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Saturday, 25 April 2026

A View From Rosklide: EpicFest 2026 (Nick Hewitt, Stief Illingworth & Lee Burnell)

EpicFest, Rosklide, Denmark 10-11.04.26


Friday 10.04.26

Lee: Going into a power metal festival with about a 1% awareness of the bands on the bill is always going to be a risk but as soon as Angus McSix (10) hit the stage and I saw a prince, an Ork, a Dwarf, an Archdemon, I knew I was going to be just fine. 

Starting out with the entry track of 2023's Angus McSix And The Sword Of Power; Master Of The Universe, the sudden urge to cosplay as He-Man was apparent. Everything about this was fantastic, from the performance itself through to the production/sound crew. Angus McSix looked and sounded phenomenal and at that point I was only 1 song in.

Sam Nyman (Prince Adam McSix) showed just how much of a talented vocalist he is as they began The Fire Of Yore. The band play so extremely well together and seem to just radiate genuine chemistry with each other, they were a joy to watch. So, given that their set time was 3pm, I wondered how much energy the crowd would give during the set and both the crowd and the band gave each other exactly what they needed. 

Everyone seemed to bounce off each other and it felt so wholesome that I was just happy to be there. We continued to be treated with songs from March's Angus McSix And The All-Seeing Astral Eye with the super catchy 6666, Dig Down featuring super-cool shovel dancing, Ork Zero and the power metal party anthem Techno Men

The setlist was a lovely balance of both albums as Angus McSix continued with Starlord Of The Sixtus Stellar System and Eternal Warrior from Angus McSix And The Sword Of Power. With Rhapsody Of Fire playing later that day, we were still treated with Giacomo Voli joining the band for I Am Adam McSix which was absolutely superb. Two fantastic vocalists backed by a very tight band, this set was flawless.

The set was finished off with Lazer-Shooting Dinosaur and Ride To Hell. A phenomenal hour to kick off the festival, a sublime performance and a new fan was born. 

Nick: Opening the Gimle stage on Friday morning was Denmark’s own Ipomonia (7). A band I had only encountered in passing over the past few years, I was keen to give them some of my time. Blending progressive metal with near-death metal riffing, Ipomonia’s greatest strength undoubtedly lies in their musicianship. Their instrumental passages and tracks move effortlessly from crushing breakdowns into intricate, technical riffs that feel both ominous and immersive, close your eyes and it’s hard not to smile.

The one oddity comes in the form of Maja’s vocals. High-pitched and distinctly nasal, they differ quite noticeably from the smoother, lighter vocals showcased on the band’s EP. Initially these proved slightly jarring, but the emotion of the songs still translated well. I found myself disappointed when the band vacated the stage after just 30 minutes, which, is usually a good sign. Ipomonia are definitely a band worth watching.

Stief: While Nick went on his epic (5 minute) journey to Gimle, me and Lee made the slightly less epic shuffle to Kings Roar Hall to catch Dragony (8) with the rest of their fans, or Dragoons as they're fondly known. 

Opening with Twilight Of The Gods, the band's synth-laden tune gave a good idea of what was to come. With most of their set coming from 2024's Hic Svnt Dracones, it was nice to also hear hits from across their catalogue; Gods Of War (2021), Lords Of The Hunt (2017) and even Wolves Of the North from 2015's Shadowplay

Siegfried Samer's (The Dragonslayer to you) vocals work perfectly with the band's symphonic style, supported by Manuel Hartleb's keyboards and Chris Auckenthaler's machine-gun drumming. Matt Plekhanov and Simon Saito's guitars weave in and out of each other wonderfully. Maria Nesh's vocals, both clean and vicious, show she has settled into her role as a full time member of the band following her guest stints in songs such as The Dead Queen's Race. A brilliant start to a great weekend.

Nick: Norwegian gothic metal royalty Sirenia (9) were one of the main draws of Epic Fest for me. Having never had the opportunity to see them live, my expectations were high; and they were certainly met. Some bands demonstrate that they are a step up live, and Sirenia did exactly that. Initially concealed behind imposing silhouettes created by clever lighting, opening tracks Meridian and Sister Nightfall served as a thunderous introduction.

Both songs sounded darker, more menacing, and significantly heavier compared to the studio offerings. Combined with the harsh vocals and growls from founder Morten Veland and guitarist Nils Courbaron, the openers leaned less toward power metal and more into death metal territory, a shift that was warmly received by the audience.

One of Sirenia’s enduring strengths is their ability to remain relevant. Each album introduces subtle changes and occasional experimentation, yet never strays too far from the sound that defines them. Central to this balance is the powerhouse that is vocalist Emmanuelle Zoltan. Effortlessly delivering operatic highs, smooth, honeyed cleans, and even visceral growls, Zoltan is a commanding presence. Backed by crunching guitars, pounding drums, and the abrasive vocal interplay of Veland and Courbaron, Sirenia delivered an eclectic set drawing from across their back catalogue, alongside several newer tracks.

Their movement on stage was confident and fluid without feeling overly choreographed, reinforcing the sense that Sirenia are seasoned professionals. Unfortunately, they did not receive the level of respect they deserved, with many in the crowd inexplicably drifting away mid-set, leaving the room half empty, their loss. What remained was an hour of metal presented exactly as it should be: powerful, dark, professional, and impressive.

Lee: Having been advised that I'd be a fan of melo-death legends Mercenary (10), I was very much looking forward to checking them out. Celebrating 20 years of The Hours That Remain, the setlist comprised mainly of that album with 2 from the 2023 Soundtrack For The End Times. Another surprising performance for a number of reasons. 

The first being that despite being on the second stage, they still sounded phenomenal. I can't give the sound technicians enough credit, they did a superb job so far. The second was the amount of pyro they had. On a noticeably smaller stage, I was surprised with just how much fire they used throughout their set and the third, just how flawless The Hours That Remain is. Even though they were only able to play 8 out 10 songs from that album (with This Eternal Instant and Obscure Indiscretion not making the cut), each song was an absolute banger. I'd suggest that if you check them out (which I strongly advise you do), start with The Hours That Remain and you'll be absolutely sucked in. 

For a band that has had many variations since their Inception in 1991, the current line up are a force to be reckoned with, the technical prowess combined with brutal riffs. I was in awe throughout that entire hour set. I suppose it would be a difficult decision to try and pick another two songs from a huge backlog of albums and EPs but they picked two fantastic choices from the Soundtrack For The End Times album in Where Darkened Souls Belong and Beyond The Waves before they finished off with the title track of the album. 

Definitely a band of the weekend contender and considering how relatively early they were on, they still got a full show and it's been another band that delivered on performance and put on a show.

Nick: True titans of symphonic power metal, Rhapsody Of Fire's (7) legacy alone commands attention, and the crowd in attendance made it clear just how respected they remain. Led by founding member Alex Staropoli on keyboards and fronted by Giacomo Voli, joined by guitarist Roby De Micheli anchoring the lineup, Rhapsody performed with confidence.

Technically, there is little to fault. The performance was exceptionally tight and professional, with Voli, in particular on form; his lead vocals were excellent, powerful and controlled, effortlessly soaring over Staropoli’s usual almost bombastic musical backing. Voli had the crowd completely under his thumb, directing chants and participation with ease as the audience duly obeyed his every command.

Nonetheless the presentation felt noticeably static. Stage movement was minimal, and the set itself leaned heavily into a familiar seemingly t rigid formula. Songs merged into one another, resulting in a performance that, while impressive, lacked dynamic variety, it felt formulaic.

The formulaic nature is not necessarily a flaw; Rhapsody are one of the sounds that helped shape the genre. But very little has changed since the last time I saw Rhapsody of Fire nearly ten years ago. The same dramatic builds, the same symphonic crescendos, the same heroic structures were all present and correct, but I was left feeling underwhelmed; particularly in contrast to bands such as Sirenia. 

While Rhapsody Of Fire understandably received rapturous applause and love from the crown, they felt stuck where I left them ten years ago. Bands like Sirenia, for me, represent a band evolving with the times while maintaining their identity. How Rhapsody command substantially more love and attention despite changing very little over such a long time makes me question how much weight legacy should carry versus artistic progression. 

Ultimately, you'll never be let down by Rhapsody Of Fire, it is always going to be a great night out.

Saturday 11.04.26

Stief: Another trip to Gimle, but a worthy one to catch the brilliant Fury (9). Though, by their own admission, the band aren't strictly a power metal band, they weren't going to let that stop them putting on a brilliant show. Going full pelt with opener Interceptor, Nyah Ifil's vocals are more than enough to blow the cobwebs off us. I mean, sure it was 3pm but there were still cobwebs. Julian Jenkins' voice is a perfect match for Nyah's, both of them managing a soulful touch with that extra kick of heavy metal grit that gives Fury their signature sound. 

Following on with Prince Of Darkness, the band then satiate the power metal crowd with the apt Dragon's Song from 2016's Lost In Space. Becky Baldwin's basswork shows why she's in such high demand from bands such as Mercyful Fate, Tom Fenn's drums blast everyone away and Matt Fletcher's guitarwork is brilliant, backed up by Julian's own fretwork. Valhalla halfway through gives the crowd a moment to catch their breath before the band speed right back into it with Star Trippin'

By the end of Road Warrior, it's clear from the crowd's reaction that Fury definitely belong here. Here's hoping to seeing them again soon.

Back up to the Roskilde Kongrescenter to catch Twilight Force (8) who are the living embodiment of what makes epic metal so good; the cheese. Twilight Force know exactly what they are, and from the outset, they transform the stage into an epic landscape both with their outfits and with Twilight Force. 

Alessandro 'Allyon' Conti's vocals ring through the music, and although it takes a few songs for him to get into it, by Valley Of The Vale, he's got the crowd dancing and prancing. Throughout their set, keyboardist, backing singer and co-founder Daniel 'Blackwald' Beckman uses his wise words (sounding like a 'friendly voldemort' according to Nick) as well as his keys to tell the story he's crafted over the years. 

The band play crowd favourites such as Flight Of The Sapphire Dragon, Gates Of Glory, and The Power Of The Ancient Force. Backed up by singer Kristin Starkey and guitarists Galen Stapley and Bradley Hall, Twilight Force weave a wonderful story, like watching a live D&D game unravel. Isak Olsson's blast beats work perfectly with Alex 'Xandor' Miles' bass. One highlight of their set is the live debut of Magic Of A New Dawn, which is exactly what the festival feels like. Magic.

Nick: Moonlight Haze's (8) reputation in symphonic metal is quickly on the rise, and it's understandable to see why. Interestingly their live performance proved to be considerably heavier than their albums would have you think. Led by the always impressive Chiara Tricarico on vocals and supported by songwriter and guitarist Federico Mondelli, the band delivered a set that was tighter and more forceful than expected, adding real edge to their atmospheric sound.

Vocally, Tricarico is always a joy and and the highlight. Her operatic passages and soaring high notes were brilliant throughout, sewn perfectly through the heavier tracks. Her ability at the higher register was commanding and confident, highlighting why she is held in such high regard. The occasional deeper vocal sections were less convincing early on, drifting off‑pitch at times, but noticeably improved as the set progressed.

Instrumentally, Moonlight Haze are solid and work well together, it's easy to see they love what they do, with smiles notable across the stage. This was reflected in their obvious cohesion, with Mondelli’s guitar work adding both melody and crunch, while the rhythm kept everything grounded and driven. Collectively, the performance was impressively tight, which explains why they are rising through the ranks of the genre with pace.

That said, a big frustration throughout the set was the constant encouragement for crowd participation. Whilst I welcome participation, in this case the demand for it felt excessive, particularly as the crowd was clearly already on side. The persistence broke the immersion of what was otherwise a dark and atmospheric show, at times pulling focus away from what Moonlight Haze do best... the music itself. A prime example of this being during To The Moon And Back, where the inclusion of a light‑hearted bunny‑hop dance, though funny, took the edge off the dark mood Moonlight Haze were working to establish.

Overall, Moonlight Haze delivered a strong and professional performance that showcased heavier instincts than their albums might suggest. Lifted by excellent lead vocals and tight musicianship. With slightly less dependence on crowd prompts and a firmer commitment to their atmospheric identity, they could grow a very good live set into a truly immersive one.

Stief: Though many of the bands over the weekend were great, unfortunately Sonata Arctica (5) didn't stand among them in my personal view. Having seen the band before, I was disappointed to hear Tony Kakko's vocals not hitting anywhere near the quality I had seen. Whether or not it was fatigue, an illness or something else, the normally vibrant band as a whole seemed very static. It took us until halfway through Paid In Full to realise that was the song being sung. By Closer To An Animal, the fourth song of their set, we had seen enough. A minor disappointment in an otherwise great weekend.

Nick: Some gigs are more important than others, and InnerWish (10) was always going to be that gig for me. I’ve followed InnerWish since around 2008, lived with their albums for nearly two decades, and slowly made peace with the idea that actually seeing them live might never happen, simply because InnerWish so rarely perform outside Greece. So ,standing in Roskilde on Saturday night, watching them walk onstage at Gimle late in the evening, genuinely felt a little surreal.

From the opening moments, InnerWish played with confidence and intent, a band fully aware of their catalogue and their strengths. It felt as though this was something special, both for them and for a lot of people in the room who’d waited years for this opportunity.

The setlist stretched back throughout the back catalogue satisfying any fan. Tracks like The Enemy Inside, Inner Strength, Modern Babylon, Silent Faces and Sea Of Lies translated effortlessly to the stage. Big anthemic choruses, strong hooks, and enough weight behind them to hit hard without hiding the melody and the foundations that make power metal what it is. These are songs that invite fists in the air, and that they did.

InnerWish take classic power metal foundations and add depth through well-placed breakdowns, tempo shifts, and technically astute passages that feel smooth like honey. The guitar work from Thimios Krikos and Manolis Tsigkos was especially impressive, melodic when it needed to be, intricate when the songs required it, with solos that slid easily into the anthemic choruses or heavy breakdowns.

Vocally, the performance was impressive. George Eikosipentakis delivered a powerful and controlled set, effortlessly handling the soaring highs while giving the lower, more dramatic passages depth. Even during the quicker transitions where and tempo changes George didn't notably slip.

What stood out overall was how natural the whole set felt. This was technical, polished power metal, but never stiff, again the band looked as though they were having fun, which after being around for so long is a testament to their passion. The fact that so many people made the trip down the road so close to the much-anticipated return of Roy Khan is an equal testament to the fanbase they have built.

On a personal level, this set meant a lot. Finally seeing a band I’ve followed since 2008, a band I genuinely thought I might only ever experience through albums. InnerWish didn’t play like outsiders; they played like a band that deserved their place. I hope that other festivals and promoters take note and entice them into Europe and beyond in the future, please don't let it be another 18 years! An unsurprising, if not slightly biased, but well deserved full marks.

Roy Khan’s (10) return to a European stage at Epic Fest 2026 felt like one of those moments that could become part of metal folklore. More than 20 years after last standing regularly on European stages with Kamelot, seeing him walk out in Roskilde as a solo artist was emotional before he even sang a note. This didn't feel like a comeback grab for nostalgia points, it felt personal and necessary.

From the opening moments of When The Lights Are Down, it was obvious that that voice the famously warm, dark, smooth “chocolate” like voice had barely changed, if at all. Songs like Moonlight, Center Of The Universe, The Haunting, and Soul Society landed with the same power they always had, but now carried an extra emotional edge. Memento Mori, Rule The World, Karma, and Forever were all selected from the Kamelot archives as offerings.

The most touching aspect of the night was how openly emotional Khan seemed about being there. He took time between songs, visibly moved by the crowd response, letting the moments breathe rather than rushing on. The love from the audience was loud, cheers that took a while to settle, applause that took time to end. Khan has spoke about how fans and his family encouraged him back onto the stage, and standing there watching him soak it in, that connection clearly meant a lot to him.

It was really pleasing to see how physical Khan's performance still is. He almost slithers and stalks around the stage, moving with an unmistakable presence he’s always had. He crouched low during the darker passages, straightened up as the drama built, and uses his trademark facial expressions to completely sell the emotion of each song. Every raised eyebrow, clenched jaw, and distant stare took me back to the days of watching Khan with Kamelot.

Khan wasn't alone on stage, the band consisting of members of Seven Spires, were expectedly tight and respectful of the material while adding a heavier edge to them, possibly moving them a little away from the power genre. Adding another layer was the Roskilde Cathedral Girls’ Choir, whose presence lifted key moments particularly the opening and closing sections into something a little magical. Their harmonies added scale without overpowering Khan's voice, turning already epic songs into something edging cinema.

A massive highlight of the set was the series of duets with Adrienne Cowan. Their shared moments during songs like The Haunting were beautiful emotionally charged and dynamic. The chemistry between them felt natural, and the quality of those duets wasn’t far off the legendary performances Khan once shared with Simone Simons. One gripe would be that both the choir and Cowan could have been elevated a little more in the mix.

Soon came the encore. When Roy returned wearing his old Kamelot floor-length coat, the crowd exploded, is this a hint? I doubt it, but you never know. Closing with Ghost Opera and March Of Mephisto felt like the perfect full-circle ending: dramatic, theatrical, and stereotypically Roy Khan.

This felt like more than a standard return. Roy Khan didn’t come back to prove he could still do it. He came back because people wanted him, supported him, and believed in him, and I think the packed arena of Epic Fest was the proverbial proof. Welcome back Roy Khan, we’ve missed you.

Stief: Sadly, it was time for the final band of the night and the weekend itself, Hagane (7). Though it was the band's first international show outside of Japan, you wouldn't think it at all, considering the rapturous applause they receive as they take to the stage. 

Immediately breaking into the aptly named Start Our Journey, it's clear why the band were brought here; vocalist Nagi's voice is clear yet powerful, backed up by guitarist Sakura (who could rival plenty of the other guitarists at the festival) and bassist Sakaya, all working together like a well-oiled machine. Drummer JUNNA is a machine in herself, blasting away at the drums the entire time we watched them, despite just being able to see over them. 

Though we didn't remain for the entire set, (on account of being over 30 and having the knees of an OAP), the band's frenetic sound as we left to Black Cult was a perfect cherry on top of the cake that was Epic Fest: Chapter Four. Til next year!

Friday, 24 April 2026

Review: Plini, Gus G, Konquest, Since The Death (Matt Bladen)

Plini - An Unnameable Desire (Self Released)

Plini is at the top of the instrumental pile for me, inspired by the legends of shred like Satch and Vai but also jazz fusion greats like Allan Holdsworth and even acoustic tappers like fellow Australian Tommy Emmanuel, his crossover/fusion/at this point unclassifiable sound has been gracing our ears and stages for many years now.

What makes Plini great is that he manages to make instrumental music interesting, the tonality and shifts in style, pace, genre always means his record are engaging and captivate in a way that is rare.

Whether you're in love with the Djent grooves of Now/Then, the more intimate style of the title track or the full on heaviness meets ambience of the brilliant Manala. Or perhaps the sweeping Ciel (which features additional production from Devesh Dayal and a guitar solo by Jakub Zytecki), there's something here for any taste and musical love.

An Unnameable Desire is his third full length and the man himself describes the record as a "playful" he spent time tinkering with them like always but when it came to refine them he wanted to take them to places maybe he's been afraid to visit before, as he's now an established name and composer in the prog/Djent/whatever world he wanted to push his playing further.

This gives a dynamic record with the heaviest metallic parts, the dreamiest ambience, the most technical fusion playing and more, just pushing further out of his comfort zone to make these tracks his most diverse and at times most complex yet.

Mixed by Simon Grove, who also chimes in with bass, auxiliary guitar, engineering and co production, and mastered by Adam "Nolly" Getgood, everything sounds big and clean and cinematic, from the crushing metal tracks (The Time Will Pass Anyway), through the dystopian Ruin to the joyous groove of the epic penultimate track After Everything.

Plini's incredible playing and composing is brought to life with Chris Allison (drums/percussion, engineering/co-production), Dave Mckay (piano/keys/synths) and John Waugh (flutes/sax). While the strings of Misha Vayman (violin) and Yoshi Masuda (cello) and arranged and produced by A.J. Minette, there's a strong cast of supporting artists to make this album and these tracks the most versatile, vibrant and ultimately best so far from the Australian Alchemist. 10/10

Gus G - Steel Burner (Metal Department Records)

While his work with Firewind, is always pretty consistent, virtuoso axeman Gus G's solo output is a bit more experimental, not only with genres but with approach too.

Starting out with two records that featured a glut of guest vocalists and only a few instrumental tracks, Fearless and Quantum Leap saw the band take the form of a power trio with Dennis Ward on production/bass and vocals, again it was a mix, though Quantum Leap was all instrumental.

Five years later and Gus returns to having that balance between sung cuts and instrumental ones, however there are fewer singers than in his first two records. Again having Dennis Ward behind the desk, he also plays bass on Nothing Can Break Me while Andrea Arcangeli adds four strings flourishes to Frenemy and Confession.

Other than those two Gus plays everything else, keys, bass, drums and especially guitar, shredding and soloing like the superstar he is as the genres move between Metal, Rock and AOR. The composition all show his skill as a musician though it's the instrumentals that are the true measuring sticks for his guitar prowess.

Born after a period of heavy touring as a soloist and part of Firewind, these songs have been sculpted to have the right impact, meaning that the vocalists have been handpicked to fit the songs, be it tour mate Ronnie Romero who wraps his pipes around a heavy rocker and a Mr Big-like ballad or the grit of Dino Jelusick who goes metal on No One Has To Know.

Perhaps the higher profile additions of Doro Pesch on Nothing Can Break Me is worth more column inches but for me getting Matt Barlow on the dramatic Dancing With Death makes me want a full album of this. (A collaboration that would sell out arenas in Greece).

Steel Burner then is Gus G going back to where he began his solo career, with a record of music that may not work for Firewind, but shows of his skill as a player and a songwriter, aided by some high level vocals talent from his professional address book. Also the title track was written for a metal cutting machine company which is pretty niche! 8/10

Konquest - Dark Waters (No Remorse Records)

Konquest is the project of Alex Rossi, across two previous albums, and on this one he is the loan creator of all the NWOBHM inspired music you get from Konquest.

Playing everything means that like Haunt and Spirit Adrfit, he has full creative control over the music he makes and with this third record Dark Waters, Rossi is writing songs that link to the theme of overthinking, a brain that is in constant motion, thinking about everything all the time even alive and firing while sleeping causing dreams of other worlds and escape.

It's a musical voyage through an exhausted psyche, longing for peace but pushing further into fantasy and delusion with dreams of giants, previous lives and "To stand within The Pleasure Dome, Decreed by Kubla Khan" as Rush once put it. Though Konquest also have a song about the mighty Mongols summer retreat, drawing inspiration from Coleridge's poem as much as the Canadian legends do, but Konquest stick it plainly in the style of a Maiden epic.

It also feels like the title track borrows atmosphere from Coleridge's The Rhime Of The Ancient Mariner, though not the Maiden song of the same name. Opener Turn The Lights Off however does sound a bit like Fear Of The Dark at the beginning, One Ticket For One Right brings NWOBHM gang vocals and those bass gallops, The Giant and Man With A Stone flesh out the classic metal sound with 80's inspired synths.

That's the main take away for Dark Waters, if you're not a big NWOBHM/Iron Maiden guy then these Dark Waters won't be for you, however if you are one of those guys you'll love this record. 7/10

Since The Death - Entangled (Nordic Mission Records)

Swedish. Death. Metal. Oddly yes it does sound like what you'd think. Begun as studio project by Oscar Rask as a way of playing extreme music which is lyrically inspired by his Christian faith, Since The Death has transitioned now towards a live band to take their glut of work on the road.

Still in the studio Rask supplies drums, synths, samples, bass and vocals, as the guitars come from Richard Adolfsson, but Rask is determined to take the band and their three previous albums, on the road, which is probably why Entangled is a bit rawer, written to be performed live.

The themes of entrapment, resilience and belief are cocooned in a mixture of death, black and thrash metal where the speed is relentless but there's mid-pace grooves, atmospheric meandering and proggy switches in tone. It's extremity that's not focussed on paganism or anything Satanic, but retains the same sonic power.

The distinction between dissonance and clarity is pronounced with a track like Hearts Are Getting Darker and the more deliberate slowness coming on As A Beloved Brother. There's plenty of references to other Swedish bands here, not just death but black and thrash as well and chances are, if you like them you'll probably like this one. 7/10

Reviews: Einar Solberg, VLMV, TONS, The Medea Project (Matt Bladen & Spike)

Einar Solberg - Vox Occulta (InsideOut Music) [Matt Bladen]

I don't want to alarm anyone but Einar Solberg uses growls on his second solo record. Something many long time Leprous fans have been crying out for since Coal, while that band have now moved past the point of needing the harsher side of their sound. With Vox Occulta, Solberg creates much heavier, symphonically dense music.

Recorded with the much lauded Norwegian Radio Orchestra, it has a different feel to his debut solo record 16 which was a collaborative project with various musicians, involved and the synths/electronics much more prominent. Vox Occulta on the other hand is more focused in it's direction, and more organic due to the orchestra, though there's a lot of thematic similarities, it's an overall darker piece, evoking the earlier work of Leprous along with Solberg's collaborations with Ihsahn, you won't find any rapping like on 16.

The debut dealt with the death of his father while this one is his world view writ large against a stunning musical backdrop inspired by film scores and soundtracks, the anger and frustration coming through with the very heavy crush and scream vocals as counterpoint to his more familiar soaring cleans, featured perfectly on the dreamy yet epic Setenitas.

Medulla sweeps in first with what you may expect, big choruses but that darker edge, however the title track brings orchestral Djent as the strings mirrors the palm muted riffs of guitarists, Pierre Danel, Ben Levin and John Browne, this heavy crush the first appearance of the harsh vocals. The undulating melodic swells of the orchestra and the keys are joined by with violinist Chris Baum on Liberatio, dramatic and striking, bassist Jed Lingat and drummer Keli Guðjónsson give the thick bottom end for when they break out the metal.

Trading introspection for gravitas, Einar Solberg enters his Hand Zimmer period with Vox Occulta, massive compositions with the power of an orchestra, the return of harsh vocals, but with moments that can still feel intimate. This second solo album is a much more intense and yet focussed affair than the debut, a tribute to the skill of Einar Solberg as a songwriter/composer. 9/10

VLMV – There Will Come Soft Rains (Pelagic Records) [Spike]


Sometimes, the best thing you can do for your ears after a week of blackened metal and high-velocity vitriol is to let the light in. Hailing from London, VLMV have returned with There Will Come Soft Rains, and it sits at the complete opposite end of the sound spectrum from the "angry stuff" I’ve been dissecting lately. It’s a record that understands that you don't need a wall of Marshall stacks to be heavy; sometimes, the most crushing weight comes from the quietest moments.

The experience begins with Tribal (A Heart, Self-Taught) which is a lush, cinematic landscape of shimmering synths and fragile, soaring vocals. It’s a masterclass in the "ear-cleanse", a track that demands you slow down your heart rate and actually listen to the space between the notes. By the time you hit We Are All Explorers Now and The Pilot, it’s clear that VLMV aren't just making "ambient" music; they are constructing intricate, emotional architectures that feel properly, painfully human.

What makes this record so compelling is the way it handles its own scale. There’s a deceptive simplicity to tracks like Bodies Grown, Pt.1 and In Absentia, but the layers of production, which are handled with a level of professional clarity that puts many "pro" labels to shame, reveal new depths with every spin. It’s a sound that reminds me of that specific, late-night melancholy I’ve always loved, when it feels like a record was recorded in the small hours when the rest of the world has finally gone quiet.

The absolute pinnacle of the record, at least for me, arrives with Bodies Grown, Pt.2. As I’ve noted before, this is the kind of songwriting that makes the "genre" tag feel irrelevant. It’s just a voice, a piano, and a swell of strings, yet the result is nothing short of EPIC. It’s a visceral, emotional gut-punch, delivered almost at a whisper, that stays with you long after the track ends, proving sometimes there isn’t a need for a single distortion pedal. It’s the record's tectonic heart, a sprawling study in vulnerability and beauty.

The back half, featuring I Am An Officer and the haunting Somnolence In Reverse, maintains that sustained, heavy-set tension. The songwriting is knotty and unpredictable, moving through movements that feel like they’re constantly expanding until the room feels too small to hold the emotion. This is the "soft rains" of the title delivering the quiet moments of survival that define us just as much as the storms.

By the time the final notes of Somnolence In Reverse eventually dissolve into the quiet, you realize that this is exactly why we bother looking in the first place. VLMV have managed to bottle a very specific kind of modern ache, proving that the most interesting things in the underground happen when you dare to be delicate. It’s a lush, dark-edged triumph that’s going to be added to my physical collection by the time this review is published. It’s a heavy, shimmering reminder that even when the world feels too loud, there is still a massive amount of power to be found in the silence. 9/10

TONS- Stoned Villains (Heavy Psych Sounds) [Matt Bladen]


Sludge now from Turin and this is the blackest, thickest, most acrid sludge you're probably going to get this year as Stoned Villains, invites you to light up a bowl of your dankest and get really loud.

Released on 4/20 (obviously) Stoned Villains is the fourth album from these weed smoking hardcore dudes who traded speed and aggression for building levelling heaviness and buckets of fuzz, however they don't fully slow down as Rollercoaster Dier Bombo blasts and there's some bluesy grooves on Lost In Plantation. Vocally there's still anguished shouts from the hardcore scene but the instrumentals are headache inducing, hypnotic grooves, thick like tar as they bleed through your speakers like the ooze in Ghostbusters II, turning everything it touches into desolation.

Like many bands in the doom/sludge scene, TONS like to play with synths and samples both used as an accompaniment and counterpoint to the fat fuzzing riffage and tonal distortion of the guitars and bass. You can play spot the sample here if your brain works that way, I got Robert Underdunk "Bob" Terwilliger doing his acceptance speech laugh from The Simpsons episode Sideshow Bob Roberts, Peter Finch's Oscar winning role as Howard Beale in The Network (probably the most sampled speech ever?) and also Zucker comedy Top Secret but some of the others I had a bit of difficulty.

These samples are there to add to the hallucinatory nature of this record, with Duncan McCrapper (named for his father perhaps?) the sample master and lead guitarist who carves leads and solos through the mire of fuzzy heaviness. Stoned Villains features new drummer Oreste Pennarelli, who brings a renewed force to the bottom end, locked into the crushing grooves with Stewart J Tanuki on rhythm guitar and Gingerzilla who is bassist, synthist and screecher.

Combined together this foursome create filthy sludge noises that will rattle your skull. 7/10

The Medea Project – Akkadian Artefacts (BDB Studios) [Spike]

Handing your songs over to a remixer is often less of a collaboration and more of an exorcism. You’re essentially inviting a stranger to strip the flesh off your work and see if the skeleton can still stand on its own. For The Medea Project, that stranger is Lucifer X, and the result is Akkadian Artefacts, a five-track document that trades the raw, untrammelled majesty of their live presence for a lightless, electronic mausoleum. It’s an ambitious, atmospheric shadow world, but it’s one where the various components seem to be in a constant, uneasy tug-of-war for the listener’s attention.

The EP opens with Babylon (The Fall Of Akkadia), and the shift from their previous work is jarring. Gone is the immediate "shove" of the rhythm section, replaced by a dense, industrial fog that feels like walking through scarred ruins at sunset. Brett Minnie’s vocals are pushed into a new kind of isolation here, and while the lyrics gain a certain fragmented power, the musical backdrop occasionally feels like it's trying to be too many things at once. It’s a sophisticated bit of dark ambient, but the transition into the hard electronics of Cave Dweller highlights the record’s primary friction: it’s a sound that is technically spellbinding but emotionally elusive.

What’s clear throughout the record, particularly on Ghosts In The Shell is the sheer level of talent involved. Pauline Silver’s percussion and Minnie’s guitars are reconfigured into these haunted, melancholic dream states that demand a high level of concentration. However, I find myself feeling that the record is "out of focus." By the time we hit The Drone Song (Desertion), the genre-blending between doom and electronica feels like it’s pulling in opposite directions. It creates a flickering light in the void, but it lacks the cohesive emotional "gut-punch" that anchored their Live At Dingwalls release.

The finale, Redacted, is perhaps the most successful moment of the experiment. It’s a quiet, atmospheric fading of the light that refuses to offer a tidy resolution. It’s here that the "quiet world ending" aesthetic truly takes hold, avoiding the clutter of the earlier tracks in favour of a still magic that actually allows the listener to breathe.

Ultimately, Akkadian Artefacts feels like a record for the scholars rather than the seekers. It’s an honest, unvarnished look at what happens when you deconstruct a band’s DNA and reassemble it in the dark. While the talent on display is undeniable, the experience remains a series of entrancing strangers rather than a unified voice. It’s a challenging, occasionally brilliant bit of survivalism that proves The Medea Project are fearless in their exploration, even if this particular mirror doesn't always show a clear reflection. 7/10

Thursday, 23 April 2026

A View From The Back Of The Room: Slowhole & Moloch (Steve Walsh)

 Slowhole, Moloch & Fatalist - Boom, Leeds, 11.04.26


Manchester trio Fatalist (7) play a kind of metallic post-hardcore that's direct, insistent and alive with tension. Bass player Mat Smith grips the neck of his guitar like he's trying to rein in something that's almost out of control, a wide-legged stance with one foot anchoring the mic stand to prevent it being blasted away by his livid screaming. Drummer Phil Giles punctures the songs with vertiginous rolls that introduce a welcome shade of abstraction. Mid-set, one song seems to momentarily fracture and splinter before recoalescing around it's purpose.

Although pretty quiet over the last few years, Nottingham sludgy doom quartet Moloch (9) are coming up on their 20 year anniversary. Despite their lengthy hiatus, they're still one of the best bands in the country and yet remain criminally overlooked outside the close knit DIY community. Just released third album Bend.Break.Kneel.Crawl is another howl of screaming guitars and anguished vocals and proves the band has lost none of its potency since the previous album in 2018. The bands music possesses a formidable forward propulsion that's full of weighty foreboding, and it all seems to be channelled through and out of singer Chris Braddock's wide eyed stare and shredded throaty screams. The quieter passages only serve to amplify the crushing power of the noise when it resumes. Magnificent.

If you navigate music by genre, New Orleans quintet Slowhole (8) may present a few problems. All the songs are set against a backdrop of relentless feedback and effects noise from guitarists Dante Galliano and David Hunter. The individual songs generally proceed at a slow grinding pace, occasionally erupting into brief bursts of frantic thrashing, with vocalist Shannon Arsenault's treated shrieking adding a human element to the noise, although it's impossible to tell what she may be singing about. The anguish and turmoil in the voice may need to be enough. 

The band perform in near darkness and don't move around much, so there's not much of a visual stimulus to provide a focus. As far as the music is concerned though, if you need reference points, try mashing together the slowcore of French doomsters Monarch, pure unhinged harsh noise, and the occasional dollop of hardcore velocity. Although it's hard to get a handle on what's going on half the time, the band clearly know what they're doing. 

Mid-set a guitarist breaks a string, leaves the stage to get a replacement and calmly restrings and retunes, while the rest of the band equally calmly fill in with an improvisation that manages to fit seamlessly with what came before and what comes after. Although I spent most of the set trying to figure out was was going on, there's no doubt that just now this band have got hold of something that's startlingly different, and seeing Slowhole again at the next available opportunity would be a no-brainer.

Reviews: Godsnake, Shadowlands, Cnoc An Tursa, Ural (Spike & Mark Young)

Godsnake – Inhale The Noise (Massacre Records) [Spike]

I’m going to start with a confession: the cover art for Godsnake’s Inhale The Noise nearly put me off the record before I’d even hit play. There is a specific visual language associated with snakes and hard rock that triggers a deeply buried, visceral aversion in me, specifically anything that reminds me of Whitesnake. 

As a band, they’ve always occupied a space I’d rather not visit, and the serpentine branding here felt like an immediate warning of hair-metal posturing to come. But as all music-related triggers go, the only way through it is to shut your eyes and listen. Once you do, you realize that Hamburg’s Godsnake are far more interested in high-velocity thrash precision than they are in the spandex-clad ghosts of the 80s.

The record opens with Scream For A Bullet, and the shift in reality is immediate. This is modern melodic thrash with a heavy-set, mechanical heart. The production is sharp and professional, providing a clinical clarity that allows the riffs to breathe while maintaining a healthy amount of grit in the low-end. It’s followed by Lost & Forgotten, which showcases the band’s knack for a rhythmic "shove", a sound that owes as much to the technical precision of early Trivium as it does to the classic German school of metal.

What gives Inhale The Noise its specific weight, however, is the collaboration with Jean Bormann of Rage. His presence on tracks like the title track, and Rotten To The Core adds a layer of veteran authority and a "Rage-esque" muscularity to the songwriting. It’s a sophisticated bit of genre-blending that keeps the record from ever settling into a "business as usual" thrash routine. The melodies are sinister yet catchy, cutting through the distortion with a surgical precision that feels properly dangerous.

The middle of the record features Digital Dumbass, a title that is admittedly a bit blunt, but the music is undeniable. It’s a biting, high-velocity jolt that targets the modern era’s digital anxieties with a level of vitriol that feels entirely earned. The guitars don't just cycle through riffs; they construct a vast, shifting architecture of noise that feels like it’s vibrating in your bones, leading toward the more expansive moments of Fear Is The Key and the finality of The Price We Have To Pay.

Godsnake have managed to deliver a record that successfully overcomes its own branding (again this is a me thing – it will never impact you dear reader….). Inhale The Noise isn't the sound of veterans playing it safe; it’s the sound of a band that still feels like they have everything to prove. By the time the final vibration of the closer eventually cuts out, you aren't left with the 80s associations I feared; you're left with the realization that German thrash still has a hell of a lot of life left in it. 

It’s an honest, unvarnished bit of reality that proves the best discoveries are often the ones that force you to look past the packaging. If you’ve still got a pulse, this will find a way to rattle it. 8/10

Shadowlands – 004 (Seeing Red Records) [Spike]

There is a specific, rain-slicked tension that Portland’s Shadowlands has spent four albums trying to perfect, and with 004, they’ve finally hit the frequency. It’s a record that feels like it was recorded in the blue hour, that hazy, indeterminate space between the end of a long night and a very cold morning. By leaning into an "80s-inspired horror synth" aesthetic and draping it over a post-punk framework, the band has created a signature sound that is as much about the "shimmer" of shoegaze as it is about the "shove" of darkwave.

The experience begins with Burdens, a track built on a foundation of spine-tingling harmonies that feel almost mechanical in their precision. It’s a cold, clinical start that provides a rigid skeleton for the guitars to eventually swamp. This sets the stage for Clicks and the rhythmic, searing energy of R/AGE, where the band proves they can handle high-velocity friction without losing the melodic "infectiousness" that defines their vocal performances.

The absolute standout here, however, is Let's Fall Apart. It’s a six-minute masterclass in the crossover from goth to shoegaze, a transition handled with a level of pained, cinematic elegance that demands a repeat listen. The track moves with a slow, tectonic momentum, building from an introspective dreamscape into a massive, skyward wall of sound. It’s the kind of songwriting that doesn't just entertain you; it inhabits you, revealing new layers of fuzz and grief every time the needle drops.

The second half of the record, Nothing Has Changed, Wounds And Relics, and Substance doubles down on the "kaleidoscopic" blend of styles. The riffs soar and sear in equal measure, backed by rhythms that feel urgent and essential. By the time we reach the finale, The Worst Light, the atmosphere has become total. It’s a brilliant, shimmering closer that refuses to offer a simple way out, instead leaving the listener suspended in that specific, hazy twilight where the band thrives.

Shadowlands haven't just delivered another darkwave album; they’ve created a climate. 004 is a lush, sophisticated triumph of tone that prioritizes the feeling of the fall over the safety of the landing. It’s the sound of a band finally embracing the beautiful, shimmering mess of their own collapse, and it’s a necessary soundtrack for anyone who prefers their pop melodies with an dark edge. 9/10

Cnoc An Tursa - A Cry For The Slain (Apocalyptic Witchcraft) [Mark Young]

A change of pace and intent now, with a touch of Black Folk from Falkirk’s own Cnoc An Tursa, who focus on their Scottish heritage to act as a rich tableaux from which they craft their unique sound. Now, I am not always down with folk metal, I’ll be honest with you as I lean more into that aggressive/speedier side of things.

Putting my personal taste to one side, A Cry For The Slain is an album that is steeped in atmosphere. Its knows exactly what it wanted to sound like, and in mining that rich heritage makes them sound unique to themselves. Na Fir Ghorma introduces us to them, and then its full on with The Caoineag, whose combination of high intensity black metal with what I can only describe as a swinging slow measure comes next. In terms of setting out the album, their approach and what you can expect then its captured here in these two songs. 

The Caoineag has all the hallmarks of an epic song, its expansive length and dense musicality that is built around that central melodic line, sees the song grow in a controlled manner whilst doing so off an emotional kick. They bring the speed and aggression but temper it with a soft hand where necessary and suddenly you have spent 10 minutes with them that has gone in a flash. 

The use of a central theme runs through each song, and to an extent you can recognise it at the start of each track. Calleach And The Guardians Of The Seven Stones comes in with what you could expect to be a traditional Celtic melody, one that evokes the raising of glasses and raucous nights. It’s the way they build around those melodic line which sees them do something different each time whilst keeping each song in context.

Any fear on my part that the folk side of things would possibly take precedence over other aspects of the sound is kept to a minimum. Baobhan Sith picks up the mantle of taking us forward through the middle of the album and has a darker edge to it. The melodic touches are there, as is the atmosphere and they are supported by an emotive lead break that lifts the whole piece to another level. The command of their material is top notch, as is the way they can switch from the light to the dark and back again whilst dropping in some quality riffs. 

Moving through each song, they constantly navigate a path that sees each track move in a certain way. The songs don’t repeat the same ideas, far from it they just use a certain methodology to start them off. Alba In My Heart explodes into life, pushing forward at every turn, using changes in tempo to add a layer to the sound. And that is something else, the album sounds fantastic. Heavy where it needs to be, pared back elsewhere. 

This and Address To The Devil lean more into the black metal, which is always welcome from my perspective. There is something primal about the attack manifested on these two songs, and yet when they do slow things down to a pause, those mint harmonious touches are front and centre. Now for a constant listener of this music, it might be old news but to these ears it sounds vital and worthy of my time. 

The closer, The Nine Maidens Of Dundee is a gentle instrumental which for me is probably in the right place. Had this been positioned earlier in the album, It would have lessened the impact of the songs before and after. Still, the strength of this album is there for all to hear. Everything about this album is quality, from start to finish (ignoring the instrumental – sorry) and for fans of this genre it is an essential purchase. 8/10

Ural - Anthropic Genetic Involution (Xtreme Music) [Mark Young]

Psycho Crossover Thrash Metal! Essentially this is an easy review to do, because it ties in nicely with my Heavy Metal flow chart which in this instance would go like this:

Like Thrash Metal – Yes / No?

If you answered yes, than you will find an extremely worthwhile way to spend your time, listening to some new/old thrash metal that is delivered with focus and determination. Being honest, it’s a love letter to the time of white high tops, of energetic downpicking and what were simpler times. Maybe not better times, but I digress.

Extreme Paranoia kicks things off, and you could be back in 86 or 87, with early lead breaks, gang vocals and a mazy riff build. Throw in a suitably driven lead break and you have a traditional slice of thrash metal. No bells or whistles, just simple thrash. They aren’t attempting to change the world with this, nor are they thinking that it will make them the next big thing. Its just honest thrash. The songs follow the standard build you would expect and don’t really deviate from that approach. I mean, why would you?

I could go on and try to wax lyrical about each track, attempting to make it more than it is, which would be pointless from my perspective. The album unfolds exactly as you hope it Two quick fire songs into God Of Lies, which starts slowly, methodically until they bring the lead guitar fire and return. It’s a great collection of riffs, executed in the right way. 

If you are a veteran (i.e. from the first time round) this is like the aural equivalent of putting on a comfortable pair of slippers and relaxing with friends. It should act as a reminder of why you got in to this music in the first place. The downpicking on Wasteland, the whammy abuse on Rat In A Cage, all of this should be welcomed with open arms.

This is the 4th full length release of their career, with their first demo coming in 2011 and the fact that they have managed to keep going is a testament to their talent. If you answered No earlier, then there isn’t anything for you here. For those who said Yes, I think you already know what they are all about, and exactly what you are going to get from them. 7/10

Wednesday, 22 April 2026

Reviews: The Last Ten Seconds Of Life, I Am The Avalanche, Stud Farm Mafia, DA (Spike & Matt Bladen)

The Last Ten Seconds Of Life – The Dead Ones (Unique Leader Records) [Spike]

If you’ve spent any significant time in the deep end of the deathcore scene, you know that The Last Ten Seconds Of Life don’t really do "lightweight." They’ve spent over a decade perfecting a sound that feels like a slow-motion car crash, rhythmic, terrifying, and impossible to look away from. 

For me it’s been a while since I listened to them and on The Dead Ones, they’ve managed to take that "unpleasant" noise I was expecting and sharpen it into something remarkably clinical without losing the snot-and-tears grit that made them a necessity in the first place.

The album ignites with the title track, The Dead Ones, and it’s a proper jolt of reality. The first thing that hits you isn't just the volume, but the specific "thud" of the production. It’s a level of distortion that feels like it’s physically occupying the room with you. 

It leads directly into Make It To Heaven, featuring Signs Of The Swarm, which is a masterclass in the balance of symphonic scale and blunt-force trauma. It’s a collaboration that actually justifies the "epic" tag, providing a cinematic weight that keeps the listener pinned to the wall.

What makes this record a bit of a milestone for the long-term fans, though, is the guest list. Getting Nate Johnson (ex-Fit For An Autopsy) on Rat Trap is a stroke of genius; he brings a veteran snarl that anchors the track’s frantic, heart-attack pulse. 

But the real tectonic shift happens on the closer, XXXXXXXXXX, with the return of original vocalist Storm Strope. For those of us who remember Soulless Hymns, hearing that voice back in the mix is pure catharsis. It’s not just a nostalgic call-back; it’s a high-velocity confrontation that proves the band still understands its own skeletal roots.

The middle stretch of the record, Freak Reflection, 1-800-DO YOU WANT TO DIE?, and Stiletto, moves with a predatory intent. 1-800-DO YOU WANT TO DIE? might win the award for the most confrontational title of the year, and the music backs it up with a rhythmic instability that reminds me of early 80s industrial-punk friction. It’s unpolished, honest, and possesses a level of “crustiness” that is sorely missing from the high-gloss metalcore circuit.

The production avoids the sterile traps of modern tech-death. You can hear the snare crack and the strings groaning under the weight of tracks like Dollar To A Dime (featuring Distant). It’s a sound that sounds like it was recorded in a space where the air is too thin to breathe; properly suffocating.

By the time the finale eventually snaps, you’re left with a ringing in your ears that feels like a well-earned bruise. The Dead Ones isn't an album that asks for your time; it’s one that demands your total submission. It’s a pained, sophisticated bit of survivalism that suggests that even after all these years, the Pennsylvania lot still knows exactly how to weaponize the void. 8/10

I Am The Avalanche– The Horror Show (Rude Records) [Spike]

Six years is a long time to keep a motor idling, but for Brooklyn’s I Am The Avalanche, the silence since 2020 hasn't resulted in any rust. If anything, The Horror Show feels like a band that has spent that half-decade sharpening their teeth in the dark. 

It’s a record that occupies that rare, holy ground in punk rock: it sounds exactly like the band you fell in love with a decade ago, yet it carries the heavy-set gravity of people who have seen a few more winters and have the scars to prove it.

The needle drops on God's Travel Plans, and you're immediately hit by that unmistakable Vinnie Caruana rasp, a voice that sounds like it’s been conditioned on urban exhaust and hard-won resilience. There’s a specific, bruised-rib honesty to the delivery here that sets the tone for the entire record. 

It leads straight into the title track, which serves as a masterclass in melodic friction. The guitars have a "room-sound" grit that prevents the anthemic hooks from ever feeling too sanitized; it’s the sound of a band playing for their lives in a basement where the lights keep flickering.

What really stands out on this release is the pacing. You’ve got these brief, high-velocity jolts like Osprey and True Legends Never Die that act as palate cleansers, maintaining a heart-attack pulse that keeps the record from ever settling into a mid-tempo slump. I Miss California And Every Dog I've Ever Met is arguably the heart of the album. 

Beyond the spectacular title, it’s a pained, melodic standout that captures the specific, road-weary exhaustion of looking backward while trying to keep moving. It’s the kind of songwriting that makes you realize "melodic" doesn't have to mean "easy."

The production throughout, hitting its peak on tracks like Alive On 14th Street and Rogue Knife, avoids the high-fidelity traps that rob so much modern punk of its soul. It’s dirty, honest, and properly loud. You can hear the floorboards groaning under the weight of the rhythm section on the closer, Trébuchet, a track that finally allows the band to stretch into a more expansive, cinematic finish without losing the snot-and-tears intensity that got them here.

By the time the final vibration of Trébuchet grinds to a halt, you aren't just left with another set of punk songs; you're left with the realization that this band is a necessity. I Am The Avalanche have managed to bottle that un-killable Brooklyn frequency, the one that turns a decade of urban decay into a three-minute anthem. It’s a messy, glorious bit of reality that proves veterans don't have to play it safe to stay relevant. 

My only real grievance is the calendar; after a six-year gap, this feels overdue. Let’s just hope we aren't waiting another half-decade before the getting another serving. 8/10

Stud Farm Mafia - Did You Have Good Weekend? (Self Released) [Matt Bladen]

Modern alt rock bow from Stud Farm Mafia who tell tales of the absurdity of modern life with some arena ready hooks and a massive addition of British sarcasm. Compared to band such as Royal Blood, Skindred and Queens Of The Stone Age, Stud Farm Mafia do have a lot of those influences on their music.

It's modern rocking made for big stages, huge choruses that will get you singing along and clever lyricism that lifts them higher than many bands of a similar ilk. There's thought on these five tracks, you'll find yourself tapping your foot or banging your head but also maybe a smile or a smirk when they use that inherent British humour to offer you a situation you may be intimately familiar with.

Be it the constant 9-5 existence, pretending you're fine, or the thousands of blokes who do nothing but look at themselves in the gym mirror, there's an honesty and heart to these songs, taken from real life but featuring the bands ideologies through them as their S.O.S was written for the charity ActionAid and shows a band who wear their hearts on their sleeve taking aim at many of the issuses that people will definitely understand and relate to.

The grooves, breakdowns and choruses here will sound massive on any stage as they're big enough on the EP. Stud Farm Mafia are aiming for big things with Did You Have A Good Weekend? a collection of tracks showing that time is the only real currency worth anything so we should have a damn good time while we're here. 8/10

DA - DA (Self Released) [Matt Bladen]

Almost overlooked this one but glad I didn't as London band DA have produced a debut album that draws from a lot of what I like in a metal band and brings it all together.

In terms of those influences the biggest are Judas Priest, Dio and Sabbath (Ozzy and Ronnie), stuck right on that cusp of late 70's early 80's heavy metal where you could still be atmospheric and theatrical before the punk elemts made everything faster and harder. I'd also say they have a link to Blue Oyster Cult in their sound too especially in the hard rock tracks here.

A lot of where they come from musically is in the history of guitarist Robin Brancher who was formerly in NWOBHM act Desolation Angels and vocalist Matt Oakman who is a former vocalist of power thrashers Stormborn, their combined influences are all over this record, from heavy metal, to thrash, classic rock to even moments of power metal, there's a veteran appeal with a modern edge.

Joined by Neil Craddock on bass and Dan Smith on drums, their debut album is a classic metal feast full of air guitar toting riffs and massive choruses from Oakman's wide Halford-esque vocal style on tracks such as Higher, while elsewhere Rock It features a strutting riff and plenty of organs, The Devil's On My Side is pure anthemic Priest, while the final track You Gotta Believe It is almost a two part affair with a pulsing rocker striding into a Zep like epic.

DA are a new force with veteran instincts, fans of old school heavy rock will love this self titled record! 8/10

Reviews: Lords of Altamont, Stepmother, Stainless, Kate's Acid (Rich Piva & Matt Bladen)

Lords Of Altamont - Forever Loaded (Heavy Psych Sounds) [Rich Piva]

Jake Cavaliere is a busy guy. Last year, his new project, Black Honey Cult, his Velvet Underground/13th Floor Elevators/post punk band, had a top ten album of the year for me. Now Jake is back with the project most people know him for, Lords Of Altamont, who bring us their new record, Forever Loaded, via Heavy Psych Sounds. 

Record eight was recorded all over the world (most of his bandmates live in Europe, while Jake is in California) and continues to bring that punky, garage rock, kick out the jams energy that all of their other great records do, but with some subtle changes that makes Forever Loaded stand out a bit more than the others.

If you just heard the opener, Got A Hold On Me, you would know the Lords are back in full form, kicking down the garage door for the whole neighbourhood to hear their Blue Cheer/MC5 stylings in all their glory, and you would be right because it kicks ass. Fuzz and filled with wild energy, the opener declares The Lords are back in town. 

What’s Your Bag is some late 60’s garage punk greatness with the keys leading the way making this one even more killer. Devil Rides is next, and boy do I love this one, and also where you start to notice this record is way more keys forward than I am used to, with it behind the sound lifting it up and adding to a fuller Lords experience. The ripping solos are still around too. This one has it all!

Rusty Guns is so much fun. It reminds me of The Modern Lovers if Jonathan Richman would have been less lovesick and more into motorcycles. There is not a skip on Fully Loaded, but my favourites include Get Out Of My Head, which reminds me of The Cramps, Got You On The Run, which picks up the pace and rips it up, guitar and keys hand and hand, and Disconnected, which makes me handclap along with it. The closer, an almost seven minute epic (for them), is this punk, psych, krautrock journey that exists to bend your mind in multiple different directions. Trippy and so very cool.

I always feel like The Lords Of Altamont are a few steps away from imploding, and I hear that on Forever Loaded, which is probably why I love it so much. Garage/punk/psych/whatever, Forever Loaded rips, more synths and all. All hail the Lords Of Altamont, once again. 9/10

Stepmother - Absurdus Manifestus (Tee Pee Records) [Rich Piva]


The Australian band Stepmother may be on TeePee Records, but don’t think you are getting some riff heavy psych stoner band. This is straight up punk rock right from the garage. I loved their 2023 record and am psyched to see the band is back with Absurdus Manifestus, 13 more tracks that just rip the place up.

Stealing from their Bandcamp bio because I can’t say it better…

“Fusing high velocity Motor City proto punk with fuzz, feedback and electric psych…”

Yes, yes indeed. The trio turn on the engine, put it in drive, and floor it for 33 minutes or so. The first two tracks are all you need to know what’s going on, as the MC5/Blue Cheer ripping destroys your speakers and your ability to sit still. The interesting thing for me is I hear some power pop eeking through too. What’s New, while ripping it up Detroit punk style, also reminds me of Cheap Trick (really good thing). 

The guitar work on Gimmie Mine veers into AC/DC territory and I am here for it. I swear this is not because they are Australian. The trio ventures into that power pop territory nicely on Beast And Man as well. Some of my other go to tracks on Absurdus Manifestus include the early punk rock goodness of Sick Thoughts, Space Invaders, which would have fit perfectly on a Screeching Weasel record from the 90s, and the closer, Journey To The Center Of The Mind, that has amazing fuzzy guitar work that closes out this energy blast from Down Under perfectly. No skips here, just put it on repeat and let it blast for three times or so.

I am very happy Stepmother has a new record and I am extra happy (not surprised) that Absurdus Manifestus rips it up. If you are into pure garage punk energy with underlying pop sensibilities and fuzzy ripping guitar work then Absurdus Manifestus is for you. If not, go home and do your homework, square. 8/10

Stainless - Lady Of Lust & Steel (High Roller Records) [Matt Bladen]

Recorded as a trio but now expanded to a live five piece, Portland, Oregon band Stainless assault the sense with classic heavy metal with speed metal/thrash.

It makes for a snarling, galloping, muscular heavy metal that expands on their Nocturnal Racer EP with a "more accomplished sound" according to band leader Jamie Byrum who is primarily a guitarist but on the record plays everything except bass, and produces the record for that vintage cassette sound of the tape trading days.

Now I hinted that there's more than just classic metal here, with (Don't Cross Me) Fool they add a groove of Deep Purple Mark IV with Clifton Martin's bass ramping up the funk, Take A Listen Mama too dwells into the 70's with a bit of Scorpions-like atmosphere.

Stainless haven't totally gotten rid of that as the tile track and Restless An' Ready both have that vintage leather clad sound of Priest and Accept. The big draw are the gritty vocals of Larissa Cavacece who snarls, sneers and screams across the record, unleashing her most vicious vocals on thrashers such as Whorefrost and Danger In The Night.

Lady Of Lust & Steel is classic heavy metal with a wider brush to paint with, thrash and hard rock both come knocking on the door and Stainless welcome them on to create a retro metal showcase. 7/10

Kate's Acid - Hellbender (High Roller Records) [Matt Bladen]

In the history of European metal, there are few bands that can claim to be speed metal originators, but Belgian band Kate's Acid (then named Acid), can definitely be considered to be one of the first speed metal bands on Europe. Lars Ulrich probably loves them!

While they only burnt brightly for 3 years or so in 2019, vocalist Kate de Lombaert, decided to fire up the engines again with a new band behind her as Kate's Acid, returning to Keep It True (obviously) the wheels of this new machine hit the tarmac with the live record Blowing Your Ears Off culled from that set in 2024.

Hellbender sees a new version of the band featuring guitarist Geert Annys, drummer Ash and basist Camilo (Thunder Screamer) Ortega backing Kate for the first new material since the 80's, though you wouldn't think this a contemporary album as it's full of the power and the glory of those years when metal bands when it ruled the airwaves, wrapped up in modern production skill.

Kate's vocals still have plenty of power behind them with tracks such as Valkyrie and on Air Raid which is an unusual ballad from the band, closing the album on a reflective note, as Mate shows some fragility behind the bravado. With wheels firmly back on Kate's Acid, it's like they've never been away! Sit Down Lars! 7/10

Tuesday, 21 April 2026

Reviews: Abrams, Victorius, American Sharks, Catalysis (Rich Piva, Cherie Curtis, Mark Young & Matt Bladen)

Abrams - Loon (Blues Funeral Recordings) [Rich Piva]

When I interviewed Zach Amster from the Denver, Colorado band Abrams for the Rich and Turbo Heavy Half Hour about the band’s new record, Loon, Turbo commented that their fifth would be their “breakthrough” album. I could not agree more, as the band doubles down on what the folks of multiple generations seem to be really into these days; stuff that sounds like it is from the 1990s. 

Loon sounds more 90s than any of the Abrams records before it, but this is not the sound of some bullshit 4th wave grunge band. This is killer, post hardcore/grunge with frantic angry, scattered directions, and that hits all the right buttons to be a record that both sounds like it is from 2026 and 1993 at the same time.

Glass House kicks it off with this Quicksand/Nirvana hybrid thing going on, executed perfectly. I love how they just let it all go at the end of the track. The production on the record is perfect, with Andrew Schneider’s mix showing he really understands the band, the track White Walls showing this. This one also harkens to some of the Midwest “noise” rock bands, with maybe a touch of Jesus Lizard going on, even with those harmonies. How about Ryan DeWitt pulling out those double kick drums? Last Nail shows off how this band just gets melody. Rival Schools vibes all over the place. This would have been on the radio 30 years ago. 

The influence of Walter Schreifels is all over Loon (and really all over a lot of your favourite records, you may just not realize it). Said & Done stays around the Quicksand/Cave In realm of awesome and I am certainly here for it. I absolutely love Amster and Graham Zander’s guitar work on this one. Waves is certainly that same arena as well, as Amster’s vocals really show his growth as a singer. Abrams has always been a little shoegazey, and that lives on with A State Of Mind, bringing a kind of Swervedriver thing to the record. 

It fits in perfectly as it leads to more post hardcore goodness of A State Of Mind and Home, the latter showing off excellent the rhythm section of Taylor Iversen and the aforementioned DeWitt. Quicksand vibes are all over Remains, which has a complex melody and could be a Manic Compression b-side. Like any good 90s record, the longest song (under 5 minutes!), Sirens, is the perfect mix of all of the amazing stuff that came before it on Loon. The harmonized, layered vocals, the big chorus, the relentless guitar, the quiet loud quiet perfection. There could not have been a better way to close out Loon, reminding me of how Quicksand ended their second record with It Would Be Cooler if You Did.

Loon really is a breakthrough for Abrams. This may be what the band is truly meant to sound like. Loon is a 34 minute psychic blast that is here then gone just as quickly, but ready to be queued up and re-experienced immediately. There is so much happening and so fast; the energy captured by Loon could power the time machine that takes you back to the 90s to hear something that sounded even close to how awesome the new Abrams record truly is. 10/10

Victorius – World War Dinosaur (Perception) [Cherie Curtis]

Victorius brings us an inventive and highly creative, 12 track album. World War Dinosaur is high energy, wacky and uplifting with a strong sense of story and most importantly – Fun.

With this new album, Victorius shows us exactly what 22 years can do for a band as they are technically strong with viciously sharp and interesting riffs alongside racing drums bringing pure energy throughout. The tracks are anthemic and catchy with gloriously satisfying harmonies which makes for a very memorable power metal experience, because that’s what World War Dinosaur is – An experience. If you don’t want to make a nuisance out of yourself, you’ll have to try very hard to stop yourself from singing along, it's the kind of album you pick to score a an anime / cartoon series or an album you put on for drinks and late night karaoke.

Victorius as a band is on a similar level of humour and theatricality as bands such as Ghost and The Darkness. They lean into ‘Silliness’ and put so much, thought, care and energy it to their overall production, lyrics and sound that it really shines through, and you can tell just how much they love their career and creating exciting new stories through music.

Overall, it’s very well made, there’s nothing to critique here as it’s very well done. It’s safe to say that it isn't an album for me personally as I tend to play it safe when it comes to my everyday rotation, I feel like this one is a little too stylised and to speak plainly, mental, for myself but if you're looking for something new and fun and would also like a break from the everyday. Let these guys take you on an out of this world adventure. Go for it, give this one a listen as it’s joyous. 6/10

American Sharks - Not Dead Yet (Permanent Teeth Records) [Mark Young]

I always find it disappointing when I don’t get on with a release. I get moody, because I always hope to like everything I listen to and focus on the good things instead of just battering something because I just don’t like it. Today is that day with American Sharks and their latest Not Dead Yet.

The three piece from Texas has called in a plethora of heavy music ‘Who’s Who’ on this, ranging from GWAR to The Sword to Red Fang, so it gives you a bit of an insight into these songs are going to run out. If you imagine a pop/punk/metal hybrid, that should further clue you in and possibly attract you. Or repulse you, depending on where you sit.

It’s unfortunate that I sit in the ‘not my bag’ camp, the songs are as scuzzy and full of energy as you might expect but they just didn’t land with me at all. They kick straight in with Not Dead Yet, an in your face quick fire blast that comes from the school of get in, get out quickly and move onto the next one. Its admirable in that it does exactly that but does it without registering at all. Each of the tracks follow with varying changes in approach, moving from the manic to the sleazy and back again dependent on who has been enlisted to assist. 

Being honest the songs do work better when played at speed, Going Insane is an example of this, an urgent 3 minute bopper that you could dance to but that’s it. I find that I don’t have anything of real substance to say about the songs. They don’t elicit a strong reaction either way and I don’t want to say something just for the sake of saying anything. So let’s cut this short: If you like your guitar music to fall within the lighter side of heavy, with a dash of pop/punk then dig in. That’s about the strongest reaction I can give. 6/10

Catalysis - Serpentine (Self Released) [Matt Bladen]

Another chunk of Dundee based heaviness from Catalysis who are creeping up on their 10th anniversary as a band and while a lot of bands will have perhaps one or two releases in that period, these Scots have delivered two full length albums and five EP's.

Both of their albums have had critical acclaim and have featured guests from some high profile names from the groove/metalcore/modern thrash genres as well as some big slots on festivals and tours supporting recognised names.

However in 2024 they hit a big hurdle with their vocalist, guitarist and bassist exiting the band leaving just founders Drew Cochrane (lead guitar) and Calum Rennie (drums), to restart Catalysis from the ground up however only two months after this they returned to the stage with vocalist Andrew Downie, guitarist Jamie Paterson and bassist Robi Islam joining the band as Catalysis version 2.0.

Releasing another EP in 2025, they didn't slow down with tonnes more gigs and now their sixth EP Serpentine, which arrives with the hardcore driven Tremors and closes with the breakdown heavy Deathblow, filling the tracks in between with some loud but innately melodic amalgamation of groove, thrash and death.

The influences are notable but Catalysis craft them into their own style, from the dual vocal style of Trivium on Futile, or the savagery of Damocles which could be a Machine Head lost track, Catalysis are very firmly in their new era, as if the line up issues never even happened, it's all guns blazing with chapter two from one of Scotland's most prolific acts. 8/10

Reviews: Enter Shikari, Metal Church, Cryptworm, Melechesh (Matt Bladen, Rich Piva, Charlie Rogers & Mark Young)

Enter Shikari - Lose Yourself (So Recordings) [Matt Bladen]

I'm very much in favour of surprise releases, though perhaps a journalist trying to keep up with the mountain of new albums every month I shouldn't be, however I find bands who just drop an album to little fanfare seem to be the ones that really care about it. 

Frontman Rou Reynolds wanted people to hear this record "as a cohesive whole, no lead up, no singles, and no explanation." For Lose Yourself to be a full experience for their listener and for the band not "to be distracted by chart races, or accolades [just] music being presented in a natural way." 

All lofty sentiments but if the music isn't very good it's all bravado, however with Lose Yourself,  Enter Shikari enter their darkest, heaviest and most mature period with this new album, reflecting the very real sense of despair in the world at the moment, it's and album that has a thematic, dare I say, conceptual nature to it, perhaps Rou's stint with Jeff Wayne's War Of The Worlds has influenced him here? 

You need to start at the beginning and cling on right until the end, no picking and choosing tracks as a playlist but listening as complete album. Despite dealing with some pretty heavy topics, ones that Shikari have never been afraid to talk about, such as immigration, the government, desolation, poverty and just the outright futility that is rife through the planet. 

However with this stark realism there's always hope, always optimism, that little spark that things CAN change if YOU are the change. If you're a long time listener of Enter Shikari then you'll know politics and their ideology is at the core of what they do and you'll also know how dexterous their music can be blending electronics, metal, rock, emo and more, going deeper down the progressive rabbit hole here. 

Ambience builds into club ready beats for the title track, Rou's brilliant vocals adding to the anthemic dancy beginnings where the likes of Darude permeates through the chunky riffs. Those increased thematic elements mean the songs all segue into one another, Find Out The Hard Way is a jangly emotional rocker that shouts their ideology from the rooftops.

As the twitching electronics come back on the venomous Dead In The Water while they continue to link the tracks together as hope arrives on the D'n'B dreaminess of demons. I love how dense these songs are, the genres are all over the place, I can't keep my hands clean for instance has the rawness of RATM as it shifts towards the dreamy string driven it's OK, the lyrics on this one are particularly good and important in our current climate. 

Both of these songs are bookended by the two parts of The Flick Of A Switch, more of that 'classic' Enter Shikari approach which makes for an interest 'suite'. Speaking of suites the final three tracks are linked forming the full Spaceship Earth suite, introduced by the euphoric Shipwrecked! Spaceship Earth suite closes the record with a fantastic, cinematic, crescendo full of strings, passion and sheer brilliance, a sound of a band reaching a new nadir in their career with Lose Yourself.

If you think that they're the band with that "clap, clap, clap" song then I'd suggest pressing play on Lose Yourself and re-educating the way you think about Enter Shikari as they're perhaps the most innovative and impressive bands in the last 25 years. 10/10

Metal Church - Dead To Rights (Rat Pak Records) [Rich Piva]

A new Metal Church album. I think we are using the term “Metal Church” loosely here given the majority of the line up on the new record, Dead To Rights, has three members that joined only in 2025 (including Dave Ellefson and another new vocalist, Brian Allen), and besides original member and rhythm guitarist Kurdt Vanderhoof, the most tenured member of the band joined in 2008, far after the classic records that the band with the name above came out. 

So I am not going to compare this to anything to do with the old Metal Church that wrote one of the best metal songs of all time (Badlands) and put out some of the best metal records of the 80s, but we still have the main songwriter in the band who delivered some solid thrash songs for a record in 2026.

I am not sure the songs sound more like Metal Church or the latest incarnation of Overkill, but either way some of these songs rip. The opener, Brainwash Game, is killer. New drummer (new to MC, he has been around) Ken Mary shows how great he is on F.A.F.O and why he is a perfect fit for an old school metal band still ripping it up in 2026. 

Some of my other favourites include Feet To The Fire, which slows the tempo just a bit but still kicks ass, and My Wrath, which gives me the most old school Metal Church vibes on the record. I think the songs are a bit too one note, in that they pretty much all sound very, very similar. I am not sure I could tell the difference between any of them even after three listens. That is not saying they are bad, it is more that the songs all sound very much the same.

There is some good stuff on Dead To Rights, but all the songs sound way too much like the one before it and it does drag a bit because of it, but I love the fact, after all the years and the tragedy, that Metal Church still exists in 2026. Even if only a handful of the songs are memorable and stand out, and even if there is only one member who has been in the band for more than 25% of their existence. 6/10

Cryptworm - Infectious Pathological Waste (Me Saco Un Ojo Records) [Charlie Rogers]

Bristolian putrid gore merchants Cryptworm are back with a third full length offering, this one reeking of putrescence as much as those that came before. Punishing low tuned guitarwork, tectonic bass playing, and rapid style switching punchy drumming, all accompanying Tibor’s sewer burps - this lineup of Cryptworm saw their success from 2023’s Oozing Radioactive Vomition settled into their grooves and sought to replicate with aplomb.

The record is full of writhing, pulsating riffs that spew all over the fretboard, some tightly moving in sync with bass and drums, others left open for the guitar to run sawing tremolo leads while bass and drums hold the space. Not opting for over the top guitar gymnastics, but focusing on solid grooves that hook the listener in and demand your head bob along is what Cryptworm, and indeed much of Putrid Death Metal, opts for, and this record stays true to form. 

Manic up-tempo lines leading into mid paced stompy parts builds excitement before the payoff is delivered with a throbbing call to vibe. Some parts even decay into sludgy, mopes, drawing the corners of your mouth into that stinkface we all crave for - a great example of this is how the track Embedded With Parasitic Larvae feels like it bursts and falls apart from the mid-section running into the ending.

Tonally, it’s what you’d expect from bands of this ilk, with the guitars having a great balanced sound. The palm muted chugging chops just right, and the single note riffs dancing clearly over the rest of the band like a long legged aberration from The Thing. Bass is blended in so most of the time you just hear the bottom frequencies rumbling away under the guitarwork, but when the guitar dies away and we hear passages with just bass there’s a grating overdriven fuzz on the tone that holds it’s own. 

Drums are very clear, the snare especially is quite pingy and sounds fabulous. Jay’s balance of straight beats and manic fills are one of Cryptworm’s strengths and he really does the music justice here keeping the percussion dynamic and interesting. My biggest gripe is that there’s some harsh frequencies in the cymbal wash that cut a little to hard through, and listening at higher volumes can be a little painful when there’s a lot of overhead work. 

Vocals are generally going for sewer monster aesthetic, with giant frontman Tibor having some of the best burps in Britain currently. He varies it up with some choking, almost strangulation sounds on tracks such as Encephalic Feast that are downright stomach churning. Death metal should put you on edge, and pushing the vocal performance this way is certainly one way to do that.

Overall, this is a very strong record from one of the most exciting bands in the British underground right now, and any self respecting death metal fan should make it a priority to give it a spin at least 3 times. I’m looking forward to hurting my neck muscles seeing these tracks played live soon. 8/10

Melechesh - Sentinels Of Shamash (Reigning Pheonix Music) [Mark Young]

Sentinels of Shamash is the new EP from Melechesh, its release acting as a stop gap whilst they are working on their new full length album. The band themselves have noted that they have had a couple of setbacks on their trip but are not giving up. The EP itself has three songs, each one steeped in their own unique way of building things.

Melechesh take no time in going straight for the throat with The Seventh Verdict starting proceedings in grand fashion. Their bio announces them as Sumerian/Mesopotamian Metal, and those touches are evident from the off. There are rapid riff breaks, pummelling drums and a delightful fusion of black metal with their own unique stamp dominating every step. What they have is a strong opener, one that makes the most of this approach which makes sure that it satisfies the core requirements of our favoured music – fast, aggressive and intense. 

Personally, it is a little overlong but that is a personal opinion and one that is more than likely not shared elsewhere. With In Shadows, In Light they push this envelope further. I don’t mind long songs by any means as long as there is a substance behind them. If it’s a long song for the sake of it, then I’ll lose interest. They start it on that front foot again, moving it forward and mixing those traditional approaches in with the black metal. 

There is something to it in how they arrange it, its heavy without feeling bloated and the guitar tone is one that conveys the feeling of speed at every turn. Being honest, they could have trimmed this a little, but that is me. In their defence there is a structure to this, the game is to keep things moving forward at all times. It’s something that you can’t argue with as they don’t take the foot of the gas at any point.

Raptors Of Anzu
channels the power cosmic in its opening passages, dropping into lightning fast black metal with an added twist. It’s definitely in keeping with the vibe that everything must be played as fast as we can, bringing a feeling of a train practically leaving the tracks. Its frenetic and for me is what you want to hear. As EP’s go, it’s a strong release that knows what it wants to do and how it’s going to get there. Riffs are front and centre and delivered with speed and skill and of course the drumming is exemplary, and there is very little to complain about. 

Personally, I’d have liked them to be a little more ruthless with the song lengths, but ultimately its their art and their endeavours. There is nothing here that is going to turn off existing fans, and certainly plenty to garner new ones. Its difficult to score because in effect there are no weak songs here from them. So, lets go with an 8/10

Monday, 20 April 2026

Reviews: Hardline, Starbenders, Glorious Bankrobbers, Fighter V (Matt Bladen)

Hardline - Shout (Steamhammer)

Hardline are a band now on their eighth album, though for frontman Johnny Gioeli, Shout is officially the 108th album he's been a part of.

In the current version of the band he's joined by keyboardist/producer Alessandro Del Vecchio, bassist Anna Portalupi, drummer Marco Di Salvia and guitarist Luca Princiotta who joined in 2023. Now Hardline have always been a band that have had a lot to live up to.

Their debut album, Double Eclipse featured the talents for Journey's Neal Schon and Deen Castronovo so they made a mark and established the band they wanted to be very early and while they have never again reached the heights of that record. They have been chugging away since then, their albums II and Danger Zone featuring an eclipse to celebrate the 10th and 20th anniversary of their debut, so it's always been a very significant part of their career.

In 2026 they again want to make music that has a connection to Double Eclipse, Gioeli going as far as saying “This band doesn’t want to reinvent its music." and with Shout they don't reinvent anything, this is an album that puts the retro with the modern.

With gloriously 80's rocking on the strutting Candy Love, Rise Up and It Owns You, while the title track, the emotive Welcome To The Thunder and the heavy Rise Above No Fear are all very contemporary.

There's of course balladry too with a cover of Scorpions' When You Came Into My Life, and Glow which is a song dedicated to the all the dogs Gioeli and Del Vecchio have had in their lives, the band even raise money for dog trust when they're on tour so it's something close to their hearts.

Ultimately Shout is a record of radio-friendly rocking that Hardline are known for and while they may never truly surpass Double Eclipse in terms of impact, they are still producing quality rock n roll for their fanbase and beyond. 8/10

Starbenders - The Beast Goes On (Sumerian Records)


Atlanta rockers Starbenders return with their fourth record of moody, glammy, synthy poppy punky, rock n roll. The Beast Goes On follows their 2023 record Take Back The Night, a record that put them more into the public consciousness but they don't play it safe with The Beast Goes On, writing music that feels right and will be picked up by mass media, not music that is explicitly written for it.

The Beast Goes On features new drummer Qi Wei joining band founders Kimi Shelter (vocals/guitar), Aaron Lecesne (bass) and Kriss Tokaji (lead guitar) for another blast of radio baiting riffs and shout along choruses that are sneered by Kimi over some bouncy riffage, twisty synth phases and a fusion of styles that create a sound that is both sexy but tinged with gothic danger.

Like the twisted cousin of Cheap Trick (Chantilly Boy and 21st Century Digital Boy), with a hint of Deep Purple on To Be Alright, they stick with the modern hybrid thrills of Palaye Royale and The Velveteers on Cold Silver, there's a post punk throb on Tokyo, Saturday borrows from The Cure while Forever Mine has the sexy gothics of Ghost, as Hello Goodbye dreamily shifts into 90's alt rock.

The Starbenders strut back onto the scene with guitars set to stun, beware the beast as it brings rock n roll. 7/10

Glorious Bankrobbers - Intruder (Wild Kingdom)

Swedish sleaze rockers Glorious Bankrobbers are legends in their native country. Their 1989 record Dynamite Sex Doze, became THE record in the Swedish sleaze/action rock scene, influential to bands such as Hardcore Superstar, Mustasch and The Hellacopters.

They broke into America with shows at CBGB'S and on Headbangers Ball. In a familiar story labels screwed them, band members changed and there was a split resulting in inactivity. They did return in 2007 but recently they have more adversity with drummer Oden passing away leading to another lengthy lay off.

However rock n roll never really dies and Glorious Bankrobbers come backed armed and dangerous with new album Intruder their third album since returning in 2023 following that years Back On The Road and 2024's Rock ’n Roll Church.

So GB are back, a meatier sound, veteran instincts and songs that bring sleaze, punk and bluesy rock n roll that will appeal to fans of The Quireboys, The Rolling Stones, AC/DC, Status Quo and The Ramones as they shove their attitude down your throat with rhythm blues on tracks such as the punchy Rabbit Hole and the rollicking Rollin' In Hollywood.

Signed to Wild Kingdom Records, Intruder has the band coming back, firing on all cylinders, rock that's as classic as it gets, inspired by sleaze, punk and proper rock n roll, Intruder will be a welcome guest in your house from these Swedish legends. 8/10

Fighter V - Déja Vu (Frontiers Music Srl)

Swiss 80's rock revivalists Fighter V return with their third album of music inspired by Journey, Survivor and Bon Jovi, imbued with a modern energy.

The title Déja Vu is perfect what they do as you'll feel like you may have time travelled back to those 80's glory days as soon as Raging Heartbeat pumps out of your speakers, you know just as Rocky gets ready to fight the big Russian, that sort of vibe.

Emerging with a debut album in 2019, it was on the follow up that they started to diversify catching their ear of Frontiers Music who picked them up for album three as Fighter V have that mix of nostalgia and modernity that Frontiers are known for.

From the glistening synths that are the lead instrument on Victory and Hold The Time, the clean guitar lines the strutting Stand By Your Side and For All This Time as there's huge vocal harmonies ala Def Leppard on Foolish Heart, the title track and let's face it throughout.

If retro AOR is your thing then Fighter V do it with flair and most importantly proper skill, grab your hairspray and get rocking. 7/10