Calyces was born when Manthos Stergiou formed another band after the collapse of Tardive Dyskinesia, they released their debut Impulse To Soar in 2020, getting rave reviews from anyone that loves the sludge meets 70’s style psychedelia of bands such as Baroness and Mastodon. In 2023 drummer Stavros Rigos joined the band and things felt different than before as Manthos and Stavros had both played on Tardive’s first two albums, a reunion then and one that has been seen by the band as the beginning of their next chapter.
Their past glories can be heard on Voices In The Grey where the guitar and drums spar with each other in a way that only two former members of a prog band can. There’s a lot of history here and their previous musical relationship mean that Fleshy Waves Of Probability is a more streamlined but more complex album than the debut. Still leaning heavily on the Mastodon sound, Lost In Phase having the galactic soundscapes of anything from Crack The Skye, the clean/harsh vocals used across the album but here they never sound more like the Atlanta band than here.
They do show signs of putting their own stamp on their music with this album though, it’s more organic and natural sounding. The contrabass from Loukas Giannakitsas in the middle of the hallucinatory Lethargy, one of the more progressive tracks here filled with shifting riffs and a changes while there’s underlying synth atmospheres on few tracks and added violin on Lost In Phrase, Manthos and Giannis Golfis given ample room to shred with the freewheeling Swirling Towards The Light, the melodies of Wastelands and the choppy Forked Tongue. That solid engine room giving its own technicality to even the simplest sounding songs.
Born from collaboration and lack of creative restraints Calyces embark on chapter two with more freedom than ever before, Fleshy Waves Of Probability is a tribute to that freedom, how the choices we make will often lead us to new discoveries. Calyces stand at the beginning of a new epoch with a brilliant second album. 9/10
Euphrosyne – Morus (Black Lion Records)
Morus is the debut album from Euphrosyne a post-black/doom band from Athens. They draw influence from the gaze/post/artistic side of extreme metal influenced by Deafheaven, Alcest and Chelsea Wolfe, this debut album featuring jubilant ringing sounds of atmospheric ambience that are snuffed out by the ferocious blasts of glacial black metal.
Formed in 2021 by Efi Eva (vocals) and Alex Despotidis (guitar) they were joined by George Gazis (bass) and Stelios Pepinidis (drums) in 2022 and recorded an EP in that year. I said in my review that I wanted more asap and in 2025 I get my wish with full length from these Athenians.
They have supported some top level talent in their native country and have drawn from real world inspiration for this album. Most black metal bands are inspired by depression and isolation but on Morus the inspiration comes from Alex's mother's death from cancer posing the existential question of "what lies beyond" and how we can find acceptance when the pass.
So it's heavy in it's influence and this is reflected in music, July 21th begins with just those haunting vocals and a piano as a solitary violin comes in for added emotion, this first song is very Chelsea Wolfe in the beginnings before exploding into ferocious black metal while Valley Of White alternates between Katatonia-like ambience and vicious extremity.
It's the first usage of screams on the album but not the last as they return on the blistering Funeral Rites a Draconian-like piece of death doom that slowly unfurls into a simple but effective solo. I was expecting a lot from Euphrosyne and this debut full length delivers brilliantly. 9/10
Wildfire – Rise (Self Released)
Retro heavy metal from Athens now and it's the debut album from Wildfire, who won the National Rock & Metal Contest hosted by TV WAR. So Wildfire are retro classic metal band who cite influences such as Queensryche (heard in Bill Chrepas’ vocals) and Crimson Glory and basically if you like those bands you'll love Wildfire, if you love Satan, you'll love Wildfire and that's good as they supported the veteran UK band when they played Greece.
Wildfire stick to their guns across Rise, they never stray into modern metal or other genres, it's fist pumping trad metal from Leap Of Faith to the bonus track Night With A Witch, the use of Marios Theofilatos' keys bring some AOR and prog melodies to tracks such as Far And Beyond (In Hell) which reminds me of Saracen (and I can tell you I love Saracen). Bassist Dimitris Megalios and drummer Andronikos Maltezos give the album it's gallop and the sway to tracks such as Navigators where they gain a bit of bass-driven Maiden slow burn and traditional Balkan clarinet.
Hitting the gas again with some Euro-power metal for Inside The Box, Tolis G Pol and Dimitris Varsamis duelling with their axe craft as classic metal prevails again on Breaking Point. With Rise, Wildfire confirm their classic metal credentials, boosted by the synths this is a metal treat. 8/10
Destiny Calls – Alive (Self Reelased)
Staying in Athens and its Destiny Calls, a melodic rock band inspired by Bonnie Tyler, Robin Beck, Romeo’s Daughter and Pat Benatar. Alive is their debut and it’s got all the bits of the AOR sound you’d want if you’re am AOR Heaven or Frontiers devotee. Stuttering riffs and emotive solos from Spiros Fousekis, take you back to strutting the Sunset Strip with the tinkle of George Georgiou’s keys more akin to his work with Rock n Roll Children than Innerwish of Fortress Under Siege.
Both are former members of Flying Mercury and are joined by bassist Loukas Adamopoulos and drummer Peter Papapetros, all four are involved in the prog metal scene and have done what many bands in the prog/power scene do by playing in an AOR band that has all the musical skill of the one genre transplanted into the other.
Taking the mic is Aggeliki Rossolatou who has a husky, rougher vocal that comes from the blues and works well with the melodic rock of Destiny Calls. I mentioned some influences above but they may be a little lazy as Destiny Calls also takes from Whitesnake, Winger, Cinderella or any band in the 80’s where the glam/sleaze/AOR was taken from a blues backing. They’ve packed their songs with some big chorus hooks that would have been huge at the time, Angel for instance has FM radio written all over it as Tonight would have a killer video on MTV., as it's even got some sax at the climax.
Destiny Calls – Alive (Self Reelased)
Staying in Athens and its Destiny Calls, a melodic rock band inspired by Bonnie Tyler, Robin Beck, Romeo’s Daughter and Pat Benatar. Alive is their debut and it’s got all the bits of the AOR sound you’d want if you’re am AOR Heaven or Frontiers devotee. Stuttering riffs and emotive solos from Spiros Fousekis, take you back to strutting the Sunset Strip with the tinkle of George Georgiou’s keys more akin to his work with Rock n Roll Children than Innerwish of Fortress Under Siege.
Both are former members of Flying Mercury and are joined by bassist Loukas Adamopoulos and drummer Peter Papapetros, all four are involved in the prog metal scene and have done what many bands in the prog/power scene do by playing in an AOR band that has all the musical skill of the one genre transplanted into the other.
Taking the mic is Aggeliki Rossolatou who has a husky, rougher vocal that comes from the blues and works well with the melodic rock of Destiny Calls. I mentioned some influences above but they may be a little lazy as Destiny Calls also takes from Whitesnake, Winger, Cinderella or any band in the 80’s where the glam/sleaze/AOR was taken from a blues backing. They’ve packed their songs with some big chorus hooks that would have been huge at the time, Angel for instance has FM radio written all over it as Tonight would have a killer video on MTV., as it's even got some sax at the climax.
A throwback but a fun one, melodic fans will definitely Alive with this debut album. 7/10