In this Review Round-Up, the new DeathCollector album offers some great death metal, and Carsick bring some freshness to indie-rock. It’s just a shame that Throw The Fight’s hard rock and Keep This Up’s easycore can’t quite match up.
Tag: Prosthetic Records
As they get even more explorative and progressive on this new album, Pupil Slicer test mathcore’s upper limits to the point of shattering them with glorious excess and creativity.
In this Review Round-Up, there’s a strong collection of heavy new releases from Drain, Death Goals and Harroway, joined by something way poppier (but still solid) from Weathers.
Sunrot’s newest album sees them able to smash through some doom-metal standardness with sheer crushing weight, force and intensity.
Armed with folk’s texture, punk’s ethics and black-metal’s intensity, Dawn Ray’d find ground to establish themselves among the most exciting names in metal.
With an acerbic lyrical stance and a metalcore sound fond of its grit and grind, .GIFFROMGOD’s newest EP is quite the assault to experience.
Frenzied, volatile post-hardcore is the order of the day on STORMO’s newest album, delivered with killer urgency and an abundance of ideas throughout.
In the first Review Round-Up of 2023, the year kicks off with a selection of heavy releases, spanning metalcore from Polar, deathcore from ten56., and black-metal from Dryad.
Destroying genre boundaries is the name of the game on God Alone.’s debut full-length, in which post-punk and post-rock are contorted and reshaped in dizzying, brilliant fashion.
In this Review Round-Up, there’s some impressive work in the form of albums from Without Waves and Thumper, and an EP from Lazy Queen, while the newest from Trench unfortunately falls short of that mark.
