Wholly different from his previous offerings, ‘Azúl Arriba, Blue Below’ displays Juan Tigre’s manifold ability to create plush ambient soundscapes.
‘Crime As Theatre’ is a crushing debut, wielding vitriol and outrage with expert care. Armagideon Time is the next torchbearer of hardcore punk.
Almost three years in the making, 'Complete Control' sees Baltimore maulers Misery Index make their brutal post-pandemic return.
With their latest studio recording, ‘Misery Made Me’ (UNFD Records), Silverstein delivers a refined, deftly executed album that hits hard, both emotionally and audibly.
Trivium frontman Matt Heafy unleashes ‘Rashomon,’ the first fruits of his black metal project Ibaraki; as dramatic and thought-provoking as it is unrelentingly violent.
Love Hertz is an interesting concept: a book about a DJ who has discovered a secret sound frequency capable of taking over minds and bodies, and...
Agnes Vein’s ‘Deathcall’ is a rare breed, with cross-genre appeal for death, doom and black metal listeners in its sludge-fuelled songwriting.
‘The Agony & Ecstasy of Watain’ is the dingiest, most elaborate and most ambitious expression of darkness yet from Swedish stalwarts Watain.
Mixing up hateful grindcore with black metal fury, Heriot's new EP, 'Profound Morality,' is twenty minutes of disturbing ferocity.
On the new album ‘Cocodrillo Turbo’ (Lorna Vista Recordings), Action Bronson delivers a sundry collection of soporifics, swelling with impressive samples.
Blending hardcore, hip-hop and nu-metal together, Kentucky wreckers Guerilla Warfare kick up a right fury on new EP 'C O N T R O L.'
Inspired by a life-changing experience, Dorothy's new album, 'Gifts From The Holy Ghost,’ is the kind of rock album that will warm your soul.
Bowling For Soup is back to put a smile on your face with their eleventh album. Read our review of 'Pop Drunk Snot Bread' here.
Undeath return with ‘It’s Time... To Rise From The Grave,’ a new breed of underground scum that just might become a death metal classic.
Essentially an exploration of life, on ‘Salt and Tar,’ Joey Harkum reveals the little things that give living meaning.