Today, Purity ThroughFire announces December 25th as the international release date for Ainzamkait‘s striking debut album, was des Lebens nicht wert, on digipack CD format.
Ainzamkait are yet another righteous Teutonic black metal horde that Purity ThroughFire has fostered. The work of one Grymnir der Zornige, Ainzamkait‘s moniker is a linguistic twist on the German “Einsamkeit,” which is loneliness in English. Fittingly, that’s what you get with the band’s was des Lebens nicht wert debut album. Riffs are hypnotically melancholic and yet also strangely triumphant, the spiritual victory lurking behind every bittersweet defeat. Grymnir der Zornige’s full-throated rasp rallies only true believers with acidic aplomb, his native tongue truly giving the album’s central six tracks a rough ‘n’ rowdy aspect that puts Ainzamkait safely beyond DSBM dross. With the pace largely residing at or near a marching mid-tempo, a certain hooliganism latent to the best German black metal arises, stacking well alongside such esteemed labelmates as Mavorim, Eisenkult, or Austria’s Aussichtslos. Nevertheless, as was des Lebens nicht wert plays on, a subtle slow-burning quality emerges, and when joined by the equally subtle usage of synth & organs, Ainzamkait plant a unique steel-toed boot on noble ground.
In the meantime, hear the brand-new title track “Feindesleid” here:
Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Ainzamkait’s was des Lebens nicht wert 1. Intro 2. Was des Lebens nicht wert 3. Heidentum 4. Ainzamkait – Widergänger 5. Feindesleid 6. Tal des Schicksals 7. Schmerz eines einst stolzen Mannes
Purity ThroughFire is proud to present Úlfarr‘s highly anticipated second album, Fornetes Folm, on CD and vinyl LP formats. The CD version will be released on December 25th while the vinyl version will see release in early 2025, and both will feature His Crown Grows From His Skull as a bonus EP.
Since 2011, Úlfarr have stood for uncompromising, antisocial UK black metal – or, under their own banner of Cumbrian Black Metal. Helmed by Dominus – who counts the equally prolific Thy Dying Light amongst his activities, as well as fellow labelmates Nefarious Dusk and Morte Lune – Úlfarr released a handful of demos, a couple splits, and most uniquely, a couple live albums before their debut mini-album, Hate & Terror – The Rise of Pure Evil, in 2019 and then another mini-album, The Ruins of Human Failure, two years later. During the summer of 2023, they released a split album with fellow UK horde Malfeitor. Across these caustic recordings, Úlfarr stoked the fires of old – namely, classic Craft, Darkthrone, Mayhem, One Head One Tail, and Death Cult.
Late last year – in December, to be exact – Úlfarr released their debut album, Orlegsceaft, featuring a revamped lineup as well as sound. Going from a quintet to trio now, the band release a second album a full year after the first: Fornetes Folm. Mind you, this second album carries forward three members – erstwhile Exvoidxist / Forvitnast vocalist Játvarðr, Malfeitor maiman Nosdrahcir on drums & bass, and of course Dominus on all guitars – and suitably does Fornetes Folm further the sound of its full-length predecessor. Grim & ancient black metal is the order of the day across this eight-song LP: raw yet refined, atmosphere and physicality coiled like the Ouroboros, with ghoulish grimness running rampant like a long-lost recording from 1995 given undead life through ghostly means. With such a continuation, it’s fair to say that Úlfarr have fully entered their second epoch, and it’s sublimely anti-modern. Underlining their perpetually anti-modern air, the bonus EP His Crown Grows From His Skull is included, harkening to the earlier Úlfarr sound – and yet, its three tracks were recorded after the central album. Only they know the true contents of their cauldron, but black metal diehards are all the richer for Úlfarr‘s restlessness.
In the meantime, hear the brand-new track “Moonskin” here:
Cover artwork, courtesy of Játvaðr, and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Úlfarr’s Fornetes Folm / His Crown Grows From His Skull Fornetes Folm 1. Alarūna 2. Hildeleoma 3. Algol (As malice shone upon northward doors) 4. November 5. Moonskin 6. Glæterung 7. The Cold Council of Old Shadow 8. Forn-Jotr His Crown Grows From His Skull (bonus EP) 9. Intro 10. Ānforlætan 11. In Veneration of the Corpse Eaters Star
Today, Purity ThroughFire sets December 25th as the international release date for Nefarious Dusk‘s highly anticipated third album, Death Beneath a Starless Sky, on vinyl LP format. The CD version is out now.
Residing in the dankest dungeons of the UK black metal scene, Nefarious Dusk have been spreading their infections since 2011. A trio of demos, an EP, and a split all issued forth before their debut album for Purity ThroughFire, 2019’s The Wanderer of the Cold North. A self-titled album arrived two years later for the label. Through it all, the iron fist of the ever-prolific Dominus has ruled, who currently also counts the considerable Thy Dying Light and Úlfarr among his activities.
Now joined by Úlfarr bandmate Nosdrahcir on drums and synth, Dominus has assembled the third Nefarious Dusk full-length: Death Beneath a Starless Sky. As expected, the duo raise high the banner of second-wave classicism, but surprises still abound. Nefarious Dusk‘s foundation is as firm as ever – a chilling-yet-rousing canvas of ancient atmosphere and hypnotic pulse, tastefully dusted by a subtle fog of synth – but one could rightfully argue that Death Beneath a Starless Sky is a deliberate “regression” of sorts, back to the very earliest ’90s and not strictly within a Scandinavian context. Witness the utterly shredded, sublimely ethereal guitars which recall the very earliest wave of Polish black metal. Then witness the synths float upward from that shimmering mass, creating a solemn-yet-stargazing effect no matter the tempo. For indeed do Nefarious Dusk shift among more tempos here, from the rockin’ side of the self-titled album to the blazing-the-Northern-sky surge of the debut, and the songwriting in kind embarking upon the epic; of the six here, two songs average around eight minutes and another tops ten. Whatever way you approach Death Beneath a Starless Sky, Nefarious Dusk remain against the modern world!
In the meantime, hear the brand-new title track “Death Beneath a Starless Sky” here:
Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Nefarious Dusk’s Death Beneath a Starless Sky 1. Black Heart [8:15] 2. Secrets Within the Dead Forest [4:31] 3. The Raven’s Curse [8:41] 4. Death Beneath A Starless Sky [10:02] 5. Mountains of Transylvania [3:28] 6. Hymns of Winter Depression [2:57]
In their endless quest to push and support current underground acts that perpetuate the odor of vintage death metal, on January 20th, 2025 internationally, Memento Mori is proud to present Putred‘s highly anticipated second album, Megalit al Putrefacției, on CD format.
Hailing from Transylvania, Romania’s Putred was formed by Uriel on guitars (Morbicus, Vorus, Reveler) and Filip on vocals / bass (Necrotum, Vorus, Demoted) back in June 2020. Dante (Slaughter Ceremony, ex-In Obscurity Revealed, ex- Infested) joined the band behind the drumkit right after writing the first two songs, titled “Necroza” and “Devorat de Viermi.” These tracks were self-released as a promo/demo tape in July 2020. In late 2021, Corina (ex-Deimos, Vorus, Reveler) joined the band as a bass-player and Filip stuck to vocals only. In October 2022, Doru (ex-Necrovile, Vorus, Malpraxis) replaced Dante on drums, and the band immediately started playing live all over Romania. After myriad splits and more demos, Putredreleased their debut album, Repulsie Post-Mortem, in early 2023.
If that simple-yet-sublime debut full-length firmed up their filthy foundation, then Putred‘s second album surely builds that foundation ever higher – and deeper – with miles of slime! Titled Megalit al Putrefacției, Putred perfect pounding, ponderously mid-paced DEATH METAL of a most eldritch nature. Rancid and foul-smelling as ever, the Romanians’ tank continues to crush forward at a patient gait, exhibiting brutality and all-out heaviness not through sheer speed or dazzling displays of technique, but rather through thoughtful songwriting, slamming / slithering riffing, and none-slimier atmosphere. The leads are especially eerie, as are the multi-tracked high / low vocals, with Corina’s wandering bass-work instilling a truly unsettling feeling. Sonic references across Megalit al Putrefacției are many – Mortician at half-speed, Cianide at their world-eating best, early Necrophagia’s weird textures, Apparition / Sorrow with a shot of energy, and of course the unholy trifecta of Bolt Thrower, Asphyx, and Grave – but Putred manage to integrate their own personality into proceedings, particularly their lyrics, all written and growled in their native tongue, telling short horror-drenched stories about death, horror, the occult, and the afterlife. The closing cover of Autopsy’s “Critical Madness” simply underlines that spiritual center.
Completed by absolutely perfect cover artwork courtesy of Jan Pysander Whitney, Putred‘s Megalit al Putrefacției is prime-grade DEATH METAL for those who want it slower, deeper, and harder – no progression, no way!
Find the way with the brand-new track “Necromanție” here:
Aforementioned cover artwork and tracklisting are as follows:
Today, Hells Headbangers sets December 27th as the international release date for Lament in Winter’s Night‘s highly anticipated second album, Whereunto the Twilight Leads,on CD and vinyl LP formats. Atrocity Altar shall handle the cassette tape release.
Hailing from the ever-fertile Australian black metal underground, Lament in Winter’s Night is the work of one The Seer, who has a vast array of other projects lurking in his cobwebbed soul. Of them, Lament in Winter’s Night is the most prominent and prolific and, since the beginning of 2019, has seen feverish activity from The Seer, culminating in the debut album At the Gates of the Eternal Storm in 2020. So impressed by its hideous grimness, Hells Headbangers reissued the album in 2022 and promptly sought an alliance with The Seer, which now culminates in the release of Lament in Winter’s Night‘s second album.
Evocatively titled Whereunto the Twilight Leads, Lament in Winter’s Night‘s second full-length immediately sounds like them – spectral in its rawness, wounded in its melodicism, largely bass-less recording, and altogether ghoulish and ethereal in equal measure – but changes are certainly afoot here. For one, The Seer is joined by Blood Fury on drums, and while the former still handles all songwriting as well as guitar, bass, synth, and vocals, their chemistry comes careening with no small amount of aplomb: Whereunto the Twilight Leads is both more feverish and nuanced than the band’s prior recordings, bouncing from buoyant blasts to an almost-regal midtempo that absolutely amplifies the unapologetically bright riffing & lead-work (often, one and the same). Mind you, by “bright,” there’s an underlying sentiment of melancholy or at least nostalgia across the whole of the album, but rather than get bogged down by the should-be-inherent misery, The Seer’s scurrying & scrying strings build citadels of invigorating sound – “medieval” by proxy, and perversely more AND less black metal than ever. It’s a unique disconnect that Lament in Winter’s Night work further in their favor here, and anyone who misses the work of Stefan Kozak (Mystic Forest, Eikenskaden) would be well advised to roam these hinterlands of Whereunto the Twilight Leads.
An exceptionally emotional release, Whereunto the Twilight Leads proves that Lament in Winter’s Night are defying the “raw black metal” template with daring imagination and breathtaking poignancy.
In the meantime, stream the entirety of Whereunto the Twilight Leads in its entirety here:
Preorder info can be found HERE. Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Lament in Winter’s Night’s Whereunto the Twilight Leads 1. The Raven’s Journey (In the Halls of Nostalgia) [3:06] 2. The Night Beckons in Yellow and Blue [9:43] 3. Dawn, Cast Your Heart [7:09] 4. Blazing Galactic Kingdoms [9:22] 5. Cradle the Flames of a Weary Life [7:14] 6. Whereunto the Twilight Leads [6:34]
On January 9th, 2024 internationally, W.T.C.Productions is proud to present Barshasketh‘s highly anticipated fifth album, Antinomian Asceticism, on CD and vinyl LP formats.
It’s been a long and winding road for Barshasketh – from their earliest days in 2007 as a solo project of Krigeist in his native New Zealand on to his relocation to Scotland and building an actual band, from breakout third album Ophidian Henosis in 2015 on to the even-mightier Barshasketh in 2019 – but even amidst all the lineup shuffles and geographical distance covered, one fact has remained firm: purest BLACK METAL, intentionally free of genre cross-pollination, chiseled and refined with patience and persistence. What stands upon that foundation after all these years is a monument to the boundless darkness and infinite imagination at the core of black metal, vital in 2024 as it would have been in 1994. Torches ablaze, hearts enflamed…eternal strife is the fuel.
Still, even with an iron-clad discography, Barshasketh are not ones to lazily rest on laurels even if considerable time passes between recordings. Witness Antinomian Asceticism, their first full-length in five years – and, eerily, fifth overall. Utterly refreshing upon pressing “play,” even with that time away, Barshasketh immediately explode into a jet-stream of velvety obsidian. It’s not inaccurate to call Antinomian Asceticism their most direct and concise record in many a year, but guiding that finely honed assault is their characteristic nightsky melodicism, which reaches a fever pitch here. Just like its all-too-considerable eponymous predecessor, Antinomian Asceticism‘s melding of mysticism and might evokes authentic, purple-blue visions of the late ’90s as soundly as it stands upon palatably modern ground. The difference here, perhaps, is that Barshasketh slice away some of the corridors of their usually labyrinthine songwriting and head straight toward the essence – austere, awe-inspiring, ASCETIC.
“Why Antinomian Asceticism?” asks guitarist / songwriter GM. “It’s important to disassociate this form of asceticism from Christian forms of asceticism, which are nihilistic (in the original, world-denying sense of the term) as well as the Socratic formulations of asceticism which anticipate St. Paul, St. Augustine, and St. Thomas Aquinas. We reject the moral law, and ascetic practices that might be undertaken in order to satisfy any such Morality. I capitalize Morality here to emphasize that we are not referring to a mere system of values that might be arrived at by rational means, but a type of absolute morality that is received from God as formulated by the Kantian ethical notion of the categorical imperative – in other words, an eternal moral standard that cannot be questioned and applies uniformly across time and space.
“Before we lay out our reasoning as to why an antinomian form of asceticism might be beneficial,” he continues, “we would firstly like to appeal to the Schopenhauerian notion of the metaphysical will, which is a kind of inner essence that resides in all things – an idea which builds on the Kantian ‘thing-in-itself.’ This metaphysical will has certain drives associated with it, most relevant of which in this context is the drive to maintain oneself, replicate oneself, assert oneself (Kant also touched on these and refers to them as ‘inclinations’); these are concepts that anticipate Darwin and something Nietzsche would later build on. Schopenhauer viewed ascetic resignation as a means to make the world good by reaching some kind of status in which we are removed and numbed from it – our sense of the idea is that we need to find some sort of Aristotelian ‘golden mean’ in which we are not led around by our inclinations and metaphysical will, which leads to a shallow, reactive way of living which does not permit deep insight, yet also not radically separated from ‘this world.'”
Concluding, GM states, “Ascetic practice in our conception isn’t a conscious weakening or the self (via fasting, for instance) in order to satisfy a moral obligation, nor is it to enable some vain self-righteousness, but instead, it is a means by which we temporarily withdraw within in order to access insights which then strengthen the liberated individual in the real and this-worldly realm.”
In the meantime, hear the brand-new track “Radiant Aperture” here:
Cover artwork, courtesy of Rodrigo Pereira Salvatierra, and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Barshasketh’s Antinomian Asceticism I. Radiant Aperture II. Nitimur in Vetitum III. Lebenswelt Below IV. Charnel Quietism V. Phaneron Engulf VI. Antinomian Asceticism VII. Exultation of Ceaseless Defiance
Today, Purity ThroughFire announces December 25th as the international release date for Order of Nosferat‘s highly anticipated sixth album, Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok, on CD, A5 digipak, vinyl LP, and cassette tape formats.
By now, those well versed in the crimes of Purity ThroughFire should be well aware of Order of Nosferat. Emerging from the shadows in early 2021, the duo of Count Revenant and Anzillu released TWO full-lengths that year: Necuratul and Arrival of the Plague Bearer. And while both underground veterans are no strangers to black metal, the variety they unleashed with Order of Nosferat was most definitely OLD, in every sense of the word: undead vampiric black metal had truly arisen! Like (vampiric) clockwork, two more full-lengths followed the next year – Nachtmusik in March and Vampiric Wrath Unleashed in December – proving that their bloodthirst could not be sated. While 2023 was relatively quiet, Order of Nosferat “only” released a split album with Lunar Spells, showing a more nuanced and atmospheric side to their vampirism.
[Anzillu]
Alas, 2024 has proven to be predictably bountiful for Order of Nosferat, as The Absence of Grace arrived as the snows began to melt – and now, as those snows soon take hold, so does yet another full-length. Titled Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok, on LP#6 do the duo of Revenant and Anzillu return to misery and comfort, regressing their black metal further back to somewhere around 1997-1999. Whereas The Absence of Grace moved at a more measured pace and utilized a unique production style – crisp and cutting but somehow brittle, exceptionally ethereal in its effect – Order of Nosferat kick up the pace again, galloping triumphantly into the night in search of prey. The production’s equally brittle, but authentically vintage: the fuzz ‘n’ buzz recalls old French vampires like Blessed in Sin, Winter Funeral, and Osculum Infame, esteemed company and spiritual forebears for this particular (and pure) style of black metal. And while the duo have always had exquisitely moonlit synths, aiding and abetting their melancholia, they truly meld into something majestic here, indeed taking the listener Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok. Christmas day shall hereby be a bloody one, courtesy of Order of Nosferat!
In the meantime, hear the brand-new title track “Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok” here:
Cover artwork, courtesy of Vhan Artworks, and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Order of Nosferat’s Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok 1. …Far Away to the Land of Ghosts 2. Crossing the Shadowland 3. Towards the Nightrealm of Orlok 4. At the Sea She Longs for His Return 5. Blood is Life! 6. Into Pale Shadows and Ghostly Dreams 7. Where the Werewolf Haunts the Woods 8. Beyond the Eternity Gates I Wait 9. Don’t Leave [Gummy Boy cover]
Today, funereal death-doomers Trollcave stream the entirety of their highly anticipated new mini-album, Adoration of the Abyssal Trespasser. Set for international release on November 15th – Me Saco Un Ojo Records will release the 12″ vinyl version while BlackSeed Productions will handle the CD version – hear Trollcave‘s Adoration of the Abyssal Trespasser in its entirety here:
Trollcave, Spain’s funereal death-doom titans, are back with a new record. Following their 2021 EP, 2022 debut LP, and recent split with Putridarium, here comes another crowing opus of decay.
Brooding atmospherics begin with some unnerving synths – this record promises a descent into the crypts. After these tense few minutes, monolithic guitars and thunderous drums reanimate a slew of fetid compositions. Gurgling vocals blend into hypnotic rhythmic sludge to convey a drudging sense of dread. This is one of those records that will make you feel entombed from the start to the end with its convulsive swaying gloom, mesmerizing you with its grotesque atmosphere and crushing delivery. Ever wondered what it would feel like to have your head pulverized by a sledgehammer of death-doom perfection? Then stick around – your answer lies in this record!
Prepare to be bound to the spot by a spectral apparition of death metal much darker and more despairing than most. This Spanish horde craft a duo of spellbinding and dynamic songs which fill the air with a sepulchral stench yet manage to retain an interesting range of ideas. For those seeking the most doomed realm of death metal, this is the final destination: no hope, only crawling rot and restless melancholy. Every sound seems to roar from the deepest abyss, and with each passing moment, you will find yourself pulled further into it… [text by Jørgen Sven Kirby, Nattskog webzine]
Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Trollcave’s Adoration of the Abyssal Trespasser 1. Intro / Grotesque Abyssal Trespasser [15:06] 2. Abominator’s Diseased Carrion [16:20]
Today, American black metallers Luring premiere the new track “Born With the Devil’s Marking”. The track is the second to be revealed from the band’s highly anticipated third album, Malevolent Lycanthropic Heresy, set for international release on December 13th via Iron Bonehead Productions. Hear Luring‘s “Born With the Devil’s Marking” in its entirety here:
Belonging to the Order of the Broken Sword circle which includes labelmates Azathoth’s Dream and Wuldorgast, Luring made their public debut in 2018 with the Interitu Caret Devotione ad Coronam Satanas demo. From there, with the successive full-lengths Victory Fires Ablaze Under the Banner of Lucifer and the Iron Bonehead-released Triumphant Fall of the Malignant Christ last year, Luring have slowly-yet-assuredly become one of the most exciting developments in American black metal of recent years, effortlessly finessing a stridently classicist form that doesn’t point toward preceding idioms too obviously nor overly.
Perhaps reaching their apotheosis of such, Luring now deliver Malevolent Lycanthropic Heresy. The trio’s third album features much of the same foundation as its two LP predecessors – rippling physicality fused with otherworldly texture, inspired by contemporaneously early Abigor and Gorgoroth as equally as turn-of-the-millennium Nocternity and Lunar Aurora – but here do Luring intensify the extremes of their sound. On one hand, that physicality goes a more gutted direction, digging deep into sepulchral catacombs almost deathly. On another hand (and especially as the album plays on), their once-subtle melodicism goes to bolder lengths: some more melancholic, others more triumphant, but always with a fully developed narrative arc. Interestingly, half the album is given to instrumental tracks that aren’t strictly “ambient” in the usual black metal sense(s), imparting haunting / alluring atmospheres that thread seamlessly into Malevolent Lycanthropic Heresy‘s overall sensory experience; however, there are touches of true ambient within the other four, otherwise-black-metal songs. Altogether, and armed with a cleaner and yet still-analog production, Luring render their third full-length a never-belabored masterclass in black metal both authentically ancient and refreshingly modern.
Also hear the previously revealed “Dying Wolf Beneath the Stars” HERE at Iron Bonehead‘s Soundcloud. Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Luring’s Malevolent Lycanthropic Heresy 1. Ravaged By the Teeth of a Feral God 2. Chalice of Splintered Dreams 3. Born With the Devil’s Marking 4. Black Death Elixir 5. The Odious Gaze of Chronos 6. We Come From the Shadows at His Command 7. Dying Wolf Beneath the Stars 8. Burial Opus
On January 3rd, 2025 internationally, Mutagenic Host will release their highly anticipated debut album, The Diseased Machine. The album will be co-released by Gurgling Gore (vinyl, cassette), Dry Cough Records (vinyl, cassette), and Memento Mori (CD). The CD version will be released on January 20th, 2025.
Mutagenic Host are a five-piece band hailing from London, as part of the New Wave of British Death Metal (see also: Coffin Mulch, Celestial Sanctuary, Slimelord, Vacuous, Mortuary Spawn, etc.). The group comprises members from various parts of the UK and United States. With a diverse background spanning the hardcore, black metal, and death metal scenes, Mutagenic Host blend hardcore sensibilities and groove with the heavy, well-crafted sound reminiscent of ’90s Floridian death metal.
Mutagenic Host dive into a technological apocalypse, examining a world overshadowed by hypocritical, insidious, and murderous global powers. The band is deeply disillusioned with the traditional themes of death metal and hardcore, feeling that these subjects no longer capture the urgency of the present. Instead, Mutagenic Host tackle the modern-day specters of complacency, apathy, and the looming threat of AI. Their work is an allegory for the systematic industrialization of humanity’s eradication — whether by human hands or by the machines we create to snuff out life. In this narrative, the instruments of the state use AI to monitor, control, and suppress the population, sounding a warning of impending doom through a fresh, intense lens in the death metal genre.
The Genotoxic Demo, unleashed in early 2023 via Dry Cough, featured four tracks that plunged listeners into a cerebral mulch while simultaneously slashing through them with a ruthlessness found in the streets. Following a year of relentless live performances alongside bands such as Incantation, Fulci, Fuming Mouth, Undeath, Celestial Sanctuary, Kruelty, Portrayal of Guilt, and Doldrey, Mutagenic Host have now finished writing, producing, and recording their inaugural full-length debut, The Diseased Machine.
Aptly titled, The Diseased Machine is a dark and thought-provoking journey into that post-plague world, which frankly doesn’t feel so far away from present times. As a debut album, it consolidates Mutagenic Host‘s myriad strengths – stomping ‘n’ slamming grooves, world-eating heaviness, patient deployment of double-bass movement – and then intensifies them to an enviable degree. To be sure, the band are the proverbial well-oiled machine (but not diseased!) across the album’s ten oft-twisting tracks, the clean-yet-crushing production amplifying their strident execution. And with their fluid shifting between tank-rolling downtempo and galloping bouts of speed, we can confidently declare The Diseased Machine as the epitome of “chug and slug” – Mutagenic Host have stormed the gates to further solidify their ferocious presence in the death metal scene!
In the meantime, hear the brand-new track “Incomprehensible Methods of Slaughter” here:
Preorders will begin on November 22nd. Cover and tracklisting are as follows:
Tracklisting for Mutagenic Host’s The Diseased Machine 1. Neurological Necrosis 2. Genestealer 3. The Twisted Helix 4. Artificial Harvest of the Obscene 5. Organometallic Assimilation 6. DIRECTIVE:: [kill_on_sight] 7. Incomprehensible Methods of Slaughter 8. S.W.A.R.M. (Systematic War Against Restless Machines) 9. Promethean Dusk 10. Rivers of Grief