Posts Tagged ‘2004’
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › M on Tuesday, May 4th, 2004
Scotland. Home of the Haggis, and……. erm, I dunno, Scottish people? Who would have thought that one of the best death metal albums of 2004 would have risen from the craggy depths of Dumbarton? And while Mithras could certainly lay claim to being the UK’s saviors of extreme metal, Man Must Die have a far […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Man Must Die, Retribute Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Friday, April 30th, 2004
Artimus Pyle is a name I have seen often in play-lists among other bands of their crusty ilk whom I am quite fond of – Tragedy, Kylesa, Remains of the Day, among others- so I was very psyched to find their new full-length in my review pile as I have been meaning to check them […]
Tags: 2004, Artimus Pyle, John Gnesin, Prank Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Wednesday, April 28th, 2004
While I’m sure it’s the most tired tactic of them all, I can’t but mention the fact that Infinited Hate is another band where Rachel Heyzer-Kloosterwaard (of Occult and Sinister-fame) speaks sexily through her throat with Death Metal playing in the background. From what I gather, the band was formed late 2003 to fill the […]
Tags: 2004, Displeased Records, Infinited Hate, Mikko, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Saturday, April 24th, 2004
I can’t really say Italy has a solid stranglehold on the doom genre, but after this, their third album, Rome’s Void of Silence at least seem ready to make others take notice. After the horrifically bad Carinou album, I was reluctant to give this a listen but it turns out, VOS are a pretty creative, […]
Tags: 2004, Code 666, E.Thomas, Review, Void of Silence
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Saturday, April 24th, 2004
It’s always hard reviewing a genre you don’t particularly get, but when graced with power metal, grim black metal or grindcore, I try my best to be objective and at least recognize ability and talent no matter the genre. However, in the case of grindcore, a few releases have found their way into my album […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Review, Vulgar Pigeons, Willowtip Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Friday, April 23rd, 2004
Edge of Sanity. Yup, that’s the first band that popped into my head when the opening chords of the tile track rumbled from the speakers. Not the ambient experimental metalcore outfit who blew me away with V.I.T.R.I.O.L, and while a drastic style change such as this might usually disappoint me, Fear My Thoughts actually pull […]
Tags: 2004, Erik T, Fear My Thoughts, Lifeforce Records, Metalcore, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Tuesday, April 20th, 2004
With all the metalcore suddenly gracing Metal Blade’s roster, it’s sure nice to see this veteran act still on the label and still churning out quality if rudimentary, but ultimately fun old school death metal. The easy thing to do would be cut and paste either their Revelation Nausea or Blood Rapture reviews and change […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Metal Blade Records, Review, Vomitory
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Tuesday, April 20th, 2004
Unlike most, I really didn’t think that Digimortal was as big of an abomination as some make it out to be. Sure it had its fair share of jumpdafuckup-elemenets, but it was still unquestionably a pure Fear Factory album where the things done right overweighted the things done wrong. Guess the success of the album […]
Tags: 2004, Fear Factory, Liquid 8 Records, Mikko, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Monday, April 19th, 2004
I’ll admit, my review of 2002’s God Was Created was slightly overzealous, but Vehemence’s second full length album was still worthy of my album of the year title, so with their follow up I’ll try to be a little more level headed and objective, but still, Vehemence are on of my favorite bands. If anything, […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Metal Blade Records, Review, Vehemence
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › U on Sunday, April 11th, 2004
While the prospect of a Kreator meets Carnal Forge or Dew Scented offspring has some appeal theoretically, its actual manifestation is far less promising. Hailing from Wolfsberg, Germany, Uppercut have taken the classic German thrash sound and spiced and tightened it up a bit with a sort of Swedish death/thrash razors edge, and like I […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, GUC Records, Review, Uppercut
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Sunday, April 11th, 2004
Formed from the ashes of legendary doom acts Dusk and Crawl, Wisconsin’s Aphotic have been hard at work forging a new band to carry on the ethereal, natural doom metal of their prior acts. Stillness Grows is the miserable fruits of their labor; 3 demo EPs on this one album. 2000’s self titled demo, 2001’s […]
Tags: 2004, Aphotic, E.Thomas, Flood the Earth Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Saturday, April 10th, 2004
Astarte is one of those bands that has a quiet history, usually making their presence known only when they release a new album. I’ll admit to not listening to them much at all over the years but when I pulled out my copies of Doomed Dark Years and Quod Superius, Sicut Inferius , which I […]
Tags: 2004, Astarte, Grimulfr, Magick Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Friday, April 9th, 2004
US black metal just never seems to find its way to these ears, and when it does it’s generally the grimier, warlike stylings of Epoch of Unlight and Forest of Impaled or the raw frozen grimness of Goatwhore and Leviathan. In the symphonic/atmospheric category, only Vesperian Sorrow has graced these ears with any true mimicry […]
Tags: 2004, Crash Music, E.Thomas, Review, Veneficum
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › Z on Tuesday, April 6th, 2004
Just under thirty minutes of “you just got your ass handed to you.” The first handful of tunes blaze like Lemmy’s secret punk band, and it all reminds me of the Supersuckers’ on-messageness; y’know, they’ve only got one song, but it’s a really good one. But then Zeke start flipping the pillow with some slower, […]
Tags: 2004, Jeff Lamb, Relapse Records, Review, Zeke
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › G on Saturday, April 3rd, 2004
This is one of those albums I have to put review blinkers on for, because as much as I’d personally like to rave about the brilliance and influence of Grave, the fact is, for the follow up to last years ‘comeback’ album , Back From the Grave the word ‘Regression’ is an apt title. I […]
Tags: 2004, Century Media Records, Erik T, Grave
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › Q on Saturday, April 3rd, 2004
Imagine for a moment that teen deathsters Decapitated played screamo-punk instead of death metal, and that they were from Staten Island and Brooklyn. You would get Quantice Never Crashed; an adolescent gathering of talent equal if not greater than their peers. Part early Hopesfall, part You Fail me Converge, part Thursday and part Fear Before the March […]
Tags: 2004, Erik T, Quantice Never Crashed, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Tuesday, March 30th, 2004
We all know Willowtip does death metal and grind as good as or better than any other US label, but how will they fare in the European dominated melodic/black genre? Fucking phenomenally. As with most Willowtip releases, Arsis’s offering is the extremity tipped, red headed, bastard child of a parent genre. Arisis is to melodic […]
Tags: 2004, Arsis, E.Thomas, Review, Willowtip Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Thursday, March 25th, 2004
O Gods of Metal, I humbly bow and beg for thy forgiveness. I have been ignorant too long. I had heard thy decree that After Forever was indeed amazing and blessed by thee, but I ignored thy voices. Forgive me, O spiked and studded ones. Forgive me, for as thou hast said, After Forever is […]
Tags: 2004, After Forever, Review, Shawn Pelata, Transmission Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Wednesday, March 24th, 2004
Do you miss old Kataklysm? Do you miss the mystical hyper-blasting and over the top lyrical, otherworldly vocalizations of Sylvain Houde? Well, Country mates Cephalectomy are for you dear reader.Nova Scotia’s Cephalectomy have released a superb album that re-creates the Northern hyper-blasting of Sorcery; insanely fast brutal death/grind with surprising amounts of intricate, layered melodies […]
Tags: 2004, Cephalectomy, Discorporate Music, E.Thomas, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › V on Monday, March 22nd, 2004
With a moniker like Vicious with and album title like Vile, Vicious & Victorious this band set themselves some pretty high expectations that they had better damn well fulfill. And this Gothenburg lot gives it a pretty good try, but it isn’t quite as promising as their namesake. A solid, competent take on thrashy, energetic, […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Review, Sound Riot Records, Vicious
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › T on Monday, March 22nd, 2004
A black metal project featuring members of Unmoored, Incapacity, Solar Dawn, Satariel and Setherial, the bloodlines of Torchbearer are certainly solid, but the results are surprisingly average. Sitting squarely in the blazing but melodic black metal realms shared by Naglfar, Necrophobic and The Legion, Yersinia Pestis (the virus that causes The Black Death) delivers plenty […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Metal Blade Records, Review, Torchbearer
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › W on Monday, March 22nd, 2004
As tempting as it was to cut and paste my review of Fragments of Unbecoming’s recent album, I thought you the reader and the band deserve slightly more than that. What other than melodic death metal would you expect from a band from Gothenburg with former Gardenian drummer Thim Blom in their ranks? As to […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Karmageddon Media, Review, Within Y
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, March 8th, 2004
So here is album number 6 from one of Sweden’s pioneering and longstanding death metal stalwarts. A new Dismember album is always an event for me, a musical milestone I look forward too with glee, and while my fanboy approach to the band has to be stifled somewhat for an objective review, I find myself […]
Tags: 2004, Dismember, E.Thomas, Karmageddon Media, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, March 1st, 2004
The Finnish metal scene is more lively than it has ever been. I’m not talking about the inbred fans, the demented critics and the sort but the actual bands. There’s plenty of variety, there’s shitloads of quality and the battle for becoming better than the other guy is intense. Unfortunately, it’s a double edged sword. […]
Tags: 2004, Diablo, Mikko, Poko Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › W on Tuesday, February 24th, 2004
I distinctly remember not being that impressed with the debut album The Bound Feed the Gagged from this Michigan quintet, but also sharing the sentiment of the Teeth of the Divine writer that reviewed that album in thinking “I’ve not heard the last from this lot.” And here they are with album number 2, and it’s a […]
Tags: 2004, E.Thomas, Review, Trustkill Records, Walls of Jericho