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Monday, 11 May 2026

Reviews: Haggard Cat, Karcius, Electric Sun Defence, Sins Of Shadows (Matt Bladen)

Haggard Cat - The Pain That Orbits Life (Church Road Records)

The duo of drummer/vocalist Tom Marsh and vocalist/guitarist Matt Reynolds, collectively known as Haggard Cat, are very well known on the British rock scene.

They've played as part of bands before but in 2017 when Heck (FKA Baby Godzilla) disbanded the two of them dragged their feline bones in there studio and began to record with a much rawer, live as it can be approach of just guitar/effects/drums/vocals leading to their debut in 2018.

It was all D.I.Y, bristling with intensity, no frills, loud and raucous rock n roll, with influences of post hardcore, noise, garage rock and more chucked together in their melting pot and played through speakers at their highest volume.

Following the pandemic they took took to the stage as often as possible as this type of music is honed best when making a room of people deaf, it also gives a band a confidence to play with the recipe, many songs evolve on stage, things are added, taken away, jammed right there and then.

This experimentation has been focussed into their third album; The Pain That Orbits Life, which still slaps you round the face with volume and veracity, but also brings in another side to this cat, a measured, progressive side where the song can be more elongated and the addition of synths can create a wider audio field than just guitar/drums.

With Grammy winner Adrian Bushby behind the desk, Matt and Tom kick off this next chapter with the atmospheric oscillation of I Hate It Here, the synths giving way to the Haggard Cat groove of punchy riffs, stiff drumming and dual vocals shouts. The new with the old as familiarity is merged with modernity.

The synths wind through back of nearly all the songs on The Pain That Orbits Life. They get back to the riffs weirdness again on Halcyon, as punk stomps through on Afterlove as they up the groove for the cascading rage of Apnoea, where Haggard Cat go Queens Of The Stone Age.

We're only halfway through with this 7 minute number, 'Side B' of The Pain That Orbits Life explodes with more hardcore anger and angular riffs, the ferocity and volume increases for Suppressor as the synths and electronic textures return on Landscapes.

Haggard Cats third album closes with Zion, their most epic cut yet, a 9 minute masterpiece that adds prog, doom and chest beating classic metal to their repertoire, changing shape in the middle as the atmosphere and psych doom crawls, Haggard Cat creating sounds much bigger than you'd expect a two piece to be able to.

Let's not beat around the bush The Pain That Orbits Life is one fine feline, Haggard Cat prove third times the charm with this opus. 10/10

Karcius - Black Soul Sickness (Self-Release)

It's always a humbling experience when you realise you're an idiot. Black Soul Sickness is the third album in a trilogy by Montreal prog band Karcius and one listen to it's confirmed I'm and idiot for not having heard anything by them before, as they are right up my street.

Influenced by Porcupine Tree, Pineapple Thief, Opeth and Big Wreck. Rest assured I will be going back to check out the first two parts of this story but for now I'll be focussing on Black Soul Sickness which is the latest chapter.

The story of Karcius is the story of Simon L’EspĂ©rance, guitarist/producer/songwriter for the band, this is actually his seventh solo album under this name, twenty years of evolution coming from a project that was previously an instrumental crossover jazz band.

Simon, joined by long time drummer Thomas Brodeur, entered a new heavier realms with the addition of Sylvain Auclair (vocals/bass) and Sébastien Cloutier (keys), from The Anchoret who joined for the first album in this trilogy.

Now we love The Anchoret here and those brilliant vocals (similar to Tom S Englund) are a part of it so there's an elevated emotional content to these records, which continues on Black Soul Sickness, you can feel the introspection, the frustration and the strong emotional content throughout the record.

With heavy groovers such as Out Of Nothing, perfectly showing off their balance of technical expertise and songwriting prowess. There's metallic volume, post-rock shimmers, acoustic moments, that infuse the opener Wallow, a track that has that call of classic prog where you pick out Floyd et all, these 'post' sounds continue on the the short but effective Slow Down Son.

Darkest Heir meanwhile fuses Opeth with Evergrey for shifting time signatures, orchestrations and a huge chorus, Rise keeps the riffs heavy but the delivery dynamic and technical as Awakening The Spirit brings some massive Dream Theater sounds in the duelling guitar and keyboard riffs towards the climax.

Black Soul Sickness closes the trilogy with the dramatic Dusting My Coat, it's short and effecting, like all good conclusions should be leaving just enough for you to want to delve back into this complex story again. Progressive, heavy, anthemic, epic, yeah I'm an idiot for not checking out Karcius before, you shouldn't be so go listen to it. 9/10

Electric Sun Defence - Estuary (Road To Masochist)

For fans of Mastodon and Baroness about sums up Electric Sun Defence. Born from the ashes of The Massacre Cave, multi-instrumentalist Joe Cormack and drummer Pete Colquhoun set about making a new band that is entrenched in prog and post metal, leaning on sludge/hardcore of Atlanta's favourite sons, while adding the palm muting and chunky technicality riffs of djent.

Electric Sun Defence are a heavyweight band musically and lyrically but they deliver their heaviness without losing the ambience and atmosphere of prog/post metal bands such as The Ocean do. Mixed by Graeme Young (Dog Tired, DVNE) and mastered by Alan Douches (Baroness, Mastodon), it sound just how you want it too, thickness in the bottom end, a rawness in the riffs and atmospheric clarity at the top end.

Multi-instrumentalist Joe Cormack claims that Estuary is a "metaphor for inevitability" and in that it's a perfect fit or Road To Masochist Records who champion bands with a experimental sound. The high level of technicality coming immediately on the title track where Morricone brass, shifts into dual harmony heaviness with clean/harsh vocals delivery.

The theme of the water begins here with a torrent moving it's way to the end of the cycle, the rest of the songs all contributing in their own way to the lyrical themes, with proggy grooves, crushing heaviness and ambient textures on The Master's Garden and the trippy Spiderweb are countered by aggression of Phantom Limb Amputee.

With the influence of Mastodon and Baroness is so strong on Estuary that you may think it's a lost album from one of them, but Electric Sun Defence do just enough to make it their own. 8/10

Sins Of Shadows - The Last Frontier (Self-Release)

Sins Of Shadows are French heavy metal band formed by guitarist Nicolas Jacon who writes all the music and lyrics, he's joined by bassist Sebastien Normand and drummer Rodolphe Plachesi.

Over the course of their existence the trio have released two previous albums dividing their work between the early days of the British heavy metal scene and conceptual sound of American prog. They've also had a few vocalists cross their path over the years, adapting their sound each time, but you can do that when you do everything, such as the production etc in house.

They now get ready to release their third full length album The Last Frontier which has Tasos Lazaris take the vocals so there's a a more pronounced Maiden vibe to the record given the Maiden related band's he's involved in. His Air Raid siren explodes on The Void which is a pacey gallop that showcases a more aggressive, focussed sound for this record.

Sins Of Shadows are leaning on the heavier side with the American power sound of Iced Earth on The Last Frontier but then there's a shift as Walls Of Past, Tell Me Why and Rise Again recall Maiden in full 80's pomp as Laszaris unleashed over some gallops and harmony guitars.

On their third record, Sins Of Shadows crank up the Irons and are all the better for it! 7/10

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