implosive disintegration of everything I held true. The result? BYONG is now one of my favorite bands, and Iâve come to love their previous work, too. Not many albums wield that much power. Subnormal Dives does.
#1. Flummox // Southern Progress â This is easily my biggest surprise of 2025. I never heard of Flummox before seeing this cover art on my Bandcamp feed, and I was thoroughly bamboozled by my first spin. The mix was bizarre, the songwriting highly unorthodox compared to anything Iâve heard this side of Devin Townsend, and Flummoxâs refusal to settle into any one style was confounding. Yet, I simply could not stop spinning it. All year long, Southern Progress was my go-to, even on days when I just felt so numb that I didnât want to listen to anything at all. With that commitment came understanding. Southern Progress is, simply put, a fully realized and inspired work of art, complete with relevant societal commentary. Steeped in messaging that spotlights systematic and social prejudices that plague the queer, and particularly the trans/nonbinary/gender-fluid, community (especially in the American South)âand deftly integrating branched subplots that exhibit the wide-reaching complications that neurodivergence, late-stage capitalism, and religion-based upbringings contribute to that experienceâFlummoxâs fifth LP greatly affected me on a personal level. More so than any other record released this year, Southern Progress feels important, not just to me, and not just to Flummox. I strongly believe everyone could learn something from this bizarre, wild, and untamable barnstormer and have a blast doing it. For these reasons, and so much more, I gratefully award Southern Progress my 2025 Album oâ the Year. Thank you, Flummox, for this wonderful gift!
Honorable Mentions
Songs oâ the Year
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Non-Metal Album oâ the Year:
Shakes Fist at Cloud Album of 2025
Tyme
Iâve spent much of my 2025 thinking about privilege. Not in the sense that the media has conditioned me, or us, to think about it, but in a way that Iâve employed to shift some of the mundane aspects of life onto their respective heads. For instance, itâs a privilege to look in my closet and have to decide what to wear each day. Itâs a privilege to look in my kitchen pantry to figure out what Iâll eat for breakfast or, better yet, which coffee cup Iâll drink from. I could go on, but thereâs a word limit to these intros. Suffice to say, I really tried to dwell on my blessings rather than my challenges this year.
And despite the blessings of my professional life, which bestowed upon me the incredible privilege of being really fucking busy for the last âwhateverâ number of months, Iâve been equally, yet much less facetiously, blessed in my personal endeavors as well. For, in addition to having a bountiful roof over my head, a vehicle to get me back and forth to my extremely privileged job, a dog I can honestly say I will have NO idea how to say goodbye to if I donât go first, and a wife that, despite the ups and downs of a normal, healthy marriage, continues to love me, I have the distinct privilege of contributing my trve opinions on all things musically heavy, or adjacently heavy, here on the best heavy metal blog in the world! And now comes the part where I give thanks.
Thank you, first and foremost, to everyone who reads this blog every day. Without you, none of this would be worth doing. At least for me, who read, lurked, and commented for years before working up the courage to actually apply for this subservient existence. Thank you to this newest crop of freshly demoted n00bs and to my list mate Killjoy and the rest of the Freezer Freaks CrewâAlekhines Gun, Owlswald, and Clarkkent1âwho, through perseverance and a buttload of patience, managed to survive nearly two years on ice to land in the crosshairs of the commentariatâs adverse, and always wrong, opinions.2,3 Thanks as well, to ALL the senior staff who are way nicer than theyâd have you believe,4 except Grier, whoâs even nicer than everyone else. And finally, the editors, the man himself, Dr. AMG, for seeing enough in me to bring me over, and Steel, who runs the tightest, most compassionate ship Iâve ever had the privilege of sailing on. Thanks, boss!
Now! To the LIST!!!
#ish. AntinoĂ« // The Fold â When I snagged this late-year gem back in November, I had no idea it would have me shuffling my list. With a little more time, Iâm sure it would have moved up the ladder, but as it stands, AntinoĂ« grabbed my (ish) spot easily. With little to no instrumentation beyond her piano, Teresa Marraco crafted something so beautiful in its basic-ness that I was entranced. Her delicate melodies evoke vibes that are as much Darkher or Tori Amos5 as they are Emperor or Dimmu Borgir, and I am definitely here for it.
#10. King Witch // III â In a year when Messa released a new album as well, the fact that King Witch is sitting on my year-end proper list and not Sara Bianchin and company speaks volumes about the job Laura Donnelly, Jamie Gilchrist, and Rory Lee did on III. Whether crooning over wispy acoustics or belting out doomily powerful tones over rock-heavy riffs, Donnelly is the star of the show, and her performance had me swooning. From the minute I first heard âSuffer in Lifeâ with its swing-heavy riffs and killer vocals, I was happy to take King Witchâs III for a spin over and over, and itâs been part of my regular rotation since summer.
#9. Imperishable // Revelation in Purity â As the year wore on, I became increasingly sure that I may have underrated Imperishableâs Revelation in Purity. In fact, I found myself returning to it several times, forgoing subsequent spins of albums Iâd rated higher. With their Nile and Olkoth pedigree, Imperishableâs expert blend of blackened death metal hit an overtly swirling sweet spot for me. The songwriting on Revelation in Purity, while not groundbreaking, is expertly executed, rendering its quality undeniable. And when you toss in those very Alice in Chains-like grunge passages, akin to a cherry on top, it was easy for me to put Revelation in Purity on my year-end list.
#8. Mutagenic Host // The Diseased Machine â Mutagenic Hostâs The Diseased Machine was the first album I successfully coveted and secured from the sump pit alllll the way back in January of this year. As a freshly demoted staff member at the time, I was overly excited at the opportunity to take it on, and the album surely didnât disappoint. Mutagenic Host does death metal the way I like it: low-brow, Neanderthalic, and brutally chuggy. Itâs a tenuous thing to run across something you deem so good so early in the year, but The Diseased Machine has definitely stood the test of Tyme and proved worth every point of the quarter-pounder I placed on it.
#7. Igorrr // Amen â My fancy with Igorrr has always been somewhat of a passing one. I was nowhere near the listener who wouldâve been part of the bandâs early target audience (Mousissure, Nostril). Still, I found more common ground with 2017âs Savage Sinusoid and even more with 2020âs Spirituality and Distortion. But when those first electronic beats of Amenâs opening track, âDaemoni,â poured out of my speakers for the first time, I was completely plugged in to Igorrrâs chaotically beautiful brand of metal madness. Amenâs surprisingly accessible break-cored, trip-hopped blackened death âbaroqueâ itâs big boot off in my ass, and Iâve been relishing and wallowing in its avant-garde pain ever since.
#6. Cave Sermon // Fragile Wings â Cave Sermonâs Divine Laughter was something Iâd definitely missed out on in 2024. When Thus Spoke covered Cave Sermonâs rapid follow-up, Fragile Wings, in April, however, I vowed I wouldnât sleep on Charlie Parkâs solo black metal project this time around. And Iâm certainly glad I didnât. Words like âwistful,â âexuberant,â and âplayfulâ were tossed about in Thusâs excellent write-up and really homed in on what made listening to Fragile Wings such a connective experience for me. Imbued as Fragile Wings is with upbeat sadness, Cave Sermon proved that I can get on board with post metal, and to be honest, any metal that sounds this good is worth the time spent. And seriously, what is that cover?!6
#5. Crippling Alcoholism // Camgirl â Inspired by a subreddit Iâm glad I never stumbled across, Crippling Alcoholismâs provocative moniker steels those whoâd approach the bandâs output with a certain sense of visceral anticipation before hearing even one note. My love for the disturbingly creepy With Love from a Padded Room led me to the pink, candy-wrapped murderpop of Camgirl with nary a momentâs hesitation. I gladly signed on to plumb the depths of weirdness I knew would exist, but could not have anticipated the absolute fathomless darkness lurking within Camgirlâs saccharine sweetness, especially as revealed with subsequent spins. A disturbing diatribe on hopelessness, disappointment, loneliness, and sex in the digital age, Camgirl wraps its message in a deceivingly poppy form of electronica that, when all is said and done, will have you wondering what the fuck just happened. I love it.
#4. Dax Riggs // 7 Songs for Spiders â Dax Riggs may be one of the more underrated artists of the last thirty years, and while I know Iâm not the only one who rejoiced in the recent resurgence and subsequent touring schedule of one of the â90s best sludge acts, Acid Bath, I also realized a new album will probably never materialize, at least not under that moniker. Instead, the universe graced us with 7 Songs for Spiders, Daxâs first solo effort in nearly 15 years. Filled with simplistically haunting melodies sung in Riggsâs inimitable style, 7 Songs for Spiders strummed every one of my fuzzed-out, laid-back heart strings and has remained consistently satisfying since its January release.
#3. Maud the Moth // The Distaff â I stumbled across Maud the Moth in 2023 while exploring the ever-expanding milieu of performers associated with my favorite artist Darkher. Searching Amaya LĂłpez-Carromoeroâs back catalog, I dove into 2015âs The Inner Wastelands and 2020âs OrphnÄ, emerging a fan of Maud the Mothâs quirky neo-classical piano-led operatics. When The Distaff popped up in the sump, I was glad to see Dolphin Whisperer snag it, knowing his words would do the album eloquent justice. Soaring in scope and execution, Maud the Moth proffers her most complex yet beautiful release to date. Filled with classically executed vocal acrobatics and massive amounts of intricate instrumentation, The Distaff is less a thing just to be listened to, as it is a thing to be wholly experienced. As immersive a piece of music as Iâve heard all year.
#2. Structure // Heritage â M-A-S-S-I-V-E is the word that best describes Structureâs Heritage, which is to say itâs big, sad, and âheavy as fook!â7 Every time I threw this beast on, and the album opener began crawling forth, it conjured the same cinematic image in my mindâs eye. A lone, bloodied warrior, fists clenched, head bowed, wind-swept and rain-soaked hair hanging down, muscles taut and twitching in furious sadness, standing in a field full of his fallen brethren as a lightning-laced deluge washed the blood of dead soldiers into the hungry ground. Then, slowly, he casts his gaze skyward, anguished tears streaming, contemplating his sole survivor existence, and screaming at the thunder-filled heavens âWill I deserve to live on?â Every time, thatâs what I see when I listen to âWill I Deserve It,â and every time I break out in goose bumps with a lumpy throat and welling eyes. Heritage came as close to being my number one as to make the two offerings at the top of my 2025 list nearly interchangeable.
#1. Dormant Ordeal // Tooth and Nail â I know I underrated Dormant Ordealâs fourth album, Tooth and Nail, for, despite giving it the 4.0 treatment, the sheer excellence of this record has only improved over time. April was THE month for me this year, yielding my two favorite metal releases and leaving Polandâs metal map deeply staked with a big, black-and-gold Dormant Ordeal flag. In true, warrior-like fashion, Maciej NieĆcioruk and Maciej Proficz soldiered on without sole founding member Radek Kowal, which opened the door for Chase Westmoreland to waltz in and give my favorite drum performance of the year. From the brutally effective âHalo of Bonesâ to the excellent, Dylan Thomas-inspired âAgainst the Dying of the Light,â there wasnât an album I returned to more this year than Tooth and Nail, its visceral riffs and razor-sharp edges leaving long-lasting scars. But in a good way, you know? Itâs with profound pleasure that I dutifully crown Dormant Ordealâs Tooth and Nail my album of the year.
Honorable Mentions
Song oâ the Year:
âTwas a mother-fookinâ toss up between my top 2 albums. I flipped a coin, so close was the race. (Heads) Structure // (Tails) Dormant Ordeal.
WINNER(?):
Structure â âWill I Deserve Itâ â Satisfyingly goose-bumpy!8
Killjoy
The fact that Iâm writing this list feels nothing short of surreal. When I became a regular reader of this blog in 2019, I had a strong interest in metal but a knowledge of only a handful of its subgenres. I did not expect to make it this far when I auditioned, but somehow I became a member of the Freezer Crew. Although we were initially forced to huddle together for warmth to survive the n00b trials, as time went on, I developed a deep respect for all of my Crewmates. Their camaraderie and encouragement were great motivation for me to keep writing this year, even when it was tough. We were even allowed to organize a special edition Rodeö! Iâm so proud to associate with them.
On a more somber note, I was sad to see many of the longtime writers who helped me fall in love with this site slip into the abyss we sometimes call ânon-suspicious sabbatical.â While I will miss reading their eloquent words, their legacy and contributions will always influence and inspire me.
And now for some thank yous. Iâm grateful to AMG Himself for creating the site and allowing me to run rampant with my questionable opinions. A gorilla-sized thanks to Steel Druhm for keeping day-to-day operations running and being the kindest, cruelest taskmaster I could hope for. Thank you to my list mate, Tyme, for making my musical tastes seem better by association. Finally, Iâd like to publicly thank my wife for being so supportive of my new hobby.
Iâm excited for what awaits in 2026 (which hopefully includes more power metal than I managed to review in 2025)!
#ish. Kauan // Wayhome â Kauan has demonstrated time and again that their ability to compose evocative soundscapes is unmatched in the post-rock sphere. Wayhome draws a little bit from different eras in Kauanâs fruitful career to form a richer, warmer experience. Each individual instrumentâacoustic and electric guitars, strings, voiceâis a crucial brush stroke in a breathtaking panorama. This is some of the most enchanting music Iâve ever heard.
#10. Anfauglir // AkallabĂȘth â When I first grabbed AkallabĂȘth for review, I was blissfully unaware of the 72-minute runtime (but probably should have had an inkling). After spending some time with it, I became blissfully aware of how awesome it is. Based on the chapter of Tolkienâs The Silmarillion chronicling the 3,000-year rise and fall of the island of NĂșmenor, AkallabĂȘth is as epic in sound as it is in scope. Mrs. Killjoy was more interested in the concept than the music, but it still made for some fun conversations. While the long runtime makes it a bit harder to revisit than the other entries on this list, this is my idea of a great symphonic black metal album.
#9. In Mourning // The Immortal â Progressive death metal comes in all shapes and sizes, and I tend to be drawn to the more emotive flavors. When Disillusion released Ayam a few years ago, it took me a while to understand the hype. In a similar manner, it took longer than it probably should have for me to appreciate The Immortal. I donât know why this was, but in both cases Iâm glad I stuck with them. In Mourningâs signature combination of earnest melodies and energetic riffs is now embedded in my mind and heart.
#8. Asira // As Ink in Water â Due to journalistic circumstances that I wonât discuss with fans, I was fortunate enough to obtain this promo earlier than I normally would have. Good thing, too, because As Ink in Water turned out to be a grower for me. The vocals proved much less popular in the comments than I anticipated, but they are the biggest reason why this record resonates with me. The buttery-smooth guitar and bass lines are another big factor. The fact that As Ink in Water was released during the tail end of 2025 might mean it appears on fewer top ten lists, but it should not be missed.
#7. Judicator // Concord â I donât have a long history with Judicator. I am part of the seemingly small minority that prefers the post-Cordisco era, although I admit that I need to spend more time with their earlier work. Concord sees Judicator returning to their heavy/power metal roots after an experimental foray into progressive territory (which I also loved!). Other than brief saxophone and fiddle segments, there arenât any fancy frills this time, only lots of guitar hooks and infectious choruses. And, in this case, thatâs more than enough to make me happy.
#6. Valhalore // Beyond the Stars â I donât normally see the point in quibbling about scores, however, I feel that Beyond the Stars was soundly underrated. Itâs a distillation of everything I love about peak Eluveitie and Ăther Realm. The folk instrumentation blends perfectly with the fast-paced melodic death metal elements. The interludes cleverly foreshadow and ease the listener into the subsequent songs. I also love the tender vocal performance by Anna Murphy towards the end. Beyond the Stars is a fun and emotional journey from start to finish.
#5. Gloombound // Dreaming Delusion â Iâm always down to sample funeral doom, but it takes a very special kind to keep me coming back. Gloombound expertly walks the difficult balance between atmospheric and stimulating music. The overall sound is that of a soul trying to escape imprisonment, whether physical, emotional, or mental. Dreaming Delusion makes me feel different emotions every time I listen, but chief among them is a crushing awe.
#4. Phantom Spell // Heather & Hearth â I love uplifting, feel-good metal (this should not come as a surprise by now). So, it was almost inevitable that I would love the nostalgic keyboards and guitar solos of Heather & Hearth. But, for some reason, it took AMGâs landmark blog post about the evils of Spotify for me to really pay attention to Phantom Spell. Iâm grateful I did, because I might have missed out on one of the most addictive pieces of progressive rock Iâve ever heard.
#3. Halocraft // The Sky Will Remember â Halocraft quickly became one of my favorite bands since I discovered them early this year. Their purposeful yet dreamy brand of post-rock is practically custom-made for me. This year, they expanded their creative limits by writing two very different records. Iâm partial to The Sky Will Remember, but donât miss out on its companion, To Leave a Single Wolf Alive, for a gloomier vibe. Their prior albums are really good too, and I listen to them just as often.
#2. An Abstract Illusion // The Sleeping City â âIf not 4.5, then why 4.5 shaped?â, one of you rabble-rousers quipped about my review of The Sleeping City. The truth is, the more time I spend with it, the more I wonder if maybe I did underrate it. Iâve somehow grown to love The Sleeping City even more in the months since I awarded it a 4.0. Sure, the production leaves much to be desired, but there arenât any other notable qualities that I would consider faults. It wonât appeal to the exact same audience as the legendary Woe, but I have plenty of room in my heart for both (and likely whatever An Abstract Illusion devises next). It was such an honor to write about this wondrous record.
#1. Black Narcissus // There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten â When I plucked There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten from the promo pit, I was a little skeptical about music made with only bass and drums. It turns out, though, that this minimalist approachâalong with excellent songwriting, of courseâwas the key to unlocking a new realm of possibility within the post-rock genre. The bass blooms unfettered in this distraction-free biome, and the drum tone is crisp and refreshing. The two instruments intertwine to engender a spirit of companionship and exploration. There Lingers One Whoâs Long Forgotten will always have a special place in my heart, and I am grateful to Black Narcissus for sharing this gift.
Honorable Mentions:
Song oâ the Year:
Judicator â âConcordâ
ï»ż
#2025 #Aganoor #AnAbstractIllusion #AncientBards #Anfauglir #Antino #AntinoĂ« #Asira #Bergfried #BlackNarcissus #BlogPosts #Braia #CaveSermon #CrimsonShadows #CripplingAlcoholism #Cryptopsy #DaxRiggs #Depravity #Diabolizer #DormantOrdeal #Gloombound #Halocraft #Igorrr #Imperishable #InMourning #Judicator #Kauan #KingWitch #Lipoma #Lists #Listurnalia #MaudTheMoth #Messa #MoronPolice #MutagenicHost #PhantomSpell #Pissgrave #Puteraeon #Structure #TymeSAndKilljoySTop10IshOf2025 #Valhalore #WyattEHIPPOLYTUS: Great crimes are never single, they are linkâd
To former faults. He who has once transgressâd
May violate at last all that men hold
Most sacred; vice, like virtue, has degrees
Of progress; innocence was never seen
To sink at once into the lowest depths
Of guilt.
[HIPPOLYTE: Quelques crimes toujours precedent les grands crimes.
Quiconque a pu franchir les bornes légitimes
Peut violer enfin les droits les plus sacrés ;
Ainsi que la vertu, le crime a ses degrés ;
Et jamais on nâa vu la timide innocence
Passer subitement Ă lâextrĂȘme licence.]
Jean Racine (1639-1699) French dramatist
PhĂšdre [PhĂŠdra], Act 4, sc. 2, l. 1094ff (1677-01-01) [tr. Boswell (1897)]
More info about (and translations of) this quote: wist.info/racine-jean/80880/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #racine #phaedra #jeanracine #corruption #crime #degree #depravity #immorality #sinfulness #sins #slipperyslope #vice
We ought to beware of people who do not think it necessary to pretend that they are good and decent. Lack of hypocrisy in such things hints at a capacity for a most depraved ruthlessness.
Eric Hoffer (1902-1983) American writer, philosopher, longshoreman
Passionate State of Mind, Aphorism 200 (1955)
More about this quote: wist.info/hoffer-eric/80863/
#quote #quotes #quotation #qotd #erichoffer #badperson #character #decency #depravity #goodperson #hypocrisy #pretense #ruthlessness #sociability #mask
Stuck in the Filter: October 2025âs Angry Misses
By Kenstrosity
They say itâs going to be a harsh winter this year. They always say that, and itâs almost never true, at least not from where Iâve set up camp. However, no matter the weather I am a harsh taskmaster, doling out grueling hours, no pay or benefits, and probably the worst coffee on the planet to my dutiful minions. It takes a special kind of person, motivated by pure unadulterated greed to ravenously scour the filter for dusty, almost-forgotten gems like they do.
But we are thankful for them for being exactly that! And we also benefit, in the form of quality(ish) chunks of glimmery, shimmery metal. BEHOLD!
Kenstrosityâs Riffy Representation
Xaoc // Repulsive Summoning [October 31, 2025 â Edgewood Arsenal Records]
Xaocâs history is one of the more confusing Iâve encountered in my time writing for this blog. After breaking up in 2008, a new lineup spawned in 2022 to record and release Proxime Mortis from the ashes of songs written pre-breakup, supported by Edgewood Arsenal. At some point this year, two more members spawned in anticipation of this new slab Repulsive Summoning. But the bandâs labeled as Split Up already on Metallum? I donât understand whatâs going on there, but at least I can say that Repulsive Summoning is a turbo banger! These riffs are bonkers, full of verve and swagger, brimming with groove and muscularity. A happy mix of Vomitory and Dormant Ordeal, this Virginian outfit know how to throw down. Highlights like âAve Solva Coagula,â âAntima Samskara,â âThe Great Perfected Ones,â and the entire âDegenerate Eraâ three-part suite reduce my body into a fine slurry by the grinding, vicious power of their riffs alone. But the rabid growls, ballistic percussion, and meaty guitar tones contain more than enough fuel to propel those riffs across this tight and thunderous 35-minute runtime. Itâs a simple record, built to beat me down and leave me broken and bloodied, but itâs also an effortlessly memorable affair that leaves me wanting more despite the mounting medical bills. Donât sleep on Xaoc!
Andy-War-Hallâs Succulent Surplus
Canvas of Silence // As the World Tree Fell [October 31st, 2025 â Rockshots Records]
Finnish symphonic metallers Canvas of Silence describe themselves as âprog-influenced chorus metal,â and that description goes far in outlining their debut As the World Tree Fell. Their core sound resembles a progged-out Nightwish moonlighting as a melodeath band, committing ludicrous bombast on symphonic-heavy cuts like âThe Great Unknownâ and âWayfarerâ amidst a sharp Gothenburg riff attack in âWatching the World Tree Fallâ and âDrown.â Canvas of Silence mete out a balanced approach of light and dark sounds between Theocracyesque prog-power (âOne With the Wind,â âHumanimalâ) and Madder Mortem-like gothic twists (âDrown,â âAnthem for Ashesâ), all reined in by the commanding vocal presence of singer Loimu Satakieli.1 Sitting somewhere between Anette Olzon (ex-Nightwish, The Dark Element) and Agnete Kierkevaag (Madder Mortem), her impassioned and heavily-layered singing turns As the World Tree Fell into a smörgĂ„sbord of lush, catchy and anthemic tunes of an uplifting, sing-along nature. Optimism permeates As the World Tree Fell, felt at a fever pitch on the enormous choral bridge of âHumanimalâ and the folky power metal jaunt of âOne With the Wind.â Even on lyrically dark/mournful passages like âWayfarerâ and âGarden of the Fallen,â Canvas of Silence deliver soaring, hopeful crescendos that at times reach Fellowship levels of good cheer. Canvas of Silence can craft sincerely beautiful moments, and though As the World Tree Fellâs production can be sterile and overly loud2 I am nothing but excited to see what these Finns can cook up next.
Spicie Forrestâs Punky Proferrings
Violent Testimony // Aggravate [October 17th, 2025 â Horror Pain Gore Death Productions]
Do you wish there was more grind in your life? Well, Cheyenne, Wyomingâs Violent Testimony just assumed you would. Combining the punky flair of Napalm Death with the lead foot ethos of early Pig Destroyer and Cattle Decapitation, debut LP Aggravate is 26 minutes of delicious grindy goodness. From the opening salvo of âGod Complex Massacreâ to the final detonations of âHit Nâ Run,â Violent Testimony shows absolutely no restraint. D.N.âs Gatling drums mow down everything in their path while T.W.âs serpentine bass clears the chaff and flattens any obstruction. Shrapnel propelled by N.Y.âs brutish, breakneck riffing can be seen burying itself in concrete walls, still quivering (âRider in the Night,â âPsychotic Episodeâ). Caustic growls and vitriolic screams tear from T.W.âs throat at mach fuck (âFlashbang Celebration,â âObligatory Manifestation of Infinite Grindâ). With only two tracks exceeding the two-minute mark, Violent Testimony screams their piece with as much sound and fury as possible before moving on and picking their next bone with the system. This keeps Aggravate a lean, densely-packed offering. If you need to get pissed off right now and even the fastest death metal is too slow, Violent Testimony is all too happy to decimate the opposition with you.
Uaar // Galger og Brann [October 17th, 2025 â Fysisk Format Records]
Hailing from Oslo, Norway, crust outfit Uaar celebrates their tenth birthday by releasing their debut LP. Galger og Brann, which means âGallows and Fireâ in Norwegian, expands on the foundations laid by established acts like Skitsystem and Tragedy. With one foot firmly planted in black metal and the other in hardcore, Uaar unleashes a cacophony of rage unfettered. D-beats abound, courtesy of Truls Friesl Berg, creating a frantic, enraged atmosphere. Dag Schaug Carlsenâs blackened rasps are so cold they burn, matching the evil pall hanging over tracks like âGaleĂ„sâ and âDen siste.â Post-flecked, Ancsty tendencies (âAlt Skal Brenne,â âOveraltâ) peek through the feral hardcore riffage (âHĂ„pet forsvinnerâ) of guitarists Erik Berg Friesl and Jon Schaug Carlsen, while bassist Stian S. Evensen provides the muscle to convince you these guys arenât screwing around. Uaar is well-versed in their base genres, alternating between and mixing black metal and hardcore effortlessly. The occasional blues-tinged heavy metal leadâas in âOveraltâ and âDolkenââkeep Galger og Brann from being a one-note affair. With a dearth of standout blackened hardcore releases this year, Uaarâs Galger og Brann is a welcomeâif lateâaddition to the list.
Scorching Tomb // Ossuary [October 24th, 2025 â Time to Kill Records]
Iâll be honest, Iâve never considered Montreal, Canada, to be prime death metal territory. Luckily, Scorching Tomb doesnât care what I think. Debut LP Ossuary is an aural violation born of Tren-induced hardcore aggression and filthy old school death metal. With a guitar tone (Philippe Lelbanc) like sandpaper and a bass like swallowing gravel (Miguel Lepage), Scorching Tomb plays in the same cesspools as Bloodgutter and Rotpit. We normally associate melted faces with guitar solos, but that honor belongs to whatever corrosive noises issue forth from vocalist Vincent Patrick Lajeunesseâs guts. Drummer Ămile Savard loves a blast beat, often detonating them in short bursts to support an already bone-breaking assault (âFeel the Bladeâ). âStalagmite3 Impalementâ and âSanctum of Bones (Ossuary)â are particularly savage, with tetanus-inflicting riffs and bloodthirsty screams threatening to drag you into the crypt to be used for meal prep. On âSkullcrush,â Sanguisugaboggâs Devin Swank perfectly matches Scorching Tombâs vile depravity, cementing them as a promising new act in the scene. Ossuary is raging, muscle-bound, caveman death metal drowned in a vat of viscera and sewage, and it tastes incredible.
ClarkKentâs Gratifying Goodies
Sutratma // Adrift [October 3rd, 2025 â Self-Release]
While I didnât purposely seek out more doom during my self-imposed month of picking only doom promos, Sutratmaâs fifth full-length, Adrift, ranks as one of the better doom albums I listened to in November. This California four-piece has been writing funeral doom for 15 years, and it shows in their ability to craft effective melancholic slow-burns that strike a balance between melody and crushingly heavy. Adrift impresses straight out the gate with the piano-drenched âWind and Sea.â This song nicely melds the sorrowful softness of the piano with punishing guitar riffs and impressive growls. Just like stalwarts My Dying Bride, Sutratma mixes growls with cleans, and Daniel Lariosâs cleans effectively hit you right in the feels while the growls take on a more despairing note. Thereâs plenty of variety from song to song, with organs stealing the show on âGuiding Starâ and a lovely melody on âThe Great Bereaverâ that builds up to a moving finale. Just like with Oromet, thereâs a serenity to the music that is calming, and the skilled songwriting and musicianship lends a poignancy to it all. With the frenzy of list season upon us, itâs nice to have something like this to remind us that itâs okay to just slow downâeven when an angry ape is berating you for more content.
Starer // Ancient Monuments and Modern Sadness [October 10th, 2025 â Fiadh Productions]
Josh Hines, the one man behind black metal project, Starer, has been very busy. Since forming Starer in 2020, he has released four EPs and now, with the release of Ancient Monuments and Modern Sadness, four LPs. I first became acquainted with this band on 2023âs Wind, Breeze, or Breath and was taken in by Hinesâs aggressively atmospheric take on black metal. Ancient Monuments and Modern Sadness hits the ground running on âI Cry Your Motherâs Bloodâ with some aggressively catchy melodies. The aggression continues on âIl-Kantilenaâ with its icy riffs and pumping blast beats. Meanwhile, âThe Field of Reedsâ combines the black nâ roll of Fell Omen with the fuzzy reverb of atmoblack for a rollicking good time. Hines screams into the void as subdued symphonics add layers of melody, providing a surprising amount of depth to each song. Because of the frenetic pace, the 50-minute runtime flies right by, even as songs like âSong of the Harperâ do their best to vary the tempo. For black metal, the production is lush and gorgeous, giving air to all instruments. The epic, ten-minute finale is the culmination of Hinesâs ability to put together complex and compelling music that both excites by its aggression and dazzles with its atmospherics. Black metal fans should not miss this one.
Grin Reaperâs Haunted Harvest
Black Cross Hotel // Songs for Switches [October 31st, 2025 â Someoddpilot Records]
Three years after dropping their favorably reviewed debut Hex, keys-drenched and industrialized outfit Black Cross Hotel returns bearing Songs for Switches. 80s-inspired synths, mid-paced chugs, and dance-ready grooves pack neatly into forty-one minutes of grubby fun, sure to interest fans of Ministry and Killing Joke, or anyone with a predilection for leather. Where Hex boasted a wider assortment of tempos, Songs for Switches narrows its focus to mid-paced songs with a keener emphasis on keyboard melodies. Averting a direction that could have been limiting, Black Cross Hotel smartly sidesteps this by shaving down song lengths and arranging the tracks for optimal pacing. Individual moments across the album evoke Me and That Man (âEyes from Nowhereâ), Soulfly (âBlood Danceâ), and Joy Division (âTypoâ), casting an eclectic array of sounds into Mount Gloom to forge ten dangerously fun tracks. Though I liked the album at first listen, it took multiple spins for Songs for Switchesâ distilled aesthetic to fully unfurl, and once it did, my appreciation redoubled. With a sinister atmosphere designed as much for pain as pleasure, Black Cross Hotel has readied your room for a night you wonât forget.
Miasmata // Subterrania [October 31st, 2025 â Naturmacht Productions]
Still hawking their distinctive blend of meloblack and heavy metal, Miasmata dropped sophomore platter Subterrania on what was one of the most congested release days of 2025.4 In addition to the recurring influences of Windir (âDie at the Right Timeâ) and Iron Maiden (the intro to âSubterraniaâ smacks of The X Factor), Subterrania adds a dollop of thrash into the mix. Opener âThose Who Cross the Flameâ struts out with a punky riff that wouldnât be out of place on an Anthrax record, while âFull of the Devilâ tastes as much like Testament or Havok as Diamond Head. The beauty of Miasmata, both on debut Unlight: Songs of Earth and Atrophy and Subterrania, is one-man mastermind Mike Wilsonâs aptitude to synthesize a mighty host of influences into a unique sonic palette all his own. As Sharky noted in Unlightâs review, Miasmata has a knack for remarkable restraint. Subterrania clocks under forty minutes, layering slithery riffs upon one another in a way that propels the music in constant motion, shifting and unfolding so organically that the album slips by before you realize itâs over (an especially impressive feat considering the self-titled closerâs near fourteen-minute runtime). If you missed Miasmataâs latest on release day, go rectify that. Donât let Subterrania get lost to the underground.
Dolphin Whispererâs Autumnal Anomoly
怹éç è // Đ ĐĐ300119225 [October 28th, 2025 â Self Release]
As if plucked into lucidity from amidst a hazy, proggy machination, Đ ĐĐ30011922 steps into its narrativeâan exploration of a beloved figure in its creatorâs life, including sound clips describing the trials through which she persistedâwith an entrancing stumble. Through an understated math rock lens, tight kit rhythms with a tension-building hi-hat clashes strut against a loud and leading bass voice across 37 minutes of fluid guitar textures. Whether itâs the chunky fusion reminiscent of Hackett-era Gordian Knot, the playful rhythmic post-rock that evokes a band like toe, or the fuzzed-out punctuation that tell a prog tale as â70s King Crimson would, 怹éç è , also known as Sleepwalker, makes their love of sound as clear as their love of Đ ĐĐ30011922âs inspiration. In a setting this free and detailed, not a single moment of this one-long-song opus passes by without taking a moment to focus on a given performerâs escalation in the drama of the movement. Wielding short guitar solos as segues into popping double-kick trots, spoken word exposition as pedal switch-up opportunities, all leading to a crescendo of bent and bluesy expression, 怹éç è succeeds in more than just holding an audience captive with their jammy and heartfelt statement. Đ ĐĐ30011922, like the shorter form releases that have graced these halls before, will have you coming back time and time again to explore its sentiments, which feel both traced from a dream yet rooted in rich, earthly tone pleasures.
Saundersâ Slinky Sneaks
Enragement // Extinguish All Existence [October 31st, 2025 â Transcending Obscurity]
The back end of 2025 has thrown down some delightfully vicious, chunkified, and straightforward death metal gems, courtesy of the likes of Depravity, Glorious Depravity and Terror Corpse. Not to be discounted, Finlandâs Enragement dropped their own intense slab of brutal death on fourth LP, Extinguish All Existence. Cutting with any pleasantries, Enragement get down to business, slamming through a tight, burly collection of Americanized death, keenly treading a balance between thuggish beatdowns, chest-busting blasts, slammy, pig-squealing grooves, and more traditional, though deceptively diverse brutal death fare. Despite the certifiably crushing formula deployed, there is an air of accessibility, perhaps attributed to the clean but suitably beefy production job, bludgeoning, addictive grooves and sinister currents of atmospheric melody flowing through the albumâs riff-centric veins. Thrashy, straightforward bursts of fury are tempered by more technical flourishes and an impressively versatile vocal assault. The likes of Devourment, Deeds of Flesh, Dawn of Demise and Benighted are perhaps fitting reference points, however, Enragement blast their own path of uncompromisingly heavy destruction.
Stephen Brodsky // Cut to the Core Vol. 1 [October 3rd, 2025 â Pax Aeturnum]
There are a couple of ways to broach this latest solo endeavor from lovable rogue and Cave In/Mutoid Man mastermind Stephen Brodsky. Brodsky delivers refreshed interpretations of various â90s hardcore songs, reimagined in acoustic form. Those familiar with the original compositions will likely have fun dissecting and comparing the original anthems. While others, such as myself, largely unfamiliar with the originals, can enjoy these polished takes in their reimagined form, without comparison. Over the years, I have developed a strong connection with Brodskyâs works and come to appreciate his softer, acoustic flavorings. The likes of Snapcase, Converge, Texas is the Reason, Threadbare and By the Grace of God are some of the acts covered with typical style, zest, and emotion. Brodskyâs expressive and emotive delivery showcases both a loving appreciation of the material and deeper emotional connection that bleeds through the often darker, melancholic vibes of the acoustic constructions. The collection is remarkably consistent and infectious, highlighted by Brodskyâs crisp and soulful acoustic playing and distinctive singing voice on standout cuts, including âWindowsâ (Snapcase), âBenchwarmerâ (Lincoln), âFissuresâ (By the Grace of God), âFarewell Note to This Cityâ (Converge), and âVoiceâ (Sense Field).
Soul Blind // Red Sky Mourning [October 10th, 2025 â Closed Casket Activities]
Riding a familiar wave of early â00s alt-rock/metal and â90s grungy nostalgia, New Yorkâs Soul Blind emerge with sophomore LP, Red Sky Mourning. Although they tread dangerously close to overt derivation of prominent influences, including Alice in Chains, Deftones, and Helmet, Soul Blind manage to just stay afloat on their own terms. The dreamy melodies, chunky alt metal riffs, and soaring, Cantrell-esque vocal melodies cultivate some earwormy hooks and fuzzy, 90s/â00s feels. Soul Blind possess a knack for writing textured, mildly sludgy, infectious rock ditties, dabbling in shoegazing atmospherics, and sturdier alt metal territories along the way. Soul Blind relish in AIC inspired earworms (âDyno,â âHide Your Evilâ), grittier, more aggressive alt metal fare (âBilly,â âNew York Smokeâ) and airy, indie pop-rock (âThru the Hazeâ). Soul Blind have work to do to stand out from their influences and develop a more unique sound and robust character. However, the signs are positive for better things to come. Red Sky Mourning is a solid throwback album and handy companion piece to the equally nostalgia-inspired album from Bleed earlier in the year.
#2025 #Acoustic #Adrift #Aggravate #AliceInChains #AmericanMetal #AncientMonumentsAndModernSadness #Ancst #Anthrax #AsTheWorldTreeFell #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackCrossHotel #BlackMetal #Bleed #Bloodgutter #ByTheGraceOfGod #CanadianMetal #CanvasOfSilence #CattleDecapitation #CaveIn #ClosedCasketActivities #Converge #Crust #CutToTheCoreVol1 #DeathMetal #Deftones #Depravity #DiamondHead #DormantOrdeal #EdgewoodArsenalRecords #Enragement #ExtinguishAllExistence #FellOmen #Fellowship #FiadhProductions #FinnishMetal #FuneralDoom #FysiskFormatRecords #GalgerOgBrann #GloriousDepravity #GordianKnot #GrooveMetal #Grunge #HardRock #Hardcore #Havok #HeavyMetal #Helmet #HorrorPainGoreDeathProductions #IndependentRelease #IndustrialMetal #InternationalMetal #IronMaiden #JapaneseMetal #KillingJoke #KingCrimson #Lincoln #MadderMortem #MeAndThatMan #MelodicBlackMetal #Miasmata #Ministry #MutoidMan #MyDyingBride #NapalmDeath #NaturmachtProductions #NewZealandMetal #Nightwish #NorwegianMetal #Oct25 #Oromet #Ossuary #PaxAeternum #PigDestroyer #ProgressiveMetal #ProgressiveRock #RedSkyMourning #RepulsiveSummoning #Review #Reviews #RockshotsRecords #Rotpit #Sanguisugabogg #ScorchingTomb #SelfRelease #SelfReleased #SenseField #Skitsystem #Snapcase #SomeoddpilotReocrds #SongsForSwitches #SoulBlind #Soulfly #Starer #StephenBrodsky #StuckInTheFilter #StuckInTheFilter2025 #Subterrania #Sutratma #SymphonicMetal #TerrorCorpse #Testament #TexasIsTheReason #TheDarkElement #Theocracy #Threadbare #TimeToKillRecords #toe #Tragedy #TranscendingObsurityRecords #Uaar #ViolentTestimony #Vomitory #Windir #Xaoc #Đ ĐĐ30011922 #怹éç è
âThe Holocaust Photo That Shatters The Myth of âJust Following Ordersâ
by Carilyn Beccia in The Grim Historian on Substack
âBecause the truthâââthat these men [Nazi SS soldiers] acted out of willingness, conviction, camaraderie, ideology, opportunityâââforces a harder question: What would *we* do if the order came?â
https://open.substack.com/pub/thegrimhistorian/p/the-holocaust-photo-that-shatters
#Press #Holocaust #Nazi #Milgram #Experiment #Obedience #Responsibility #Trump #Depravity #Tyranny #Orders #US #Military
âThis madness cannot last forever. At some point, there will be a break. It could be military; it could be #Israel tearing itself apart; or it could be the #US finally overwhelmed by a financial crisis that printing more money can no longer stave off. In #WestAsia the people will rise against the fate decreed for them sooner or later. They have risen before, and they will rise up againâ
in âGaza: The Moral Sicknessâ by Jeremy Salt
âGaza: The #Moral #Sickness and #US #Policy #Derangement behind the Genocideâ
by Jeremy Salt in The Palestine Chronicle
@palestine@fedibird.com
@Palestine@masto.ai
@palestine@lemmy.ml
@BBC5Live
@BBCRadio4
@BBCNews
@AlJazeera
@UKLabour
âIsrael is a full-on nightmare. An extra level needs to be added to Danteâs nine levels of hell to capture the full depravity of what its military minions have done in Gazaâ
#Press #Genocide #Gaza #Israel #Zionism #Depravity #DismantleZionism #DecolonizePalestine