Posts Tagged ‘Disharmonia Mundi’
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Friday, February 19th, 2010
Ive always championed Italy’s Disharmonia Mundi as one of the more underrated melodic death metal bands in the scene. Obviously overshadowed by the likes In Flames, Dark Tranquility and Soilwork, the band has still managed to hang around and are now on album number 4 (not including last years re-issue of Nebularium and The Restless […]
Tags: 2010, Coroner Records, Disharmonia Mundi, E.Thomas, Review
Posted in News on Friday, October 23rd, 2009
Italian melodic-death metallers Disarmonia Mundi have finally completed their new record entitled “The Isolation Game”. The album has been recorded, produced, mixed and mastered at The Metal House Studio by Ettore Rigotti and contains 13 brand new tracks of wallshaking extreme metal also featuring guest appearances by Björn “Speed” Strid (SOILWORK) on vocals and guitarist […]
Tags: 2009, Disharmonia Mundi, News
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Wednesday, July 22nd, 2009
Now more known for having Bjorn “speed’ Strid (Soilwork, Terror 2000) in their ranks, Italy’s Disharmonia Mundi were actually a pretty progressive melodic death metal band before Strid joined the fold, as this re-issue of their 2002 debut shows. While I was impressed with the (vastly under-rated) Strid era albums (2006s Mind Tricks and 2004s […]
Tags: 2009, Coroner Records, Disharmonia Mundi, E.Thomas, Review
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Thursday, July 20th, 2006
Album number three from this highly underrated Italian Melodic Death metal band that features Bjorn ‘Speed’ Strid of Soilwork fame on vocals, and ol’ Bjorn has to be pissed that his little Italian side project blows his full time band out of the water.Yeah I said it. Disarmonia Mundi, and this album especially, blows (recent) […]
Tags: 2006, Disharmonia Mundi, E.Thomas, Review, Scarlet Records
Posted in Reviews, Reviews › D on Monday, May 17th, 2004
Someone forgot to tell Scarlet Records that melodic death metal was dead, what with Withering Surface’s Force the Pace and this high octane little number, they seem in denial to admit the relative complacency of the genre. What makes Italy’s Disarmonia Mundi so interesting is the presence of Soilwork’s Bjorn Strid on vocals, and realistically […]
Tags: 2004, Disharmonia Mundi, E.Thomas, Review, Scarlet Records