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Monday, 1 June 2026

Reviews: Redshift, Erdve, Kristoffer Gildenlow, The Scalar Process (Matt Bladen, Joe Guatieri, Cherie Curtis &

Redshift - Down The Wire (Pale Wizard Records) [Matt Bladen]

We're long past the days when HyBriD_tHeOry.exe used to curse your computer to hell and back, technology has evolved exponentially since then and we've all had to keep up. The issues of A.I have inspired many songs, albums, most in the prog metal genre, much of this due to prog's inherited links to Sci-Fi I would think. 

So when I saw Bath based prog metal trio Redshift were making their long awaited return with concept album in six chapters, telling the story of a "world surviving without independent thought, where human-made art became outlawed, and A.I generated art propagandises obedience." So taken straight from the dystopian Science Fiction of the 70's but more resonant culturally than it ever has been. 

It's the story of an artist who acts in defiance of this New World Order, creating the most experimental and human art that he can where freedom and expression is paramount, creating a resistance to the machines. If any band can really lean into this idea, it's Redshift who have been impressing us in these pages since their debut,their style of Opeth meets Rush via Dream Theater, instantly making a mark with their debut and it's follow up scoring high. 

Unfortunately the band faltered a little after their second record as co-founding guitarist Joshua Boniface left the band so live shows to promote that record were limited. But with guitarist Tiago Martins joining drummer Jack Camp and Liam Fear vocals/bass/keys, they've injected some new life and creative vision into their third album. 

Down The Wire bursts to life with The Singer, heavy, melodic, breakneck, there's virtuosity everywhere but used to propel the vision and storyline. Moving through Dream Theater, Opeth and early Haken (when they still had harsh vocals), all the big hitters are ticked off as another story driven journey begins the production sound of Ben Turner and Jamie King, right bang on with the modern prog metal crowd. Into The Machine and there's more Dream Theater, with a bit of Styx vocoder work, black metal snarling and then a solo section Rush would be proud of. 

Needless to say if you don't like prog then this is an album to avoid as it somehow gets madder on The Clown where the band show they've been listening to too much Mr Bungle, Primus and ELP, the carnival atmosphere, the haughty spoken word vocals, the banjo, arpeggios from hell, it's a wild ride that goes wilder when John Hare adds Trumpet and Flugelhorn to increase the jazz fusion quotient on The Rogue, where the organ/keys are very familiar, and they should be, as Derek Sherinian (ex-Dream Theater/Michael Schenker) is the guest for this one, prog keyboard royalty on this most muscular of proggers, which lovers of bass will get all gooey over. 

After this venture into the prog fusion sphere, Down The Wire ends with the 13 minute The Redemption, a song where every facet of the band is on show, each previous track is referenced, all of the virtuosity is at a paramount, from guitars, to bass, to keys and drums and even the vocals are the most varied, adopting some Geddy Lee tones when it moves into the dreamy acoustic section that precedes the intense finale. Redshift embrace the change in their line up to create their most expansive album yet! 

Another perfect prog record from this special band. 10/10

Erdve - Epigrama (Season Of Mist) [Joe Guatieri]

Erdve are a band from Lithuania whose sound falls somewhere between Hardcore and Metal, they formed back in 2016. Over the course of their career so far they have put out two albums, that last one being 2021s Savigalia. Now in 2026 they bring us their latest effort, Epigrama.

The record opens with a song that takes its name from the album title, the track presents a metallic explosion with deeply heavy riffing. The guitars are piercing, trying to break through the glass ceiling with their intensity. This attack is paired with Post Metal solace in the chorus that feels heavenly, it’s a battle between good and evil which is something that Erdve loves to do throughout this LP.

Next we have track two with Nyra. It’s a song that has a lot more Sludge elements at play, in my mind it takes influence from Primitive Man in it’s destructive nature. The bass adds so much weight with its thick tone, this song is pulverising.

Later on we go into track five with Trukme. At first this song verged into a territory of sounding too similar as what came before it. However, this song proves to be the most daring and experimental song on Epigrama as after a great buzzing breakdown, Trukme transforms. It dances between Ambient and EDM with a glitchy drum machine and massive low-end. I wasn’t crazy about it but it shows how inventive Erdve can be.

Directly following that is a Blackened Metalcore number called Svertas. It’s incredibly catchy as is the rest of the record with its headbang-inducing drums, impossible not to move to it. By 3:13 the track almost comes to complete silence as a lone guitar is heard only by its left breath, sounding defeated until 3:41 when you are blasted into space with an incredibly victorious riff. It’s the perfect resolution to the song and presents excellent use in dynamics and patience and shows how beautiful Erdve can sound, they always move forwards! No doubt, Svertas is my favourite song on the album.

Overall, Erdve have put together a tight and expansive listening experience with Epigrama. The band has got a rock solid formula in place balancing sheer force in hefty riffs, pace and creativity with blissful guitar passages that float in the sky above all of the darkness. I’m impressed with Erdve and the band have definitely proved their worth to me. Epigrama is great but I think that this band are truly capable of doing something even better. 7/10

Kristoffer Gildenlow – Humanised (New Joke Music) [Cherie Curtis]

Kristoffer Gildenlow brings 9 dark, weirdly fascinating and magnetically intimate tracks to his newest album, Humanised. What strikes me most about this album is the level of articulation and control there is between stifled passion and controlled ferocity.

Humanised is rich with layers of punching and detached main vocals complimented by affecting backing ones, It’s atmospheric and technological with tense riffs and resounding drums that provide a dynamic build to a towering point followed swiftly by a gratifying breakdown, that's less of an explosion and more surgically precise which shifts the tone back and forth between melancholy and passionate.

There is heavy emphasis on being enigmatic paired well with measured yet coarse power. It’s certainly not a neck breaker of an album but a moodier one that can only be described as sitting comfortably in the eye of a storm. The Fields, is a personal favourite of mine and I feel like it’s the track that captures this sentiment the most.

Gnarled and abrasive but around the 1 minute mark it switches up completely into one of the most gripping and harrowing, soft spoken bridges I've ever heard in a song, and I desperately need this bridge in an IV attached to at all times. The Almosts is a close second, a cinematic build up with a stunningly textured chorus that feels more like a lament than the rest of the album and will stay with you long after the album finishes.

All in all, Humanised, offers us something interesting as well as distinctive. It's always great to hear when an artist bends genres by contrasting styles and sounds, especially in this album. It doesn't feel experimental but very well established and thought out, giving us prog metal with some symphonic fusion and that's why this one feels so special. 

There isn’t a comparison I can think of, and even though Kristoffer Gildenlow has been around for a while and has put out a good few albums, this one manages to feel like a one off without being inauthentic. 10/10

The Scalar Process - Agnomysticism (Transcending Obscurity) [Adz Redpath]

The Scalar Process from Besancon, France are a self coined progressive/tech death band which is an accurate description to say the least, fitting in the pocket with bands covering everything from Fallujah to Rivers Of Nihil onto the mighty Periphery. Having a cohesive and tight musical metric that shines throughout with a tasteful use of keys and sampling that adds to a huge sonic assault on show here with this their second full length outing on Transcending Obscurity Records they are making a real statement.

There is tight and cohesive musical vision on show here from musicians who clearly know their craft and the genre traits that serve their vision best. Truly peak vocal layering and production are on show throughout with my only personal critique on the mix being that I feel a touch more of the low end sonics and frequencies are missing giving it not as much bass and rhythm guitar punch, this does not detract but is something that would elevate this band to a genuine head turner although this is a negligible quibble at best as finding fault in this release is hard. 

This being said I know the battles of trying to balance the clarity a band seeks with note definition and separation on a record with the required low end shift that many have these days in the metal scene and whilst this doesn't shake rooms with its low end it provides a soundscape that is truly captivating for fans of the genre and whilst considered tech death I don't find it contrived or overtly technical in a pretentious or self gratifying way, the band have struck a great balance and it genuinely sounds like they are writing for the song rather than to satisfy personal wants for overtly tech sections that will usually only interest fellow musicians.

The vocals truly shine here with intricate layering and a great balance from Mathieu Lefevre when needed between heavy and clean exemplified on a track like Incessant Continuum. The guitarwork from Eloi Nicod and Lucas Martinez shines throughout with a heavy lean towards the stylings of Rivers Of Nihil at their best, both intricate and tasteful in equal measure. 

Adding in stunning soundscape interludes scattered throughout as in the incredible Affluent Marea and the haunting Sigil which gives goose bumps as a reprieve from the sonic assault that these guys hit with and the whole opus being knit together by the consistent weight of the rhythm attack from Thomas Giroud on drums and Vincent Amar on bass.

It's hard to pick favourites here although for me A Breathing Moment is a genuine high point amongst an absolute monster of a release, this is a band that anyone into the extreme genres should absolutely not sleep on and one I will be not only following but would love to see live, An easy and very high recommendation. 8/10

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