04/06/2026
“Bleak and haunting, yet stuffed with cutting riffs, keening melodies, and brooding, nerve-jangling bass-lines, 'Pedagogy for the Existentially Exhausted' combines an intense sonic presence with an equally intense emotional resonance reminiscent of the likes of Infestus, Wesenwille, and Der Weg Einer Freiheit." - Solipsism review in NO CLEAN SINGING
For his second edition of "Things You My Have Missed" in as many days, once again taking a look at releases from May you may have overlooked, Andy Synn keeps things nasty and blackened (and you can read more about all four albums via the link in the comments).
"From the way that the songs coil and contort into ever-stranger, almost stream-of-consciousness shapes, to the poisonously psychedelic aura – both harshly hypnotic and dissonantly melodic at the same time – there’s a distinctive voice and vibe here that is both instantly recognisable yet also utterly inimitable." - AUZAWANDILS
"Sitting somewhere between Nails, Antichrist Siege Machine, and early Anaal Nathrakh (to my ears, anyway) the band blast and bludgeon and brutalise (almost) without mercy or restraint across the fifteen tracks (well, fourteen and one intro) which make up their new album (most of which come in at under two-and-a-half minutes)." - Libranos Del Mal
"Are you a fan of bands like Bloodbath, Goatwhore, and Wolvhammer? Do you like your Death Metal cooked low and slow, and more than a little blackened around the edges? Then 'Cesspool' might just be worth sinking your teeth into!" - Saasta
"Bleak and haunting, yet stuffed with cutting riffs, keening melodies, and brooding, nerve-jangling bass-lines, 'Pedagogy for the Existentially Exhausted' combines an intense sonic presence with an equally intense emotional resonance reminiscent of the likes of Infestus, Wesenwille, and Der Weg Einer Freiheit." - Solipsism