#Invictus

2026-02-13
Scythe – Boiled Alive Review By Grin Reaper

In the midst of a recent metal deep-dive, Romania’s Scythe skulked out from a Bandcamp back alley and bludgeoned me with the flat side of their blade, knocking me senseless with scuzzy shenanigans. We weren’t graced with a promo for Scythe’s self-released debut, but Boiled Alive packs in so much grimy panache that after my first listen, I had it shortlisted as someThing You Might Have Missed. Rather than wait several months before bringing attention to Boiled Alive, though, I volunteered to burn some midnight oil and write about this quartet from Constanța. Why did Boiled Alive get me so hot and bothered? Scythe’s brand of death metal grips you by the throat and never relents, evoking many influences while creating something uniquely their own. After the dry spell I’ve had with death metal lately, I finally found something I unapologetically adore. So step right up, put your head on the chopping block, and let Scythe have a whack at your earhole.

Scythe doesn’t make grand statements about existentialism or introspection, nor do they redefine a genre. First and foremost, Scythe is here to serve up sickly, sticky licks with blithe recklessness. This fearsome foursome drops track titles that ooze with enough viscera (“Liquified Entrails,” “Of Pure Goriness”) to squelch onto a Cannibal Corpse setlist while harkening to soundscapes defined by Pestilence and Autopsy. Throughout Boiled Alive, the pace oscillates between frenzied paroxysms and plodding crawls, often within the same song (“Necrophilic Corpse Orgies”). Though it would be easy for these dynamics to jostle listeners, the savvy songwriting avoids clumsy transitions and affords an entrancing experience. Ultimately, Scythe guides listeners through a curated gallery of horror that’s as thrilling as it is fulfilling.

Boiled Alive by Scythe

Interweaving Asphyxiating drudges with Mercilessly hectic eruptions, Scythe concocts a unique brew all their own. Boiled Alive simmers with ever-shifting tempos, imbuing the album with vivacity and a disarming blend of chops and accessibility.1 Where “Liquified Entrails” opens with a cannonade evoking an unholy union of Priest’s “Riding on the Wind” and Merciless’ “Souls of the Dead,” “Of Pure Goriness” flits between a mid-paced slink and rabid surges of hostility, and sounds like the crossbred bastard of Cannibal Corpse and Dismember. “Necrophilic Corpse Orgies” and “Tenebrous Decease” expose Scythe’s ability to nimbly jump between accelerated clips and more measured velocities, electrifying with their seamless agility as they navigate whipsawing tempo changes with a sophistication that is all the more impressive considering the band has no other projects or credits to their names.2

The musicianship on Boiled Alive is especially tight for a band formed just three years ago, and the mix highlights the band’s technical acumen. Rather than feature the glossy veneer popular with bigger labels, Boiled Alive sports a dry, natural texture that allows Scythe’s instrumentation to glisten. Reminiscent of the production on Invictus’s release last month, every whack on a tom and clang on the bass is afforded an organic timbre, imparting a raw aesthetic that lets Scythe sizzle. Whether rattling off meticulous snare rolls (“Necrophilic Corpse Orgies”), punky, snare-kick combos (“Plastered in Phlegm”), or playful cymbal splashes (“Of Pure Goriness”), David Rolea flays the skins on every track. Meanwhile, bassist and vocalist Andrei Constandache wields a gorgeously fat low-end tone3 as he assaults the mic with a menacing rasp. Not to be outdone, guitarists Mihai Panait and Andrei Oglan buzzsaw their way through Boiled Alive’s eight tracks, focusing on knotty riffs over wankfest solos. While the drums are the star of the show, Scythe suffers no weak links.

Part-thrashy, part-doomy, and all deathly, Scythe swings for the fences on Boiled Alive. And dammit, it’s Great. This beast writhes and squirms with purulent pizzazz, and I’m guilty many times over of restarting Boiled Alive as soon as the final track concludes. I wish solos were more prevalent across the album, and Constandache’s vocals, while effective, could use some variety, but these nitpicks should be taken as wishlist items for ol’ Grin rather than anything inherently off with Boiled Alive. Scythe discharges riffs and fun with an enviable effortlessness that should have death metal dealers and appreciators paying attention. In a genre with so much competition, Boiled Alive stands above the rabble, and I anxiously await the next time the Scythe comes down.

Rating: Great
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Self-Released
Websites: Bandcamp | Instagram
Releases Worldwide: February 1st, 2026

#2026 #40 #Asphyx #Autopsy #BoiledAlive #CannibalCorpse #DeathMetal #Dismember #Feb26 #Invictus #JudasPriest #Merciless #OldSchoolDeathMetal #OSDM #Pestilence #Review #Reviews #RomanianMetal #Scythe #SelfReleased
SpringGnollspringgnoll
2026-01-27
2026-01-26
Invictus – Nocturnal Visions Review By Kenstrosity

Five years ago, I highlighted Invictus’ 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, Invictus’ 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, it’s Invictus.

Having only one previous album and a few scattered demos/singles to their name, Invictus haven’t 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 Riff™. 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 don’t just open up pits, but rather rip open dimensional rifts straight to hell itself (“Altar of Devoted Slaughter,” “Wandering Ashdream”). Instead of relying on blasts for intensity, Haruki Tokutake’s 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 half—accommodations which in no way deterred my summary bodily encrushment (“Persecution Madness”). 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 record’s warm, slightly swampy production (“Nocturnal Visions”). Unlike many of those acts from whom Invictus draws inspiration, Seki’s 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.

Nocturnal Visions by Invictus

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 “Abyssal Earth Eradicates” 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 metal’s history. As Nocturnal Visions progresses through its early movements, boasting killer tracks in “Altar of Devoted Slaughter,” “Lucid Dream Trauma,” and “Persecution Madness,” 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. What’s left is a mind-broken sponge reduced to primal instincts, with a vocabulary of one word, “Fuck!” exclaimed exclusively with each new swaggering groove or pummeling riff. Even after several dozen spins, pit monsters “Persecution Madness,” “Dragged Beneath the Grave,” and later highlight “Wandering Ashdream” 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 “Nocturnal Visions” earns its keep here, switching up themes and reprising refrains just enough to keep my interest up and my engagement high.

That doesn’t leave much room for negatives, and indeed, few found purchase in my evaluation. Obviously, Nocturnal Visions exhibits nothing new or innovative; it’s 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 it—see the otherwise ripping “Frozen Tomb.” Seki’s somewhat one-note vocal approach doesn’t 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

#2026 #40 #DeathMetal #DemolitionHammer #Depravity #Incantation #Invictus #Jan26 #JapaneseMetal #MeSacoUnOjoRecords #NocturnalVisions #Pestilence #Review #Reviews #TombMold
El Pregoner del Metallpregonermetall
2026-01-26
float magazinfloatmagazin
2026-01-04

„Sophistication first“ heißt es bei den Superboats. Design und Leistung kennen in diesem Segment nur eine Richtung: Premium.

floatmagazin.de/boote/premiere

Float
2025-12-27
... 'ᴄᴀᴜꜱᴇ ɴᴏᴛʜɪɴɢ ʀᴇᴀʟʟʏ ᴍᴀᴛᴛᴇʀꜱ ... ꜱᴏ ʟᴇᴛꜱ ᴅᴀɴᴄᴇ 'ᴛɪʟ ᴏᴜʀ ꜱᴏᴜʟꜱ ʙᴜʀɴ ᴏᴜᴛ ... 🌀🖤🪽
#bnwportrait #invictus #affirmation #selfie #yolo
#sonya7c #sonyalpha7c #model #blacknwhite #bnw #monochromephotography #monochromatic #witchcraft #goth #darkaesthetics #portrait
2025-12-27

🪷 Tonight's #Aries #FirstQuarter Moon is called the #Invictus moon in #Antinous Moon Magic, honoring #SolInvictus #Mithras. #Antinoos shines forth from your eyes to illuminate others who live in spiritual darkness. Open your eyes and be a beacon: antinousstars.blogspot.com/202 🪷

2025-12-27

🪷 Tonight's #Aries #FirstQuarter Moon is called the #Invictus moon in #Antinous Moon Magic, honoring #SolInvictus #Mithras. #Antinoos shines forth from your eyes to illuminate others who live in spiritual darkness. Open your eyes and be a beacon: antinousstars.blogspot.com/202 🪷

2025-12-27

🪷 Tonight's #Aries #FirstQuarter Moon is called the #Invictus moon in #Antinous Moon Magic, honoring #SolInvictus #Mithras. #Antinoos shines forth from your eyes to illuminate others who live in spiritual darkness. Open your eyes and be a beacon: antinousstars.blogspot.com/202 🪷

2025-12-25

🪷 We celebrate the return of #Antinous #Invictus (Unconquerable Gay God) between 25 Dec & 1 Jan, the Golden Age of #Saturn's reign. It's time for #Saturnalia joy as #SolInvictus returns & #Mithras fecundates the cosmos: antinousstars.blogspot.com/202 #Antinoos in Lima Peru #fcoleo 🪷

Brian E Rangelbrianerangel
2025-12-05

“Out of the night that covers me…
I thank whatever gods may be
For my unconquerable soul.” Still my favorite poem, 15 years after watching Invictus.
Some words just never let you go.



:rss: 電ファミニコゲーマー – ゲームの面白い記事読んdenfaminicogamer@rss-mstdn.studiofreesia.com
2025-11-13

【閲覧注意】虫だらけの地球で生き延びるシューター『No More Light』トレーラーが公開。カサカサ動きこちらに迫る虫がリアルすぎてキツい
news.denfaminicogamer.jp/news/

#denfaminicogamer #サバイバルシューター #No_More_Light #TPS #Invictus #ニュース #ポストアポカリプス #Para_51_Games #Steam #しんじょ

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