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Tuesday, 17 February 2026

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: Winter - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26

Interview With Winter - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26



1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band.


We are WINTER. We are a 4 piece Welsh Metalcore band formed In the heart of Newport, following our debut releases success “Malevolent” we wanted to throw ourselves back into the heavy pitting and neck breaking breakdowns.


2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

Our lead vocalist has done the previous two M2TM with other bands. After going to the shows ourselves, we knew this was a competition that we wanted to participate in.

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band?

The local scene is a key element of our band. We all love to support the local scene when we get the chance to. We’re really looking forward to seeing some local bands through M2TM.

4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?

Our lead vocalist has played both venues but the remainder of the band are excited to get into these venues and get some pits started. A few of the members have been in the green rooms but have never been on stage.

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM?

As it is our first time competing our expectation is to turn up to a great venue , play with some fantastic bands and most importantly spread our music. We would love the opportunity to play bloodstock but it will be a hard competition with all of these amazing bands competing. We wish them all the best and we can’t wait to share a stage with them.

6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

Playing day of reckoning or bloodstock would mean the world to us as we’re a band who have recently reborn. To get to that stage within the early days of the band would be everything.

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

Following their latest single release and ep release we are really looking forward to seeing Virtue in vain take on the stage. As well we are excited to see syndicate, Excursia and if you’re near Manchester go see Bloodsaw.

8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?

Heavy riffs and circle pits

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: Blood Red Lips - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26

Interview With Blood Red Lips - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26



1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band.


We’re Blood Red Lips, an original hard rock band from Caerphilly, South Wales. Formed in 2019, we’re a 4 piece band and our sound is rooted in the grit of classic rock and metal and delivered with our own flavour. We like big riffs, dark hooks, and choruses and melodies that stick in your head. We love leaning into a slightly gothic themes including mortality, obsession, folklore, and desire. Pulling this all together to form our sound and drive.

2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

The Metal To The Masses competition is something we’ve always respected because it genuinely champions bands from all avenues and promotes grassroots music and venues. We were lucky enough to be included in the heats a few years ago, and we had great fun playing at the bunkhouse in Swansea. But this year felt like the right time for us to re-enter. We’ve recently had a line up change and where we are now has resulted in us writing some of our strongest material yet and we can’t wait to get it in front of people. We’ve had experience playing competitive showcases before, but M2TM has its own legacy and reputation and being part of it this year is something we’re really excited about.

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band?

The local scene is everything. South Wales has an incredibly passionate and supportive metal and rock community, and we wouldn’t be where we are without it. Playing shows with local bands pushes us to be better, keeps the scene alive, and builds real connections. Supporting each other is how scenes survive and thrive. Grassroots venues and artists need the recognition they deserve.

4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?

We love the Green Rooms venue and the team there! We’ve played Green Rooms before and it’s a killer venue, great atmosphere, great sound, and always a strong crowd. Jonny and the team are fantastic and really supportive. It feels like the perfect setting for M2TM, and we can’t wait to get back on that stage and give it everything and turn the Green Rooms Red!

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM?

Playing Bloodstock would be incredible, and that’s something that as a band would mean a massive amount to us, but M2TM is also about more than that. We’re looking to connect with new people, fans, build relationships with other bands, promoters, and people in the industry, and push ourselves as a band. It’s a chance to showcase our songs in front of people and grow as a band.

6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

It would mean everything to us. Reaching the Day Of Wreckoning final would be a massive payoff and recognition of the work we’ve put in as a band and that our sound is respected by others. Playing Bloodstock would be a proper milestone moment. It’s one of the most respected metal festivals in the UK, and to represent Blood Red Lips and South Wales on that stage would be an honour.

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

The South Wales music scene is strong and there’s always such a great lineup in South Wales M2TM. That’s part of what makes it special. There’s a few bands we’ve played with before but also some new bands we cant wait to see, from our heat, Excursia are a powerhouse and from other heats, bands like Manumit and Thawn are great! We’re also looking forward to discovering new bands as much as catching the ones we already know. Fans should come early, stay late, and support the whole bill. You never know who your next favourite band will be.


8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?

Melodic, catchy, heavy, something new!

Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/blood.red.lips_official?igsh=MW5nMjZhZnA2czQzeg==

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/BloodRedLips.Official

YouTube: https://youtube.com/@bloodredlips?si=X-Ky5JKy08CL8awk

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@bloodredlips_official?_r=1&_t=ZN-92jc8vWNhkU

Reviews: Worm, Temple Balls, Deathraw, Austen Starr (Mark Young & Matt Bladen)

Worm - Necropalace (Century Media) [Mark Young]

Buckle up kids, Worm have dropped a truly essential album with Necropalace. It is an absolute barnstormer where the songs are just at an insane level of excellence. 

Now I should back up a little and set the scene. This review slipped through the net a little and as result I got to it late. As a band, Worm, have been releasing music in one form or another since 2014. 

Necropalace represents their 4th full length album in a period stretching from 2017 and I’ll be honest I hadn’t come across them until I sat down to prep for the review. Generally, I like to listen two or three times and then put pen to paper.

Pressing play, the intro track Gates To The Shadowzone started off and its ho-hum, instrumental but it had something different to it. The arrangement is all building guitars and over the top atmosphere which then transfers into Necropalace. Its here that the gloves are truly taken off.

It is a 10-minute masterwork where they hit you with an album’s worth of ideas in one shot. Its overwhelming as it is engaging and is basically everything you love about Black metal, wrapped up in one place. It goes from full tilt to crawling tempos, mixing the approach so that it never settles in one place and incredibly it works. Nothing is out of place, no idea off the table. 

There is a solo that comes in around 8 minutes in that is sublime and mental at the same time. That seems to be at the core of this album, that combination of ideals. Love it. After this 1-2, they could have recorded a car alarm going off for 40 or so minutes and it wouldn’t have changed my feeling towards this album.

Luckily, they didn’t and then proceed to unleash god tier metal on us. Halls Of Weeping pulls that speed right back, going heavily into atmospheric realms instead. The thing here is the length of these songs. Halls is around 9 minutes long, and like Necropalace and the ones that follow forms a complete story in its own right. You can listen to the songs here in any order you like and it doesn’t alter how they land with you. Each is an exercise in how to do epic metal and I don’t think I’ve heard anyone get close to this. 

It’s difficult to pick out stand-out moments here, because each song is a stand-out in its own right. The shorter songs – The Night Has Fangs and Blackheart (7 minutes each) still have more going on than the norm, and somehow, they make it work. Neither sounds rushed or over the top. Both have crushing rhythms and those mental lead breaks within. There is nothing that you can find fault with at all.

And then they bring out the bigger guns. They close out with Witchmoon – The Infernal Masquerade (ft Marty Friedman). Barely a minute on the clock and the first lead kicks in. Delicate arpeggios and choirs back up the guitars and its obvious that this is culmination of their efforts. Its pace is slightly restrained but it doesn’t feel slower because of this. If anything it gives it the room to breathe, bringing those themes together and mixing them into a heady brew.

It brings brutality, beauty and all points in between and shall become in my eyes the very definition of what epic looks like. Its not overblown, overwrought or any other overs you can think of. The lead work is fantastic, completely in keeping with this and the album as a whole. The duelling solos around 8 minutes in is just chef’s kiss, truly exceptional stuff.

Necropalace is the sort of music that you will come back to again and again. The instant attraction is there straight away, but this is not a shallow experience. If this isn’t still in your playlists come AOTY time in December, then there is something wrong with the world. You don’t have to love Black Metal to love this. You just need to love heavy metal. 10/10

Temple Balls - Temple Balls (Frontiers Music) [Matt Bladen]

It's still the worst name ever but I have to say Temple Balls play really fun hard rock. Coming from Finland, their self-titled record, their fifth overall, continues their journey as a band, they've been adapting their style over their previous albums and this one can be seen as a bit of reinvention, like all good self-titled records, though drawing from where they have come from to be the best version.

The band feel like they have finally nailed down how they want to sound as a band after four albums. Produced by Jona Tee, it's extremely slick in how it's delivered. Thumping electronics, bouncy rhythms, huge choruses, massive backing vocals, this is 80's AOR in the modern age, brimming with attitude, Temple Balls bristle with energy and confidence here. 

Influences of Def Leppard, Bon Jovi and Foreigner (sax on We Are The Night) are all here, but so are the melodic metal and modern rock styles that are now present with many of the bands on the Frontiers roster.

Opening with Flashback Dynamite, you know its bloody good, music that is honed on stage and then written for it, this is good time rock n roll, ready to bounce along to and sing back with your full voice. There’s a sleazy swagger to Lethal Force, Tokyo Love meanwhile reminds me of fellow Finns Lordi with its warped sense of humour. 

The playing is great, the tracks such as Hellbound and Chasing The Madness benefiting from the double guitar approach. The rhythm section boisterous on There Will Be Blood and heavy southern approach of We Are The Night. Vocally too there’s enough grit to melody ratio on The Path Within and the epic closer Living In A Nightmare.

Temple Balls still have a terrible name but their music is extremely anthemic melodic metal/rock, honed to near perfection, album number five collects everything that’s come before into their most definitive statement so far, fair warning you will be humming it for days to come. 8/10

Deathraw - Reduced To Ashes (Self Released) [Mark Young]

And now for some Bay Area Thrash by way of France, Deathraw bring their debut assault to bear with Reduced To Ashes. So, getting down to brass tacks, it’s 5 tracks of razor-sharp thrash that is as good as anything you would have heard outside of the Big Four. 

It owes more to those bands that stayed within that tightly focused musical sphere for the whole of their careers, instead of those who moved beyond it. Musical trends come and go and like fashion ideas they do come back around again and thrash is no different. 

The question is, does it have enough to garner interest when perceived rightly or wrongly as being simplistic when held up against other forms of metal. Well, you either love it or hate it. There isn’t any middle ground here, no meandering moments or acoustic guitars or lyrics with the word ‘baby’ in them (copyright to J Hetfield, Donnington, the 80’s).

It is aggressive, fast and like I mentioned earlier it can sit with the likes of Testament and Death Angel and their best material. Its played completely straight, it isn’t coming from an angle of humour they are deadly serious.

Wolves Assemble is proof of this intent. Spidery melody lines are its introduction and then its boom, here we go. It must be difficult in trying to find the right way to sing – the vocals have to sit within a certain range, possessing the right amount of grit. 

Its about right on here but let’s face it you are here for the riffs and the leads. I can confirm that they are in place. The riffs are exactly what you expect, wrapped up tightly, palm-muted and dropped with venom. 

Reduced To Ashes comes hot on the heels and keeps velocity in place, with a sumptuous lead break. From that perspective, Deathraw achieve what they need to and over the course of the remainder of the songs they remind you of this. They appreciate that they can’t use speed every time and bring The Last Testimony to the table. 

Possessing a crawling tempo, it attacks in a different way using a core melodic line to allow the song to grow around it. Of course it also gives them a ton of space to drop a face melter of a solo. Job done.

For fans of thrash, well they should just eat this up. Riot, the penultimate track is a scorcher that takes the classic template of super tight riffing, multiple lead breaks, down picking and of course cymbal tapping. It has everything you would normally expect to hear, possibly over the course of one album but in one song, and if you wanted a jumping on track then I would say this. 

Post Human (ft Ol Drake) would probably have words about that though. The final song here, it pails a little when compared against Riot, and for me I would have swapped them round, but no matter. Thankfully they haven’t dropped a ballad or an instrumental, it’s a face forward stomper that has another burner of a lead. It is an absolute corker.

And we are done, its 28 minutes of fast, aggressive material that should find a home with anyone who digs heavy metal. The question for some maybe that its considered to be old hat when placed side by side with modern metal. 

Well, bands are still going back to Black Sabbath for inspiration, are they old hat? There is a glut of bands who use that super-dense sound with 7 or 8 strings to mask their ability. On this you can hear everything so those riffs have to be good, the leads have to be solid gold. 

On balance, having the 5 tracks works in their favour. Long enough to make a mark on you, short enough so that it doesn’t overstay its welcome. The acid test will be a full album, can they sustain it over 40 or more minutes? I’d like to find out. 9/10

Austen Starr – I Am The Enemy (Frontiers Music) [Matt Bladen]

Having never been a teenage girl full of angst, in fact I’ve never been a girl or had angst to be honest, there are a lot of bands who have passed me by. The entire emo movement, most of pop punk and few others. 

Now I read that Boston singer Austen Starr has been compared to bands such as The Warning and Halestorm, and while I can hear that, she reflects both bands at the early stages of their careers where the influence of Avril Lavigne, Paramore and Evanescence, all brought about a pop rock sound that was fit for radio, and has been adopted by artists like Oliva Rodrigo in recent years. 

A lot of the nuance and maturity that Halestorm especially have now doesn’t manifest here, it’s a throwback to the pop punk/emo/alt rock anthems of the early 2000’s. If you’re from the UK, this is a record that has Kerrang TV and Scuzz TV all over it.

Now that being said, Austen Starr is a great singer and lyricist, she also has a majorly high profile and talented band behind her in guitarist Joel Hoekstra (Whitesnake/Revolution Saints/Trans-Siberian Orchestra), bassist/drummer Chris Collier (Mick Mars, Lita Ford), keyboardist Steve Ferlazzo (Avril Lavigne) along with Chloe Lowery (Trans-Siberian Orchestra) on backing vocals. 

Raised in household where being a musician was frowned upon, she channelled her angst into her songwriting, being picked up by Frontiers and given a crack team of musicians this debut is the result of many years hard work, and if the result of many “emo karaoke nights” is your bag then you’ll be putting on the eyeliner and shouting along to punky the title track, head banging to Effigy or getting into Paramore styled Running Out Of Time.

If you’re expecting AOR or melodic rock from this Frontiers act, turn away now, however I guarantee there’s still an audience for this sort of angsty pop rocking, and Austen Starr has the potential to be huge. 7/10

Monday, 16 February 2026

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: Remain The Few - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26

Interview With Remain The Few - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26


1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band.

We are Remain The Few! Our music blends metal influences with other genres, including punk, prog, and emo. Creativity doesn’t care much for genre boxes and we go wherever it sounds good. Blending raw energy with thoughtful and deep lyrics, our music leans into the catharsis of heavy alt music.

2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

It’s our first time performing at Metal To The Masses as Remain The Few, but a couple of us have played the heats before with another band. The show was great and it was so much more than a typical battle of the bands, where the audience appreciated every band and gave everyone a fair shot. That being said, it’d be great to go far in the competition!

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band? 

Our local scene is incredibly important! We’re all spread across South Wales (Barry, Bridgend, Cardiff, Newport, and Pontypridd), and they all have their own unique music scenes. We’ve been around the block in other bands and we look forward to getting out into our local scenes more in 2026 as Remain The Few.

Without grassroots venues you wouldn’t have any of your favourite bands, so it’s super important to support it as much as you can and give a chance to bands you don’t necessarily know, but might end up loving. There’s been a tonne of bands on shows we’ve played that we know consider ourselves fans of.


4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?

It’s our first time at Green Rooms. But we’ve practiced there before and members have performed there in other bands. It’s a unique venue, with great sound and incredible staff, so we’re looking forward to playing there. It’s a really vital part of the scene in South Wales, and gives up-and-coming bands a chance to get on stage in front of supportive crowds.

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM?


We’re looking forward to getting out there more. We’re all parents so we’re just relieved to be out of the house for a bit and doing what we enjoy: playing bangers and performing on stage.

Also, gigs like this are so important to meeting new people and bands, and we’re looking forward to playing with the other bands on our bill.


6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

Needless to say, progressing in the competition would be incredible for us. We’re a relatively new band, and playing the Day Of Wreckoning and maybe even getting to Bloodstock would be beyond words. As we said, we’re all parents, and we’d love to show our kids that the metal/heavy music scene is a place where everyone has a place and can come together and enjoy music.

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

In our heat, we’re really looking forward to Blood Red Lips. A couple of us have played with them before and they’re great live.

Outside of our heat, Thawn! Definitely check them out.

But, importantly, get to as many heats as you can. The lineup this year is incredible with some real heavy hitters.


8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?

Megaphone. Riffs. Bass. Dad jokes.

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: Excursia - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26

Interview With Excursia - East Heat #2 Green Rooms 21.02.26


1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band. 

Rooted in guitarist Sam Hill's inspiration, passion, and love for the Pantera style of groove metal, Excursia look to splice modern extreme metal into the rawness of 90's groove metal. Excursia tackle and explore the inner struggle between anger and hatred, as well as sadness and depression.

2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

Excursia have had many line up changes in the past. However, we’ve found solidarity in our current line up and love the idea of bringing this new energy to the M2TM audience. We have performed before with great success. Unfortunately, due to members leaving the band we had to remove ourselves from the competition. We return with a chip on our shoulder, and an unrivalled passion.

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band?

As a band alot of our shows are performed locally. We have a passion in trying to get involved and create DIY shows with as many different promotion companies and bands as possible, ensure upcoming/new bands are on the bills, but also ensure that the level of talent on display is of a quality that we can be proud of.

4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?

We’ll be performing at Green Rooms. For us, and many other bands, this venue has been a fundamental part of the South Wales music scene. It’s been a while since performing there last, so it’ll be nice to return to a place that is a right of passage for all bands in the South Wales region.

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM? 


For us M2TM is an opportunity to see all of our friends in the community! There’s always a huge turnout and it’s a yearly event that gives us an opportunity to continue to grow our fanbase, as well our connections within the community, as new bands form and enter.

6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

Walking in the footsteps of all the other great bands that have not only performed at Bloodstock, but in the M2TM competition, is something we take great pride in. To be able to say we realised our dream of performing at the UK’s biggest metal festival, or at least boast that we managed to reach the finals of this illustrious competition would be an amazing feat.

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

There’s a good bunch of new bands, but people we know are great that we’ve played with previously and are friends include:

Virtue In Vain

Syndicate

Winter

Exaust

Scratch One Grub

Blindburn

Risperidrone


8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?

Beatdowns

Breakdowns

Blast-beats

Pig-squeals

Filth

Review: Converge - Love Is Not Enough (GC)

Converge - Love Is Not Enough (Epitaph Records/Deathwish Inc)



In every style or genre of music, there are names that you instantly know and always hold to a high standard and can usually rely on them to release great records. One of those names is about to release their latest record Love Is Not Enough, that name is of course the mighty Converge. Over the course of their 30+ year career they have re-defined what it is to be a heavy band over and over again, they have been labelled as many things and have always delivered the goods consistently including that one album that defined an entire genre of heavy music, yes Jane Doe and as much as I want to, I won’t talk about that here as this review is about their new album and that deserves all the focus here.

Back in the distant year 2025 when Love Is Not Enough was released as a taster for this album it absolutely floored me with its pure aggression and spiteful sound and after what feels like hundreds of listens since it still has the same impact, it has everything that makes Converge such a force, the pure anger running through every single second of this song feels almost life affirming in a weird way and it’s a blistering way to start a record that’s for sure.

Bad Faith in comparison doesn’t feel as aggressive and has a slower more thoughtful way of throwing extreme violence in your direction the deliberate and thundering force behind the music is something to behold and shows that they know how to be heavy in many different ways and always do it immaculately, Distract And Divide instantly throws the shackles back off and has a juddering and violent grindcore beginning that then drops into the more sludgy sound before ending on a chaotic and unholy cacophony of noise all over and done in 1:31, thank you very much and good night! 

To Feel Something sounds like a lost recording from the Jane Doe era, yes, I know I said I wasn’t going to mention that record but the second I heard this it’s all I could think about and that’s kind of a good thing and also maybe not such a good thing? It reminds you once again how vital they were and still are of course but then it also makes you wonder if they could have stretched a bit more? It’s a good track no question just feels a little too familiar maybe? I’m not sure what they were aiming for on Beyond Repair because its just one riff and a bit of bass that does precisely nothing at all for a couple of minutes and feels like a complete waste of time to include as an actual track on its own instead of just having it as part of a build-up in a another song? 

Amon Amok rudely smashes you back into life and is full of the kind of raw emotion and heart wrenching pain that is such a backbone of the sound and always makes for a fascinating and uncomfortable listen even after all these years I’m not sure there is another band that can show such emotion in heavy music and REALLY make you feel it all, this is a torturous listen but in the best possible way. 

Force Meets Presence has a barn storming riff to get things going nicely with a touch of the stoner style but mixed with hardcore bite and then its back to the white hot violence and punk attitude and some wonderful atmosphere setting tones that then all form to one massive noisy crescendo that mixes back in with that beginning riff before ending abruptly, as you pick your jaw off the floor the sounds of Gilded Cage slowly and ominously begin. It’s a bass lead track with some background vocals that are more of the hardcore style the guitars come in and the familiar bark is back and creating the discord but they thread the sounds in and out in equal measure and it has an uneasy feel throughout without ever sounding one paced or predictable. 

Make Me Forget You is another familiar feeling track but not in an instantly recognizable way, there are parts that you have come to expect and are all here in droves and the usual relentless behind this song feels a little purposeful and really makes you sit and want to take it all in, it’s a perfect expression of anger and done in the unique way that only Converge really can.

It’s fitting that We Were Never The Same closes this album because it feels like a grand finale, the first part has a grand bass rumble that sets a tone of expectancy that then explodes into life with the vital hardcore punk energy you want and then as quickly its back to the mood setting bass tone with the vocals screaming and wailing their discontent over the top before more blasts of energy and vitriol, it has an energy and flow that is remarkable and is a suitably effortless way to end.

Another day, another awesome Converge record, Love Is Not Enough is a remarkable piece of work, and while their earlier offerings are classed as genre defining classics. If you are a already a fan you will no doubt love this record, if you for some unknown reason you haven’t really got into them then this would not be a bad place to start because it combines a lot of their styles and sounds all together and is a fantastic show case for what an amazingly talented and unpredictable band they are and that alone should make you want to listen because once you do, you will not regret your choice. 9/10

Friday, 13 February 2026

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: Thawn - West Heat #1 The Bunkhouse, 15.02.26

Interview With Thawn - West Heat #1 The Bunkhouse, 15.02.26



1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band.

We’re Thawn, a Bridgend-based three piece best described as a mix of grunge rock and alt-metal. Lead guitarist and frontman Dylan Norris, drummer Miles Davis and bassist Kate Roberts came together to develop a writing style that draws from groups such as Incubus, Deftones, Alice in Chains and Snot.

2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

This is our second time participating in Metal To the Masses South Wales! We first played last year, however since then we’ve grown substantially as a band and have learned the trade. We believe our unique style will work in our favour for getting to the next round, however whether we get through or not, we’re just happy to play a gig in a great venue!

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band?

Especially recently, we have really began to feel connected to the local scene and the bands that inhabit it. We’ve made some great friends and played with people that we respect and love! At the end of the day, we’re all just a group of artists trying to get our art into the wider world, and we need to support each other in that endeavour.

4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?


We’ve played the Bunkhouse twice before and we absolutely love it there. The sound is immense out front, however the clarity from the monitors is also top notch. Apart from that, we love the aesthetic and community aspect of the venue, and the music history it has behind it. Just beyond excited to get up there!

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM?

We hope to prove to the younger community of Swansea that we have the goods, really. It’s an opportunity for us to show off a style that no one else in the scene is really doing at the moment, and to hopefully get some people in the crowd to jump! Bloodstock is obviously the dream, but there’s a lot to be gained from this beyond that, especially regarding connections.

6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

It would be an absolutely amazing experience. As a young band, our only hope really is to use this as a platform to share our music, but getting as far as more experienced, established bands would mean the world to us!

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

Antique Curse’s style of Iron Maiden-esque heavy metal is absolutely up our street, and we’re really excited to see what they have to offer.

8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?


Music to vitalise the industry!

Reviews: Primaluce, Kröwnn, Mount Palatine, Infinite Misery (Matt Bladen)

Primaluce - Way Of Perfection (Primaluce Records)

If something is labelled as for fans of Dream Theater, Rush, Toto and even mentions Enchant then I'll be listening to it. So it turns out I'm a little late to the party with Primaluce, formed in Paris by Stefano Primaluce (rhythm guitars, keyboards, backing vocals, programming), back in the 90's.

The band is an outlet for his creativity, founded as a long-term compositional project rather than a fixed band, with this new album, they have written songs that all link conceptually featuring vocals for the first time to add more emotion to their songwriting, sacrificing some of their heaviness to make sure that the melody is just as important as the complexity.

Way Of Perfection is the band trying to achieve just that, the previous album saw them shedding their experimental project, skin to become more song driven entity, adapting the songs to feature broad soundscapes and cinematic moments over technical virtuosity. That's still there, obviously, with Stefano a one man band himself but Andrea Rocchi's guitar playing is impressive a lot of the time but at moments it's also beautiful.

The rhythm section of Marco Adami (bass) and Michele Avella (drums) has a mind of it's own, driving these songs with shifting time signatures and immense skill. Way Of Perfection begins with The Wind Remains, brilliantly modern prog, like Van Halen meeting The Dirty Loops, the instrumental side absolutely mind blowing but also filled with groove, that danceable thump comes again on the hip shaking Countdown At Dawn.

However like I said this is their first record with vocals and singer Falco (not that one) is a powerhouse in the Myles Kennedy meets Ted Leonard via Joseph Williams vein, he soars above the music adding the emotion to the dynamic virtuoso playing with tracks such as Back Into The Blue that don't play safe, with some power metal meets AOR elements to it, keys duelling with guitars.

Heart Of The Moment and When The Light Returns are both strongly AOR, the one a punchy rocker while the other is a perfect American FM radio ballad from the likes of Daughtry or Shinedown, this has to be a single, though I'm sure it will confuse anyone who loves this track but hates prog, Standing In My Name keeps this style coming with a bit of keyboard friendly Alter Bridge.

Running Out Of Yesterday enters into the Dream Theater zone, returning to prog, angling in a bit of Toto as well. On Black Static Halo it hits me, Primaluce sound like Ra, and I love Ra (you should too), the personal lyrics, the complex compositions it's all very close to Sahaj Ticotin and co, which for me makes me love it more. Synthwave dominates Echoes Of Tomorrow, the riffs (and solos) come back for In The Tides Of Time and the modern prog sound returns for closer Where The Water Meets The Stone.

It's all brilliant, I don't care that it's 12 songs and over an hour, The Way Of Perfection is exactly my sort of album, prog meeting AOR colliding with metal and alt rock. Creating a magnificent musical journey performed with incredible skill. This isn't The Way To Perfection, it's about as close as you can get, keep the vocals, with them, Primaluce should dominate the prog world. 10/10

Kröwnn - Santa Somnia (Subsound Records)

Formed back in 2012, as a doom trio, Kröwnn have been kicking out riffs since then, with inspiration from Robert E Howard, Michael Moorcock and George R.R Martin their first two albums brought the sword and sorcery through thick psychedelic doom riffs. Just before their third album they added another guitarist to expand their sound further and with a change in drummer they now are primed to release their fourth record Santa Somnia

The bastard son of Conan and Nightstalker, Kröwnn wear their influences proudly, heavy doom riffs that are all fuzzy and fury but with this fourth record they also envelop classic/thrash metal and even punk (SkullKnight) to further widen their sonic power. The band features Michele Carnielli (vocals, guitar), Silvia Rossato (bass), Nicola Bordignon (guitar), and Mimmo Bennici (drums), this thundering foursome have diversified but never pull too far away from their epic doom beginnings. With Mastodon elements coming on Morirdormire and or the blackened venom of Respawn.

The album has been inspired by video games such as Dark Souls, Bloodborne, Elden Ring, and as such has the same level of dark and brooding intensity as these games, it's a more mentally fractured Kröwnn here, letting the madness overtake them and lead them down a path of loss and hope. These topics are hard to digest sometimes but get easier with a spoonful of riffs helping the medicine go down. Heavy is the head that ignores the Kröwnn. 8/10

Mount Palatine - Wormholy World (Argonauta Records)

Originally known as The Paladin, this Finnish trio now go by Mount Palatine but their modern psychedelic metal style still persists. Taking you into far fling worlds with fuzz that will melt your brain the trio are inspired but the likes of Elder, Stoned Jesus and Mastodon, playing riffs that will shift continents while never truly fixing themselves to anywhere on Planet Earth.

Playing under pseudonyms Jean the Baron (Guitars), Count Boogie (Bass), and Lord Of The Groove (Drums), kick out heavy jams ready for your relaxation agent of choice, but don't be surprised by the headache these spiritually aligned grooves may give you. It's heavy, moody and groovy too, vocals that croon and snarl, riffs that hammer and weave and while the band conceive these songs as cohesive jams they are built upon to make towering cuts of psych metal that takes you through auditory journeys.

Wormholy World has Mount Palatine streamlining their cosmic flight, with hypnotic repetition on Whispers Of The Holy Land, the swirling Panther Eyes, through the doom of The Dreaming and Ethereal, psychedelic heaviness coming from Helsinki you need to get on your ears. 8/10

Infinite Misery - Altar Of Extracted Teeth (Iron Fortress Records)


Another release of disgusting death metal from Iron Fortress Records? Oh go on then, and if you like Cannibal Corpse then you'll be grabbing your Hawaiian shirt and get ready to mop up the blood and gore as Infinite Misery are murderous death metal from Connecticut and they unleash absolute hell with their new EP Altar Of Extracted Teeth.

Five tracks of surgically precise, bludgeoning death which also features intense riffs, furious vocals and punishing grooves as well as some guest spots from Undeath and Damnations Domain. Torture Rack begins the violence, opening up the pits early, the drumming takes no prisoners and the riffs rip and tear at the flesh, moving between blasting flurries and bone crushing grooves.

The title track, and frost single features In death and has the creeping, slimy beginning that band does so well before the violence begins again, Cadaver To Carrion meanwhile brings guitar solos that lead into the bounce of A Virulent Sadism and the final vile expulsion that is Lacerated Viscera.

Infinite Misery bash you over the head with this new EP, it's Cannibal Corpse-like death metal that doesn't skimp on the brutality. 7/10

Thursday, 12 February 2026

Bloodstock M2TM South Wales Interviews: House Of Hosts - West Heat #1 The Bunkhouse, 15.02.26

Interview With House Of Hosts - West Heat #1 The Bunkhouse, 15.02.26



1. Please introduce yourself for anyone who may not know you. Tell us a little bit more about you as a band. 

Sup! We’re House of Hosts! We’re a Welsh 5 piece alt metal/metalcore/early2000’s metal band from Swansea/Bridgend and..Bristol (side eye)! We’ve been together now as a full band since 2022 after reforming the old HOH which started in 2014!

2. What made you want to participate in the Metal To The Masses South Wales 2026 campaign? Have you had previous experience? Or is this your first time?

So we absolutely LOVE playing the MTTM gigs – from the rush of the competition to the energy of the crowd and getting to create some amazing contacts for future gigs. This will be our (I want to say) 2nd time playing the MTTM show? Last time we made it to the quarters, and this year we have put so much work into finessing our set/stage appearance and we want to try and push it all the way!

3. M2TM is all about supporting your local scene. How important is the local scene to you as a band? 

The local scene is everything to us – without it, we wouldn’t be where we are today!

It’s been said that local music is a dying scene – but we can disagree with that as we’ve seen nothing but amazing rising bands emerge and faithful crowds that are keeping the scene alive!

4. We have a slightly different set up this year with Heats/Quarters/Semis taking place at Bunkhouse/Green Rooms. Have you played the venue before or is this your first time? Are you excited to get on those stages?

Oh, the Bunkhouse *Heart eyes* <3.

We have a deep fondness for this venue, purely because it is f**king amazing! The staff, sound tech Kalebh, the owner Will – oof! We began our journey pretty much at the bunkhouse, and the support and professionalism we have seen from them to this day are immense! We cannot wait to get back onto that stage and give it our all in homage to our fantastic hosts!

5. What are your expectations from being a part of M2TM?

Honestly? It’s just getting on that stage and connecting with the crowd through our music. Being given the opportunity to play our tracks to people who may have not seen us before, is enough in itself. We’re deeply honoured!

(…but obviously getting the chance to play Bloodstock is a given…right?!)


6. What would getting to our Day Of Wreckoning final and the possibility of playing Bloodstock Festival 2026 mean to you?

It would be a defining moment in our musical journey, it would prove that hard work and dedication can pay off big time!

7. We encourage all the bands in M2TM to try and check out the other bands, who are you most looking forward to? Who should your fans also try to catch?

We would like to say check out all the bands!

Thawn: bring a an old school distortion vibe with some wicked riffs and fantastic vocals

Clarity As Arson: bring the heaviness in with ferocity and a beastly vocals.

Antique Curse: Delivering some old school heavy metal which will please everyone's ears.

8. Tell us in five words why people should come and see your band?

Super thicc big boi riffs

Reviews: Nuctemeron, Assignment, Aeon Temple, Shatterheart (Mark Young, Simon Black, Rich Piva & Matt Bladen)

Nuctemeron - Demonic Sceptre (I Hate Records) [Mark Young]

Sometimes the PR release has just the right words:

‘Leather, spikes, chains and bullet belts + German Black/Speed Metal = a winning formula’.

It is not a bad statement to make when regarding Demonic Sceptre, the debut release that appears to have been a long time coming from Nuctemeron. It is an album that screams ‘I am old school’ in everything this album has to give. Having this mindset in place, it basically sign posts you as a potential listener to a situation where you get onboard with velocity and straight forward assault that channels heavy metal circa 1981 which delights in bludgeoning but with little finesse. If this doesn’t sound appealing or intriguing then you might as well stop reading and move onto the next review. Unless I’m at the bottom in which case you are stuck with me.

Everything about this is like stepping back in time, when the prime directive was to be faster than everyone else, that introductory instrumentals were acceptable (just) but what we really wanted were songs about Bats and being able to shout Fuck Off (In The Name Of Evil). Once that instrumental wraps the aforementioned The Bat kicks in, replete with a chiming bell and super-fast riffing that formed the base for early Slayer. The band I take from this is Venom, more than any other. Over 5 minutes The Bat just charges forward, a manic outpouring of speed and vocals that just about stay the course. 

The whole thing is frenzied, such as After Violent Storm which effectively blasts along the same path as The Bat. Iron Maiden amped up on speed is next for Under Devil’s Command and it does what it needs to do, keeping that no fucks, metal all the time vibe in place. If you have stayed with them this far, then the remainder that they manage to imbue enough in each song to make it more than just a plain homage to simpler times. Each of the songs has that manic energy to it with no let up in place, all played at more or less the same pace. They stay true to their word, with no song dropping off in speed or attack throughout the whole of the album. Basically, if you go into this knowing that one song sets the scene for the rest with little variance and this works then you will find 41 glorious minutes of old school love.

And speaking of Venom, they throw in Angeldust as a closing cover, which is a pretty cool way of finishing up because if you are going to cover someone and do it justice, do Venom. It’s a difficult one to score, because if you aren’t hot on old school metal, then this won’t do much for you. If you can appreciate the vibe its manifesting then it represents 40 minutes of fun. 8/10

Assignment - With The End Comes Silence (Massacre Records) [Simon Black]

Sometimes I don’t know whether to be happy that the world is littered with hugely proficient and long-serving Progressive Metal bands that I have never heard of. Since Dream Theater first kicked me up the early 90’s, I’ve always had a hugely soft spot for the genre, and the beauty of this reviewing lark is you constantly get to discover new music you’ve never heard of. The happiness comes from finding another diamond in the dirt; the sadness is that surely I should have come across a band that’s been at it since 1996 before now?

To be fair they’ve only garnered six full length albums in that period, and with the kind of gestation gaps between them that indicate that this ain’t the full time focus for these German gentlemen, but that’s more of a reflection of the commercial state of the music industry than their abilities, which from what I am hearing so far are considerable. Also, they did rather switch styles somewhat, with their much earlier work being more Thrash and Death influenced (albeit with a more technical flourish), before going full on Prog.

That said, there’s a strongly commercial and melodic vein running through this record that is more Power Metal than Prog, and Diego Valdez vocal style would work well on a straight-ahead Metal record, with just enough melodic power to cross the aisles, but enough rock’n’roll edge to feel gutsy and authentic. Oh, and charismatic, this boy has that in spades and effortlessly holds the attention.

Musically this is a very guitar-orientated affair, with keyboards being in the mix but very much in the background, just enough to add a little cinematic layering to what is otherwise a very riff-based piece of work. In fact, strong anthemic hooks litter the piece and ultimately give it its sense of accessibility more than any other element in the mix. Lyrically this is a dark piece concerned with the frankly rather dire state of the world, so not many major keys in earshot this time out.

The downside is that for it’s one hundred and nine minutes With The End Comes Silence pretty much keeps the same tempo and tone throughout and really could do with a bit more variety. OK, we go from moody downtuned bangers into more balladlike territory from time to time, but it’s still a consistently sad piece which gets a bit wearing after a while. That said I can tell this is the sort of record that might hang around on the platter for a little longer than my review window, and my curiosity is piqued enough to take a little dip into the past. Not bad at all. 8/10

Aeon Temple - Resurfaced (Temple Records) [Rich Piva]


The first thing you get is the voice. That is the first impression that knocks you off your feet when you switch on the new record Resurfaced, by Aeon Temple. The German band return with five tracks of huge sounding stoner psych, the first new material since their debut EP from ten years ago. Yes, ten years.

Claudia Weber’s vocals are the star here. You know this right off the bat when the opener, Grapes And Wine starts. She harmonies with herself beautifully until that stoner gallop kicks in nicely. The music is fuzzy goodness that pairs nicely with Weber’s voice. There is a 90s vibe to these songs for sure, and you can tell someone in the band is a prog fan too. Weber’s voice is all over the place range-wise, and she ventures into a bunch of them just in the opener. 

Children Of Dirt has a very cool and proto sounding riff, showing the band can doom it up if they need to. This one rips and has a cool evilness to it. With only five songs in 40 minutes you know you are in for some long ones, and Tireless Machine is just that. Just let the swirling guitars, killer rhythm section, and that chunky riff take over and it will just fly by. Did I mention the voice? That too. The song is long, but I would not change a thing. 

The eight-minute Blumulu has a kind of folkiness to it for which Weber’s voice works perfectly and it is where the band lets their psych leanings show up. Don’t worry, their version freak folk rocks too. I can’t help but to get a Smashing Pumpkins vibe from the closer, the eleven-minute Golden Veils. Like how Billy Corrigan was the master of big sounding quiet-loud-quiet on songs like Rhinoceros and Drown. That vibe is here, but maybe could have been just a bit shorter, given the record ends with three songs over about 30 minutes.

Ten years is a long time for a follow up, but Aeon Temple nailed it on their long-awaited follow up. Resurfaced Indeed. Be ready for a journey, but hang in, it is worth it. 8/10

Shatterheart - Infernal Symphony (Art Gates Records) [Matt Bladen]

Shatterheart play symphonic metal with some heaviness to it. So often bands in the genre move towards the ethreal or the spectral, Shatterheart bring the power metal gallops of Kamelot and Serenity with some classic metal guitar solos and visuals inspired by Greek sculpture and gothic/Victorian architecture.

Tracks such as A Shattered Heart, Afterlife and Nightchild all move forward with power metal pace, biting riffs, big vocals and double kick blasts, the Sweden based band (though their vocalist is Greek) seamlessly shift between the leather clad traditional metal realm and the modern electronic sound with Betrayal, where the influence of Within Temptation is strong.

The production from Fredrik Nordström is great adding drama to Raging Storm, Forever Will Last and the title track all add some folk/pirate metal influences to the Shatterheart sound. There's loads to love here for fans of Kamelot and Visions Of Atlantis, theatrical symphonic metal that doesn't spare on the grit. 8/10