Greet – I Know How To Die Review
For me, this was really out of left field — and that’s what made it so refreshing.
For me, this was really out of left field — and that’s what made it so refreshing.
If you’ve been drowning in walls of distortion from doom and blackened thrash bands, this one’s a breath of fresh air.
This is that kind of slow, chugging, dirty doom that doesn’t try to be clever or flashy. It just works.
Sorceress brings that late-80s vocal style back in a way that feels fresh instead of nostalgic. You don’t hear many singers these days who can pull that off convincingly — and she does.
The Godfathers of New York Hardcore are back! — and they’ve never sounded more vital.
They could’ve easily made Titans II and called it a day, but instead, they took risks and delivered something fresh.
If you’ve been craving a return to the reckless energy of mid-’80s crossover thrash, Denial of Life is here to scratch that itch—and then some.
It’s got jump, it’s got heart, and it’s got that old-school Brooklyn grit.
Acid Bath and Voivod lit up Rebel in Toronto on October 11, 2025 — a powerful reunion and a night of pure metal magic.
This record came completely out of left field — not something I ever expected on my 2025 bingo card — but Kala Rupa delivers.