Paradise Lost stop in Bristol to prove that the long-standing legends of doom-metal have still got it.
Tag: doom metal
The soundtrack to the impending end comes courtesy of Guiltless, with their slowly enrapturing blend of noise, doom and pessimistic mire.
In this Review Round-Up, Rain City Drive continue to unimpress, but at least the slack is picked up by a returning Happy Accidents, and some fascinating prog-metal from Lowen.
Though it goes without saying that this isn’t an easy listen, Body Void’s newest journey into the abyss yields a shrieking, industrial mutation of doom-metal that couldn’t fit into the blackness around them more perfectly.
Ever the underrated favourites, URNE’s newest sees them continue to grow and flourish with grand, powerful exploration within the depths of metal.
Intense, abyssal and deeply foreboding, Radien’s newest album is exactly what you’d want from a thick, new slice of doom.
Showing off every aspect of brutality in their repertoire across two new albums, The Acacia Strain deliver their most accomplished bodies of work to date.
Sunrot’s newest album sees them able to smash through some doom-metal standardness with sheer crushing weight, force and intensity.
Their status as doom-metal legends can’t save Candlemass from a massively disappointing new album, in which they sound flatter, paler and more shallow than ever.
InTechnicolour’s newest album brings together doom riffs, anthemic hooks and swirling romanticism, brimming with depth alongside huge heft.
