Posts Tagged ‘2010’
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Tuesday, June 15th, 2010
There’s not a single original note on the debut from the Ukraine’s Acephala, but what they do deliver is a solid slab of slamming Eastern European brutal death metal that should fit right in with the likes of label mates Katalepsy, Murder Intentions and of course, Devourment. With twelve bludgeoning songs (as well as an […]
Tags: 2010, Acephala, E.Thomas, Review, Soulflesh Collector Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Monday, June 14th, 2010
Assassins: Black Meddle Part I, the first chapter in Nachtmystium’s post-black metal transformation, was aptly named in that it mashed up Floydian psychedelia with the band’s gritty, scuzzy and vaguely punk brand of USBM. When I reviewed the album two years ago, I latched more onto the rippling, expansive sections than the fiercer black-punk explosions […]
Tags: 2010, Century Media Records, Jordan Itkowitz, Nachtmystium, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Monday, June 14th, 2010
I’m willing to stretch my metal arms pretty wide to accommodate a wide variety of the sub-genres that have sprung up in the past decade. This new wave of black metal that Nachtmystium has been courting for a couple albums now was a pretty big deal a few years ago. I still remember the first […]
Tags: 2010, Century Media Records, Kris Yancey, Nachtmystium, Review
Posted in Frontpage Feature, News on Monday, June 14th, 2010
Soilwork hasn’t kept much of noise as of late. The band’s previous album, Sworn to a Great Divide, divided the audience into two; some claiming it to be a fresh album for the band, whereas others were not as polite in their views. The Panic Broadcast is the band’s first new musical output in three years. Read TeethoftheDivine.com’s review to find out if it was worth the wait.
Tags: 2010, News, Soilwork
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Monday, June 14th, 2010
Looks like the guys in Soilwork have finally dug themselves out of their hole. Opener “Late for the Kill, Early for the Slaughter” is the fastest, most relentless thing they’ve done in a long time, and from that very first blastbeat, it’s clear that Soilwork wants you to forget about Sworn to a Great Divide. […]
Tags: 2010, Jordan Itkowitz, Nuclear Blast Records, Review, Soilwork
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Friday, June 11th, 2010
The Guessing Game, for all of its metal pedigree has (like the band Cathedral itself) roots equally as deep in early (read: Syd Barrett era) Pink Floyd as in doom progenitor Black Sabbath. In fact, an open-eared listener will hear (uh oh… sit down, metal people) references to ‘70s-‘80s Britpop bands like XTC and The […]
Tags: 2010, Cathedral, Donald Kyle, Nuclear Blast Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › F on Thursday, June 10th, 2010
The latest Fates Warning album to be given the reissue/deluxe treatment is 1991’s Parallels. At the time, it was lauded as Fates‘ “commercial” release and certainly cuts like “Eye To Eye” and “Point Of View” (which both received extensive MTV airplay) were examples of more streamlined material from this prog metal band. Listening now, 19 […]
Tags: 2010, Fates Warning, Metal Blade Records, Review, Shawn Pelata
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › M on Wednesday, June 9th, 2010
Back in 2000, I was pretty disappointed to hear that Morten Veland was leaving Tristania after their brilliant second album, Beyond the Veil – an album I still consider to be one of the triumphs of the entire goth-metal genre. (I was, however, lucky enough to see the band in one of their few US […]
Tags: 2010, Jordan Itkowitz, Mortemia, Napalm Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Tuesday, June 8th, 2010
Hailing from Tennessee, As Hell Retreats is one of the recent addictions to the Strikefirst/Facedown Records family, so you know they play some form of quality Christian metal, and in this case it’s a hybrid of melodic metalcore and crumbling deathcore. Not as utterly devastating as label mates Impending Doom or Earth From Above and […]
Tags: 2010, As Hell Retreats, E.Thomas, Review, Strikefirst Records
Posted in Frontpage Feature, News on Monday, June 7th, 2010
Norwegian symphonic black metal band DIMMU BORGIR proudly announce their collaboration with Norwegian composer and Berklee College of Music summa cum laude alumnus Gaute Storaas in addition to the 51 members of KORK (the Norwegian Radio Orchestra) and the 38-member Schola Cantorum Choir for their as-yet-untitled new album. To date, over 101 musicians have lent […]
Tags: 2010, Dimmu Borgir, News
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › N on Monday, June 7th, 2010
Ulver‘s made some great ambient and electronic albums since their big genre switch, but don’t you wish they’d also turned out another Bergtatt or Kveldssanger before leaving metal behind for good? (Or at least took a bass with them when they recorded Nattens Madrigal in that forest?) Well, now you can take a hike into those same misty, […]
Tags: 2010, Jordan Itkowitz, Nattsol, Prophecy Productions, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › L on Monday, June 7th, 2010
It occurred to me a while back that a lot of the stuff that I converse with the most is one way or another—if only barely—connected to black metal. This was a revelation of sorts to me, as I’ve never considered myself a fan or particularly open to the genre. I have no interest for […]
Tags: 2010, Lantlôs, Mikko, Prophecy Productions, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, June 7th, 2010
In itself, the formula for a successful female fronted gothic metal act is simple; lush production, lavish synths, some catchy riffs, a ballad or two and all of it sung by some buxom, corset clad beauty. It’s been done to death, resulting in somewhat of a saturation of the genre over the last few years. […]
Tags: 2010, Delain, E.Thomas, Review, Sensory
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › P on Thursday, June 3rd, 2010
When I started writing for the now-defunct Digital Metal (around 2002), France seemed like an insular metal nation. There weren’t too many Tricolore-bands that I could mention by name. The bands that did get some airtime, were marginal and quite frankly, seemed to require an exquisite taste simply because they were very—lack of a better […]
Tags: 2010, Ascendance Records, Mikko, Pin Up Went Down, Review
Posted in News on Thursday, June 3rd, 2010
After 16 years of delivering punishing, extreme heavy metal, California’s Abscess has decided to call it quits. The band’s sixth and final studio album, Dawn of Inhumanity, was released in March on Peaceville Records. Abscess drummer/vocalist, Chris Reifert, issued the following statement: “Greetings, sickos. We need to inform you that Abscess has officially broken up. […]
Tags: 2010, Abscess, Autopsy, News
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Wednesday, June 2nd, 2010
So, Christian Älvestam delved into a few projects after departing from Scar Symmetry. The standard melo-death of Miseration, the more aggressive The Few Against Many, and now the Swede is involved in (restrained and commercial) supergroup Solution .45. The presence of Älvestam’s Miseration and The Few Against Many cohorts (guitarists Patrik Gardberg and Tom Gardiner, […]
Tags: 2010, AFM Records, E.Thomas, Review, Solution .45
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › S on Tuesday, June 1st, 2010
If you enjoyed Aeon’s recent Path of Fire opus or even thought is was a bit safe, then be sure to check out the debut from fellow Swedes Syn:drom (all the –tion and –blood names are officially taken I guess?) as it delivers a high quality death metal assault that competently mixes brutality, technicality and […]
Tags: 2010, E.Thomas, Review, Syn:drom, ViciSolum Productions
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › H on Monday, May 31st, 2010
A 30th Anniversary Special Edition with bonus tracks of an album I’ve never heard of. If you’re going to be obscure, it doesn’t get much more obscure than Christian prog rock. The only other band of this kind I had ever heard of (not counting Neal Morse) is Arkangel, but even that I’ve never actually […]
Tags: 2010, Born Twice Records, Jimmy Hotz, Review, Shawn Pelata
Posted in Frontpage Feature, News on Monday, May 31st, 2010
Since power metal extraordinaire, Tobias Sammet, has kept it busy and published two Avantasia albums at the same time, we’re following his example by publishing not one, but two, Avantasia reviews! See what Teeth of the Divine’s Fred Phillips had to say about Angel of Babylon and The Wicked Symphony. German power metal for the win? We recommend you start the reading adventure with the review of Angel of Babylon.
Tags: 2010, Avantasia, News
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, May 31st, 2010
Projects that feature a who’s who of artists from a genre usually disappoint me. No matter the gathering of talent, it usually just doesn’t quite gel. One exception to that rule in the past has been Tobias Sammet’s Avantasia. Once again, for the most part, he overcomes that with the double release of The Wicked […]
Tags: 2010, Avantasia, Fred Phillips, Nuclear Blast Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › A on Monday, May 31st, 2010
The other half of Tobias Sammet’s two-album Avantasia release, The Wicked Symphony, doesn’t fare quite as well as its counterpart Angel of Babylon. It, too, has its moments, but overall seems just a little too generic power metal in places. Like its companion piece, The Wicked Symphony opens with a longer, more epic number in […]
Tags: 2010, Avantasia, Fred Phillips, Nuclear Blast Records, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › C on Friday, May 28th, 2010
When you are reviewing an album that has tracks called “Spitting in Infinity’s Asshole” and “Strip Nude for Your Killer”, you know you are in for a good time… and by good time, I mean a sickening black/sludge/doom affair that falls under the same umbrella as Cough, Negative Reaction, Highgate and such. The formula for […]
Tags: 2010, Coffinworm, E.Thomas, Profound Lore Records, Review
Posted in News on Thursday, May 27th, 2010
Montreal based death metallers NEURAXIS have finished writing for their upcoming album and offer a final update before entering the Wildsound Studio next week with producer Chris Donaldson (Cryptopsy, The Last Felony, The Agonist) to start the recording process for their 6th studio album. Vocalist Alex Leblanc comments: “Time for an update… First of all, […]
Tags: 2010, Neuraxis, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › J on Thursday, May 27th, 2010
I’ve been a fan of Jon Oliva since the first time I heard Savatage, and I honestly don’t think that anything he’s ever touched has turned out remotely bad. (OK, I do try to block out Fight for the Rock). In my mind, he’s one of only a handful of creative geniuses in metal, and […]
Tags: 2010, AFM Records, Fred Phillips, Jon Oliva's Pain, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › I on Wednesday, May 26th, 2010
Had it not been for Britney Spears, the world wouldn’t have been introduced to bad boy gone good Kevin Federline and his monumental release Playing with Fire. What a random statement to pop in my head. In completely unrelated news, I was stunned to find out Finland’s pixie rock outfit Indica had secured a deal […]
Tags: 2010, Indica, Mikko, Nuclear Blast Records, Review