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Nasty_Cabbage

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Posts posted by Nasty_Cabbage

  1. NP: Exorcizphobia - Spiritual Exodus

    Spiritual Exodus | EXORCIZPHOBIA | Doomentia Records (bandcamp.com)

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    It's firmly planted in the more thrash/hardcore version of things. Vocals are very clean without singing or full-on growling. Unfortunately the modern production can sometimes really expose the flaws in the typical hardcore bark, and especially so when the guitar goes with plain old thrash.. Not a dealbreaker by any means, but there's far better out there.

  2. NP: Wrektomb - Bovine Mockeries of Human Passage

    ▶︎ Bovine Mockeries of Human Posturing | WREKTOMB | Personal Records (bandcamp.com)

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    First listen for me, and I'm enjoying it. The real trick with death/doom hybrids I think is keeping it heavy while maintaining some of the better aspects of the early 'epic' doom tonality. There's no operatic vocals to speak of, but the reverence for the old guard is evidenced by the minor key chord progressions and arpeggiated plucking that suffers no pleasance or light. Doom, gloom, and death's the name of the game for sure. I'm probably not going to research much further since that album title indicates a possible 'We take ourselves way too seriously' sanctimonious veganism that you run across here and there in extreme metal, and I just want to enjoy the album without enduring any diatribes from that end. Still a very good doom album.

  3. NP: Koitos - En Taida Kuulua Tanne

    ▶︎ En taida kuulua tänne | Koitos (bandcamp.com)

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    Information on this one is pretty sparse, and I think the archives classify this as hard rock and not metal, which is understandable. I just wanted to know if the singer was the same guy from last years Quasarborn album. Sounds similar, but it seems these guys are from Finnland, and not Hungary. Regardless if you enjoyed that album this one should satisfy.

  4. Hello. Hope you stick around. Texas is home to a few really interesting black metal bands, and of course my personal favorite metal drummer Proscriptor.

    As far as recommendations it depends on which era of Mayhem we're talking about. There's plenty of bands that changed absolutely nothing from the blueprint provided by De Mysteriis... If you want some all out blitz stuff check Beherit's Oath of Black Blood, and if a little Tolkien muddled in there doesn't bug you check out Cirith Gorgar. Also if it's the high energy stuff you're after it's hard not to recommend some of the more tenured "war" metal bands. It all occurs as a sub-genre of a sub-genre of a sub-genre, but there's definitely some solid stuff to be found. Can't help much with the Burzum stuff as it was never really my area of expertise, but Drudkh is a fair comparison I've heard, although they seem to have had as many different eras as Varg/Burzum.

  5. 22 hours ago, Thatguy said:

    This kind of theme is aimed at manipulating Thatguy's emotions, and that kind of malarkey is not Thatguy approved. So I've made a point of avoiding all such movies, and suchlike books too, Orca.

     

    A yes, entertainment and it's pesky habit of making people feel things. That's why I only read technical manuals about water filtration, deionization, and treatment facilities. Try and make me emote over that, you local municipalities! You just try!

    I'm just throwing a little shade your way Thatguy. In truth I definitely have a mental list of movies that I know to only watch by myself. At some point we all learn to maintain our defenses in or around company.

    NP: Wardra - Warden of the Stellar Crypts

    ▶︎ Warden Of The Stellar Crypts | Wardra | Onism Productions (bandcamp.com)

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    I was expecting a little more DSO style dissonance since the promo blurb said they had moved away from purely traditional black metal. They really didn't move too far from it, and the production values are on point. Honestly not bad.

  6. 31 minutes ago, AlSymerz said:

    The Sword - Age of Winter

    Man did this one get the purists riled up when it came out. I remember getting this on a whim for under five dollars in physical format from one of the last real CD stores left (They hung on for as long as they could, but eventually folded not long after), and having never heard of them prior thinking it was pretty good. Then of course finding the absolute bile and venom being thrown their way online over everything from their singer "trying to sound like Ozzy" which was a patently absurd assertion, to them "synchronizing their headbanging" on stage. I like metalheads in general, but occasionally we can all be really susceptible to hyperbolic contrarianism. Lament for the Aurochs is still a song I listen to semi-regularly off this album. 

    I like it. With a name like Double Homicide I was expecting something leaning toward the slam americanized style of brutal death metal. Not so. This would be much closed to something you might hear from Asphyx or Gorement, which is a style I like better anyway. Also that album cover is awesome.

    2 hours ago, GoatmasterGeneral said:

    It's a line from a little movie from the early 90's called The Sandlot, which you wouldn't have seen because it's about a bunch of young teenage kids who love baseball, and I know your Ozzy mob doesn't care about baseball, you have that silly cricket game and 9 different versions of rugby.

    My Kiwi wife actually had a "You're killing me Smalls" t-shirt with that freckle-faced fat kid's picture on it which is where I heard the quote, because I'm not a real big movie guy. Apparently the main character's name was Scotty Smalls and the fat kid kept telling him "You're killing me Smalls."

    😆Ha. That movie is alright for a Disny-esque sort of ode to childhood misadventures. I completely forgot Dennis Leary was in it until I happened to catch it on TV again this year. Goes to show how things change that they actually let the whole fake drowning/Wendy Peffercorn thing just play out the way it did. I get the feeling that and the "you play ball like a girl" thing wouldn't slide today. Damn. Even as a kid myself I think I preferred Stand By Me for depictions of diminishing childhood innocence perched just above the looming darkness of adulthood. It's a little less sanitized and basically covers the same thematic ground.

  7. NP: Hasturian Vigil - Unveiling the Brac'thal

    ▶︎ Unveiling the Brac'thal | Hasturian Vigil | Invictus Productions (bandcamp.com)

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    This one has some teeth to it. The Absu influence is very clearly present, but it's definitely got it's own thing going. Honestly this is probably one of the better bm releases I've heard this year. Obviously in the drumming department you're not going to find some one as good as Proscriptor, but that's because only Proscriptor is as good as Proscriptor. It's nice to hear them using their drums in a completely different way. Creative and energetic riffwork as well with just enough stylization to keep it out of mopey "depressive" black metal territory and they have a knack for finding the best spots in their songs to insert some leads. I like it.

  8. NP: Dolmen Gate - Gateways of Eternity

    ▶︎ Gateways of Eternity | Dolmen Gate (bandcamp.com)

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    Marcolin era Candlemass is pretty easily identifiable as the primary source of influence. You could probably point to a little Trouble or Pentagram here and there. I do enjoy some of the Marcolin Candlemass albums, so this is a pretty easy going listen for me. The songwriting is excellent on this, even if I'm not a fan of echo laden Solitude Aeternus style production. The vocal layering is frustrating since the singer clearly has the pipes to carry her weight through the style. It's the same sort of frustration I feel when I hear the early Fates Warning albums with John Arch. They should really just trust their vocalist enough to leave the mix a little rawer and pick up a lot more of the inflections that the production seems to smooth over. Still definitely my kind of doom. B+ from me.

    1 hour ago, FatherAlabaster said:

    Mayhem - Ordo Ad Chao

    Mayhem have had such an interesting career. I'm one of those nutcases who will actually defend A Grand Declaration of War onward era Mayhem. This album in particular seems to love making use of rests and what I would call very loud silences in the guitar work. It tends to push Attila's rangy growls a little further to the front, but in return we get erratic quick lashing riffs that actually finds me listening to the rests as intently as the notes themselves. You don't get into the listener's head like that without long years of experience and high confidence in your songwriting.

  9. NP: Mathilde - 32 Décembre

    ▶︎ 32 Décembre | Mathilde (bandcamp.com)

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    According to their press blurb "Mathilde is a band that mixes Black Metal, Death Metal, Progressive Metal and Doom."

    Alright. Prog for sure. I could even hear doom in this, if only because doom encompasses a lot of styles. The other two, though are kind of a stretch, and it's mainly the vocalist that's throwing off the whole vibe of the thing. No death growls, no black metal shrieks. Instead we have a very hardcore style of delivery from a male vocalist whose actual singing voice is probably a low tenor. Way too hardcore for my liking, but even Progenie Terrestre Pura use distinctively black metal styled vocals. Thing is, I actually like this album. The material here is very well thought out, and compositionally ahead of a ton of other bands that do this sort of thing. I showed up looking for the wrong thing maybe, but the prog is definitely keeping me with it. It's impressive enough to warrant a few extra spins at least before rendering my final verdict.

  10. NP: Eternal - Cryptic Lust

    ▶︎ Cryptic Lust | Eternal | Raw Skull Recordz (bandcamp.com)

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    Kind of a shame they have such a generic name. The material is quality, but you're going to run into trouble with people not being able to find your stuff with a name like that. Then again I guess if Carnage came onto the scene today they'd probably have the same problem. I definitely dig the Entombed-style font though. Always makes me happy to see it.

    In any case the material is good, and surprisingly it's got a little more in the way of variety than just pure Entombed worship. It doesn't stray too far though. We're deep in Swedeath country here.

  11. 1 hour ago, SurgicalBrute said:

    Sacramentum - Far Away from the Sun

     

    I'll second this suggestion. It's not quite as catchy as Dissection were at their best, but what it loses in that department it more than makes up for in depth and quieter shifts in the guitars. For me at least, that creates a ton of replayability.

     

    NP: Fantasma - Abomination of Human Pestilence

    ▶︎ Abomination of Human Pestilence | Fantasma | Narbentage Produktionen (bandcamp.com)

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    This one's growing on me. It's only an EP, but it shows a lot of potential.

  12. 2 hours ago, SurgicalBrute said:

    They're a relatively well known site because they're associated with both Metal injection and the PRP through the Blastbeat Ad network, but the site itelf is looked at as a joke.

    i think originally it was started as site that had kind of a humorous take on metal news, while also doing reviews and announcements, but somewhere along the line they shifted to outrage clicks, basically writing "articles" about how band X might be NSBM or how band member Y once said something stupid online 5 years ago....I'm sure you've seen the type. that was when they'd actually bother to write something original...more often than not they would just take a news article from sister site Metal Injection, wait 2 days, and then post the same thing, slightly reworded in a more humorous/snarky manner.   

    Additionally, their actual music coverage was garbage...as a site they seemed completely unaware of anything that came out in the last 30 years that wasn't on a label like Nuclear Blast or Metal Blade, and what new stuff they did talk about was either some kind of prog, tech, or trendy -core band. (this is why I said ACSM was over as a band, because if Metalsucks was aware of you, you were probably about to become mainstream as fuck)

    The site lasted for the longest time on the fact that their audience hated the two main writers/owners, and enjoyed insulting them throughout the comments section on a daily basis. Gradually though, they started locking down what posts could and couldn't be made, to the point where most of their commenting audience finally wandered away. A couple of years back, the original guys apparently sold the site, or at the very least don't run the day-to-day anymore, and it has become marginally better, but overall you'd still be better getting your metal news and info from your local homeless guy under the overpass than from that site

    Yeah, see. That's exactly the type of drama I just don't have any patience for. I don't really flip out over it, and usually just sorta say to myself, "Well, it's their site. They can run it how they want, but I'm out". My guess is that I had heard of the site somewhere along the line and instinctively avoided it. The self appointed grand inquisitors of the internet are some of the most insufferable people around.

  13. 4 minutes ago, SurgicalBrute said:

    Whelp...Metalsucks covered the new Antichrist Siege Machine...safe to say they're officially over as a band worth following 😆

     

    I'm kind of out of the loop for the big metal websites. Are Metalsucks the big bad guys for a lot of metalheads? What did they do? Only site I've ever just stopped myself from checking in on was a long time ago, and it was due to them refusing to cover a band over some beef with a former band member causing unnecessary drama. I liked the band, but even then I wasn't going to sift through all the dramatic bs and just stopped frequenting the site. It wasn't a boycott or anything. I just have no patience for the non-musical aspects of the members.

  14. NP: Vircolac - Veneration

    ▶︎ Veneration | Vircolac | Dark Descent Records (bandcamp.com)

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    I'm not 100% sold on this one. It's holding my interest though. The (basically) a capella opening track actually won me over after my initial misgivings. The album is definitely kind of an in-between for black metal. Sometimes they sound like they want to dive head first into murky uncomfortable atonality and sometimes they sound like they want nothing more than to put their foot on the gas and make the sort of howling desolate black metal that their stronger chord progressions lend themselves to. Beneath it all though is a solid metal center holding the thing together, so I'll definitely be returning to this one, perhaps with a clearer head.

  15. 1 hour ago, MarkhantonioYeatts said:

    ZAO - Live From The Church

     

    Man, it feels like forever ago that I first heard these guys. I had a friend who was a good guy, but definitely had a habit of trying to proselytize his Christian listening habits. I knew it was pretty much his absolutely insane mother that had forbidden non-Christian music in their home. The situation with her was complicated and wouldn't do to get into here, but he definitely did his research in looking for bands that he and I could both listen to. I think he could tell that I just wasn't taking the bait with Creed or other particularly popular Christian bands at the time, and that eventually led to him introducing me to Zao. I was honestly a little indifferent and found them a little boring, but whatever. Made a suitable soundtrack to driving around and generally getting up to no good in small town country. I'm sort of surprised to see they're still around honestly.

    NP: Slug Gore - They Slime! They Ooze! They Kill

    They Slime! They Ooze! They Kill! | Slug Gore (bandcamp.com)

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    I will never understand the seeming connection between certain parts of extreme metal and dub-noise-rave whatever electronica. The entire first track of this album is a techno track, and it threw me for a loop because it really doesn't play nice with honestly fairly capable and energetic grindcore. I can respect the art of arranging, and I understand that a choosing from a whole spectrum of audible sound could open things up as far as songwriting is concerned. It also seems like it helps keep a bead on an idea and the song as a whole during the whole brain to writing to performance journey, but I just can't get excited about it. Maybe others are hearing something that I'm not. It's happened before. Still, despite my best efforts I can's get into it. These guys sound like they'd be fun to see live in some squalid hell hole of a venue though.

  16. 2 hours ago, SurgicalBrute said:

    I assume none of y'all enjoy stouts, porters, pale ales, dark ales, IPAs, DIPAs, ESBs, Kolschs, dubbels, trippels, quads, saisons, wheat beers, barley wines...

    For that matter, considering the majority of beers out there have some degree of citrus or dark fruit flavor to them, what the hell kind of beer do you "real beer doesn't have any fruit flavor in it" guys actually drink?

     

    Obscurial - Heretic

    Preview tracks for the new Obscurial album due out next week

    https://obscurialmusic.bandcamp.com/album/heretic?from=fandiscflw

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    For real. I can't drink any significant amount of alcohol anymore, but when I could it was fairly apparent to me that the world of beer is a big one full of all different kinds of styles and flavors. I enjoyed stouts, saisons, the occasional fruit beer, and sometimes even a good sour. We all know that cheap mass produced swill is bad, but just condemning fruit(y) beer outright is kind of foolish. Hell, the producer of one of the most recognizable import stouts out there (Samuel Smith) makes an incredible peach beer that's absolutely delicious and worth trying for anybody who can find it.

     

    NP: Rogga Johansson - Otherworld

    ▶︎ Otherworld | Rogga Johansson | Iron Blood and Death Corporation (bandcamp.com)

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    Nice. It's cool to see that after the metalcore headache that subsumed most of the Gothenburg/Slaughter of the Soul sounding melodeath tropes, the subgenre's most adamant practitioners tend to revert to Edge of Sanity leanings which, in my personal opinion, make for a much more robust songwriting palette and have a ton more room for experimentation. This stuff isn't exactly top-tier melodeath, but it gets the job done if that's what you're after. 

  17. 20 minutes ago, GoatmasterGeneral said:

    Holy shit, did Dave die or something?

    Given the amount of noise he makes in almost everything else he does I doubt he would choose his passing to be the one thing he ever did quietly.

    NP: Occult Blood - st/st

    ▶︎ Occult Blood - Occult Blood | Occult Blood | FORBIDDEN KEEP RECORDS (bandcamp.com)

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    "Alright mister Occult, everything seems to be in order here. If you'll just sign we'll be happy to certify this inspection as a B from the black and death metal safety administration."

    "Why a B? I thought you said it was perfect."

    It is, but if we issue too many As we wouldn't secure a funding increase for next year, when we're really going to need it. Word on the street is Lamb of God is going to release a concept album "reimagining" George Elliot's Middlemarch, and we need to be able to fail some establishments if that's allowed to happen.

    "... I'll take the B then."

  18. NP: Blood Eclipse - Небесная Кровоточащая Луна

    ▶︎ Небесная Кровоточащая Луна | BLOOD ECLIPSE (bandcamp.com)

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    Based on the relatively slow start I thought I was about to get some blackened doom, but it moved into regular ol' black metal soon enough. Occasional effect flourishes are fine for me as long as they know when to get out of the way. I was wary at first also because they chose to include 'gothic' in their genre description. A part of me wishes that bm would drop that tag entirely as it's a fully established subgenre of rock at this point. Just call it black metal and don't set yourself up for misgivings from most black metal fans.

  19. 4 hours ago, SurgicalBrute said:

    You know, a ton of ink has been spilled over the years exhaustively cataloguing and over-dissecting the often less than subtle phallic imagery in the designs of H. R. Geiger and Beksinski, and why it's so often associated with terror and the fear of the angry young men in our society with their capacity to use force to indulge their basest impulses. I can fully admit that a lot of it makes sense. Then I see things like this and the part of me that I've tried to push down in the interest of listening to all perspectives offered, which feels offended and hurt by these sorts of broad assertions just quietly tries to come to terms with exactly what I'm seeing and says "and yet..."

    7 hours ago, GoatmasterGeneral said:

    Meat Spreader - Mental Disease Transmitted By Radioactive Fear, Polish goregrind

     

    I really don't like braunschweiger, but this stuff is pretty good.

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