Tag: death metal

  • Desolate Shrine – The Heart of the Netherword

    Desolate Shrine – The Heart of the Netherword

    So apparently the folks at Dark Descent Records (home of THANTIFAXATH, HORRENDOUS, & LVCIFYRE, among others) don’t want to give hapless metal scribes even a brief respite. Feels like we’re barely out of year-end review season (and into the new year) and they’ve already dropped yet another hands-down triumph. Hailing from the Nordic climbs of…

  • Relapse Records: 25 Years of Contamination

    Relapse Records: 25 Years of Contamination

    Now available from Relapse Records: “Celebrate 25 years of independent metal with over 180 tracks from our catalog! From death and doom to grind and hardcore to experimental and noise, get acquainted with our entire roster and help us celebrate a quarter century of contamination!” Right away I got a new discovery, and I was only…

  • Lord Dying – Poisoned Altars

    Lord Dying – Poisoned Altars

    Lord Dying’s 2013 debut, Summon the Faithless, kinda caught me by surprise.  Hey, it’s not every day that a relatively unknown band outta Portland issues its debut album on Relapse.  But it’s grown on me over time, and translated well to the live setting when I caught ‘em in a shitty Tex-Mex bar on tour…

  • Varga in Kingston ON, Dec 5, 2014

    Varga in Kingston ON, Dec 5, 2014

    VARGA with Non-Existent, Rise of Dissension, Meathook and Ithon December 5th, 2014 at the Overtime Sports bar in Kingston, Ontario What better way to spend a Friday night than watching a band you grew up listening to and, not to mention, supporting your friends and their local bands that were also attending and playing on that night? Ithon…

  • Origin – Omnipresent

    Origin – Omnipresent

    The music of tech deathers Origin produces either a smile or a grimace. Outer space themed! Insanely fast! Insanely technical!…but also a blender of sound and a stagnant end point close to frigid techno. Really, resembling a computer blurp isn’t something everyone aspires to (or wants to listen to). 2008’s Antithesis changed the narrative by…

  • Graveyard Ghoul / Cryptic Brood split

    Graveyard Ghoul / Cryptic Brood split

    You can judge Final Gate Records‘ latest split from the cover. It’s a skeletal sepulchral party in full occult swing, done in pen ‘n’ ink scratching à la Mark Riddick. Musically it’s the same – this is Old Skool Death Metal worship at the altar of Incantation, so if that sounds like fun, take gulp…

  • At The Gates – At War With Reality

    At The Gates – At War With Reality

    Comeback hype, buoyed by hazy, revisionist memory (and no little vain optimism) rarely bears fruit. That’s the well-established, seemingly legit, conventional wisdom in popular music. However, recent comeback stints from Autopsy and Obituary, alongside the relentless, entropy-defying longevity of acts like Vader that are only just now reaching full potential, have defiantly pushed the bloody…

  • Autopsy – Tourniquets, Hacksaws and Graves

    Autopsy – Tourniquets, Hacksaws and Graves

    Autopsy is remarkably consistent. For the fourth time in as many years since reuniting, the Oakland band has released another full-length, the awkwardly titled Tourniquets, Hacksaws and Graves. Autopsy has now reached a point where post-reunion output nearly matches the initial catalogue in size, and it’s easy to forget they were absent for fourteen years.…

  • Metalhead’s Holiday Gift Guide 2014

    Metalhead’s Holiday Gift Guide 2014

    December is almost upon us. Unless you’re one of those highly-organized, forward-thinking people, you’ve likely still got a ways to go with your holiday shopping. There’s still plenty of time! But we here at Hellbound want to make things as easy for as possible, so once again we’re stepping up to help you out on…

  • Amon Amarth, Sabaton, and Skeletonwitch in Charlotte NC, October 24, 2014

    Amon Amarth, Sabaton, and Skeletonwitch in Charlotte NC, October 24, 2014

    Photos by Justin Richardson Want to read a review of the Thunder Bay show on the same tour? Check it out here – review by Jonathan Smith, photos by Scott Hobbes.