supported by 9 fans who also own “Anthropophagous Inhumation”
An outstanding Extreme doom death album, in the best tradition. The funerary atmosphere reminds of Evoken ('Centuries of ooze" bears striking similarities, for my delight). It is overall sharp, dark, hypnotic and unrelenting. One of those rare convincing new bands that hold proud the legacy of the biggest names. Bertrand Marchal
supported by 9 fans who also own “Anthropophagous Inhumation”
Distilled death metal with catchy riffs and well written songs. It's not reinventing the wheel or anything but it's osdm, if that's what you want look elsewhere. grahamy
supported by 8 fans who also own “Anthropophagous Inhumation”
Behold an appalling slab of trash metal from an alternate reality year 1997, dredged into the modern era by uncaring hate-tulpas. This is the album Incantation would've released after The Forsaken Mourning of Angelic Anguish if they were actually seeking to achieve Unholy Deification.
The drums are frantic, yet loose. The riffs; vile. Vocals; dry in the best way possible and reverbed all the way to shit. Lyrics are minimalist yet upsetting. I literally cannot recommend this album hard enough. Ghuughra
The experimental rock band's new record is as melodic and inventive as ever, but now with an even more honed sense of play. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 27, 2024
Ross J. Farrar of Ceremony creates dubby outside punk evoking the minimalism of Young Marble Giants on his second solo record. Bandcamp New & Notable Apr 27, 2024