Having had a bit of a break from the death metal grind, today I am back on the scene and have the second release from German death metal band APEP, Before Whom Evil Trembles a completely new name for me and a quick read up says that there is a technical style attached to their sound but that’s about as much as I have been given!
It starts with blistering force and beautiful chaos on Enslaving The Putrefied Remnants Of The Deceased which is a whirlwind of pummelling death metal that has no room for any nicety and instead just is just set to all-out attack, there is a slight slowing of pace midway that maybe dulls the overall force of the song slightly but it’s a good way to begin and carries forward into The Pillars Of Betrayal but it doesn’t take long for the speed to return and the familiar death metal racket is with us again and while there isn’t much originality on show the way they put it all out there with a bucket load of conviction, makes for a passionate and endearing song, much the same happens on Tombs Of Eternity which is full of technical and dexterous guitar work with a fantastic drum showing as has been the way from the start and while I can admire what I am listening to and enjoy it.
Then unfortunately we get the mammoth Swallowed By Silent Sands which clocks in at an unhealthily long and unnecessary 10:23 and with the marathon length we get back to the more paired back and slower sound which seems to go on, and on and on and on and just absolutely stunts the ferocity that has been building and feels like somewhat of a dissatisfying and annoying end to the album.
This album felt like a game of 2 halves for me and looking back now I can see that the first few tracks, while not really hitting as hard as I would have like they were building towards something furiously enjoyable but that burst of fantasticness didn’t last anywhere near long enough for my liking and also, for album that only lasts 7 songs to have an interlude/instrumental on it just seems lazy to me?? Anyway, a pretty decent listen overall that any death metal fan will no doubt enjoy but can’t see it troubling any AOTY lists or anything. 7/10
Victory – Circle Of Life (AFM Records) [Paul Hutchings]
I believe that Circle Of Life is Victory’s 11th studio album. We last encountered the German quintet in 2021 when they released Gods Of Tomorrow, their first album for a decade. It was described by Simon Black as “good but not great”, and I can see exactly why he said that at the time, for Victory don’t do anything that is mind-blowing but what they do produce is solid hard rock and heavy metal that could sit under the moniker of hundreds of other bands.
Ten songs of solid composition spread over 45-minutes. It’s not a chore by any stretch to listen to Circle of Life, but there is little to really spark the excitement. Tonight We Rock and American Girl, the duo that open the album, are reasonable if cliched. It’s all a bit one-paced, and on songs like Moonlit Sky the song just lumbers along with no real drive.
Musically I can’t fault it. The playing is impressive, Pontillo’s vocals are strong and powerful, and the guitar work weaves and winds its way through each song. One might call some of these songs anthemic. Falling is a posturing track that sounds just a little dated, a real 80s throwback, and whilst there is a polish here, it’s not holding the attention in any great manner. Money does have the riffs and hooks to draw you in, but it doesn’t really snare you in any great way.
That’s not to dismiss Frank’s lead work, which is a highlight, or the overall musicianship. But in a world of saturation, songs like Reason To Love, which is a rather drab semi-ballad, just fade into the ether. Sure, if you like melodic hard rock with harmonies and soaring choruses, then Circle Of Life might float your boat. Sadly, I’m sunk on the rocks, and although there is no danger of me drowning, I might not do much more than drift. 6/10
Bodysnatcher - Vile_Conduct (MNRK Heavy) Zak Skane
Vile Conduct still comes with Bodysnatchers tried and tested formula of beatdown in cased Deathcore, but with Will Putney at the mixing and producing helm, the bands sound has become more refined than before. For example, the bands song writing has become more catchy as well as heavy on songs like Severed, which brings in the punches by taking us back with mid 2000’s influences with it’s pounding chugging patterns, tremolo lead playing and pumping breakdowns.
Even though the delivery is short, it doesn’t soften the audio assault that Vile Conduct is willing to give. Will Putneys collaboration to the bands sound basically lifted the lighting out of it’s existing bottle and amplified it by putting it into the electrical grid. The breakdowns sound more brutal but yet dynamic, whilst the drums and vocals sound a lot more polished in the mix whilst keeping it’s serrated edge. For fans of Spite, Filth and The Acacia Strain. 8/10.
The Blacktones - The Longest Year (Sleaszy Rider Records) [Rich Piva]
While the name The Blacktones sounds like a blackened ska band that Moon Ska or Asian Man Records would put out, alas, they are actually a sludge band from Italy. Instead of unleashing the horn section on you they are bringing the absolute heavy on their third record, The Longest Year. This is some good stuff, combining heavy riffs, clear and screamed vocals, and some serious musicianship for fifty minutes of some high-quality sludge that starts to lean more towards cleaner modern metal, but still executed very well.
What makes it so good? Well take the first full track opener, The Threshold. You get some very cool clean vocals, answered by that scream, with this dreamy Deftones type vibe over the track. Now I don’t love the Deftones, but I think you will get what I am saying when you hear this one. Like you know how the Deftones wish they were a shoegaze band? Then you get it. The Blacktones tower over you on The Longest Year, with case in point being that opener and a track like Noise Pattern, when the band rips you up with riffs but still maintain that shoegaze meets sludge vibe that I can only assume they were going for.