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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of August 12th, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: August 12, 2022 –

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A-Z: A-Z

Genre: Progressive Metal
Label: Metal Blade

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Acid Blade: Power Dive

Genre: Heavy Metal
Label: Jawbreaker

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Arch Enemy: Deceivers

Genre: Melodeath
Label: Trooper Entertainment

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Aronius: Irkalla

Genre: Death Metal
Label: The Artisan Era

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Boris: Heavy Rocks

Genre: This time? Who knows…
Label: Relapse

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Carrion Vael: Abhorrent Obsessions

Genre: Tech Death
Label: Unique Leader

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Collective Soul: Vibrating

Genre: Rock
Label: Fuzze-Flex

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Danger Mouse and Black Thought: *Cheat Codes

Genre: Hip Hop / Electronic
Label: BMG

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Goo Goo Dolls: Chaos In Bloom

Genre: Alt Rock
Label: Warner

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The Halo Effect: Days of the Lost

Genre: Melodeath
Label: Nuclear Blast

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Hell Fire: Reckoning

Genre: Heavy Metal / Speed Metal
Label: RidingEasy

303

Hydra: Point Break

Genre: Hard Rock
Label:


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of August 5th, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: August 5, 2022 –

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Abaddon Incarnate: The Wretched Sermon

Genre: Death Metal / Grindcore
Label: Transcending Obscurity

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Amon Amarth: The Great Heathen Army

Genre: Heavy Metal / Melodic Death Metal
Label: Metal Blade

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Coscradh: Nahanagan Stadial

Genre: Death Metal
Label: Invictus Productions

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Early Moods: Early Moods

Genre: Doom / Stoner
Label: RidingEasy

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Ether Coven: The Relationship Between The Hammer and the Nail

Genre: Doom / Post Metal
Label: Good Fight

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The Flatliners: New Ruin

Genre: Punk
Label: Fat Wreck Chords

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Goldfinger: Never Look Back (Deluxe)

Genre: Punk Rock / Ska
Label: Big Noise Music Group

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Grigorien: Magtens Evangelium

Genre: Black Metal
Label: Signal Rex

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H.E.A.T.: Force Majeure

Genre: Hard Rock
Label: Ear Music

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In Hearts Wake: Green Is The New Black (Soundtrack)

Genre: Metalcore
Label: Unfd

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The Interrupters:



 

During the early ‘10s I went through a phase of listening to a lot of tech-metal, but there was one band in particular that really apprehended my intrigue. That band was Cyclamen, masterminded by one man, Hayato Imanishi. What impressed me back then and even more to this day, is that he lives his life on pushing boundaries for both himself and the music he makes; for a guy that can shred on the guitar with ferocious virtuosity, it’s somewhat refreshing to hear him humbly talk about always improving. Between 2010 and 2015, Cyclamen became a driving force in the scene, with extensive touring and steadfast recorded output – all managed solely by Hayato while he organised events for bands like Dillinger Escape Plan in Japan. However, after Amida’s release in 2018, things got steadily quieter. This year Hayato announced that he was going to sell the ownership of all his works, including the much-revered Cyclamen tracks that have been released over the years.

After reading the post with a small amount of shock, I reached out for an interview, not just to get a better understanding of why he was selling the rights to his labours, but just on where the band is at this point, and where Hayato intends to go artistically moving forward. After kindly accepting, I caught up with him while he was back in Japan helping his sister, to talk about the music industry’s business model, getting a buzz from complete…


Revisit other SputStaff Top 10 Lists

| Kanye West | My Chemical Romance | The National | Say AnythingTaylor Swift | Thrice |

WorkhorseLeviathanBlood MountainCrack the SkyeThe Hunter [Explicit]Once More 'Round the Sun [Explicit]Emperor of SandHushed and Grim

Foreword:

Greetings, and welcome back to Sputnik’s semi-famous “SputStaff Top 10” series, in which – and get this – our site’s staff members pick their favorite 10 somethings! In this case, we had Mastodon in our crosshairs, a natural progression from June’s feature on Taylor Swift. If you are brave enough for infallible truths, then dare to proceed below to witness the top 10 Mastodon songs of all time — but be sure to also stop by the honorable mentions section to see what barely missed the cut! If you’re new to Mastodon and are just looking to get your feet wet, you might scroll all the way to the bottom of this feature to locate our Spotify playlist, where you can find the ten best Mastodon tracks all in one place for your convenient consumption. Hold onto your hats, here we go!


Honorable Mentions:

15. Blasteroid

14. Iron Tusk

13. The Hunter

12. Siberian Divide

11. Colony of Birchmen


Sputnik Staff Top 10 Mastodon Songs:

(10) “The Wolf Is Loose”

Artificial-Brain-Artificial-Brain

Artificial Brain – Artificial Brain


 

Of all the bands I love, Artificial Brain is the one that has taken me the longest to wrap my head around. As someone who prefers the more freewheeling skronkfests of avant-garde death metal, Artificial Brain’s steadier, more nuanced approach to the genre was lost on me. Yet it always felt like I was missing something obvious with the band, like a lost puzzle piece smothered between couch cushions. When premier single “Celestial Cyst” dropped, I had an epiphany: Artificial Brain are playing at a scale far beyond human comprehension. The band’s music feels like depicting galactic warfare, but there’s no glory found in the destruction. Its view is a top-down perspective, where fiery explosions appear as minor blips, and all that’s left to do is pray for the loss of life both corporeal and mechanical. 

Examining their album covers gives clues to how their world building manifests sonically. Labyrinth Constellation’s grimy robotic skirmish on floating rocks is a perfect representation of Artificial Brain’s hectic yet laser-focused songwriting; it’s as fully realized a debut as you can find. Infrared Horizon depicts the aftermath with a robot cradling the decapitated friend of the same model, foreshadowing the black metal influence creeping forward. For their newest record, depicted with a rusted spider mech covered in moss, the production has gotten a lot murkier and muddier than previous outings. While it might not have the same frayed electrical


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of July 29th, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: July 29, 2022 –

Anberlin

Anberlin: Silverline

Genre: Alt-Rock/Pop-Punk/Post-Hardcore
Label: Equal Vision

Arch Enemy

Arch Enemy: Deceivers

Genre: Melodic Death Metal
Label: Savage Messiah

Belphegor

Belphegor: The Devils

Genre: Black/Death Metal
Label: Nuclear Blast

Beyoncé

Beyonce: RENAISSANCE

Genre: Pop/R&B/Soul
Label: Parkwood Entertainment LLC

Chat Pile

Chat Pile: God’s Country

Genre: Noise Rock/Post-Hardcore
Label: Flenser

Dance Gavin Dance

Dance Gavin Dance: Jackpot Juicer

Genre: Post-Hardcore/Progressive Rock/Math Rock
Label: Rise Records, Inc.

Florist

Florist (NY): Florist

Genre: Folk/Indie-Pop
Label: Double Double Whammy

Expectations

Hayley Kiyoko: PANORAMA

Genre: Pop/Electronic
Label: Atlantic

Ithaca

Ithaca: They Fear Us

Genre: Hardcore/Post-Rock/Metalcore
Label: Hassle Records

King Princess

King Princess: Hold On Baby

Genre: Pop/R&B/Indie-Pop
Label: Zelig Records

Kuedo

Kuedo: Infinite Window

Genre: Electronic/IDM/Ambient
Label: Brainfeeder

Maggie Rogers

Maggie Rogers: Surrender

Genre: Indie-Pop/Folk
Label: Debay Sounds LLC

Of Montreal

of Montreal: Freewave Lucifer F<ck F^ck F>ck

Genre: Psychedelic/Indie-Pop/Funk
Label: Polyvinyl Record Co.

Murder By Death

Murder by Death: Spell/Bound

Genre: Indie-Rock/Folk/Americana
Label: Many Hats Distribution

Orbital

Orbital: 30 Something

Genre: Techno/Electronic/Ambient
Label: Orbital Recordings Ltd

Perfume - PLASMA

Perfume: Plasma

Genre: Electronic/Pop
Label: Universal J

Reeking Aura

Reeking Aura: Blood And Bonemeal

Genre: Death Metal
Label: Profound Lore

Spectre

Stick To Your Guns: Spectre

Genre: Hardcore/Metalcore
Label: Pure Noise Records

Triumvir Foul: Onslaught to Seraphim

Genre: Death/Black Metal
Label: Invictus Productions


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Sputnik Roundtable #1: Music Assessment

All discussion prompts submitted by the user nightbringer.

So far this year, we have implemented a handful of new, different ideas of our website’s staff blog — while some have predictably flamed out, others have endured and seem primed for a bright future. About four months ago, I surveyed our collective userbase for additional concepts, and this latest one came to us from nightbringer, who suggested all seven of the below discussion topics. We organized a small committee of writers (granitenotebook, JesperL, JohnnyoftheWell, and myself) to answer as we saw fit. In this first installment of what will hopefully be many, we observe the nature of music critique: from “what makes a classic” to how album art influences our perception of the music we hear. If you have questions you’d like to submit for future Sputnik Roundtable installments, please submit them here. Thanks, and we hope you enjoy the article!

Free Question Marks on Paper Crafts Stock Photo

(1) What are music reviews for?

Sowing: A music review is really just a persuasive argument.  Yes, we critique the art based upon its objective merits as well as its subjective implications, but there’s a reason we don’t merely assign it a number and move on. The objective is to sell that opinion to the consumer and convince them that your take is the correct one. Why else would someone be reading – or thanks to YouTube – watching a music review? Outside…


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of July 22nd, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: July 22, 2022 –

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Anthony Green and The High and Driving Band: boom.done

Genre: Indie Folk
Label: Born Losers

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Beach Bunny: Emotional Creature

Genre: Indie Pop
Label: Mom+Pop

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Ben Harper: Bloodline Manteinance

Genre: Soul / Blues
Label: Chrysalis

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Domestic Terminal: All The Stories Left To Tell

Genre: Indie Rock / Emo
Label: Dishonest

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Elysia: Numinous

Genre: Black Metal
Label: Self released

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Em Beihold: Egg in the Backseat [EP]

Genre: Singer Songwriter
Label: Moon Projects

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Gabbie Hanna: Trauma Queen

Genre: Singer Songwriter / Alternative
Label: Self released

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Hatriot: The Vale Of Shadows

Genre: Thrash Metal
Label: Massacre

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Imperial Triumphant: Spirit of Ecstasy

Genre: Death Metal / Jazz / Avant Garde / Black Metal
Label: Century Media

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Jack White: Entering Heaven Alive

Genre: Alt Rock
Label: Third Man

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Jamie


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of July 15th, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: July 15, 2022 –

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…And You Will Know Us by the Trail of Dead: XI: Bleed Here Now

Genre: Alt Rock
Label: Dine Alone

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Antigama: Whiteout

Genre: Grindcore
Label: Selfmadegod

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Ashenspire: Hostile Architecture

Genre: Black Metal / Progressive Metal
Label: Aural Music

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Beabadoobee: Beatopia

Genre: Indie Pop / Singer Songwriter
Label: Dirty Hit

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Belief: Belief

Genre: Electronic
Label: Lex

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Behold! The Monolith: From The Fathomless Deep

Genre: Doom / Sludge
Label: Ripple

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Birth: Born

Genre: Progressive Rock
Label: Bad Omen

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Black Midi: Hellfire

Genre: Noise Rock / Post Punk / Progressive Rock
Label: Rough Trade

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Critical Defiance: No Life Forms

Genre: Crust / Death Metal
Label: Unspeakable Axe

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Death Bells: Between Here and Everywhere

Genre: Post Punk
Label: Dais

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Elf Power: Artificial Countrysides

Genre: Alt Rock

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Metallica: Back to the Front

Metallica Store
Written By: Matt Taylor
Foreword by James Hetfield – Afterword by Ray Burton
Released: August 16, 2016
276 pages
Publisher: Insight Editions

 

 

 

Metallica’s tell-all about the Master Of Puppets album and subsequent tour is presented with the same meticulous attention to detail and professionalism as every other project they’ve put their mind to…. except that Lulu album…

——————————————————————————————

Introduction:

You already know it’s coming, but….
… your mind keeps hoping somehow it doesn’t.

Metallica: Back to the Front starts with a date — September 27, 1986 — and a nuanced description of a Swedish countryside. It talks about how a car traveling those roads can feel detached from time and space… and then it focuses in on Metallica’s tour bus traveling the same roads. It’s at this point that almost any reader will know what’s coming. It kind of hit me like a shock when I realized they were opening with one of the most tragic events in Metallica’s history, but I prepared myself for the inevitable. The thing is, it didn’t come. Matt Taylor and Metallica don’t use Cliff Burton’s death to simply provide a shocking way to open the book. Instead, the subsequent series of events are presented almost like a movie. There are beautifully detailed descriptions of the countryside, the tour bus, and its occupants. Funny stories and observations


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of July 8th, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: July 8, 2022 –

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Altars: Ascetic Reflection

Gender: Black Metal / Death Metal / Dissodeath
Label: Everlasting Spew

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Apollo Brown: This Must Be The Place

Gender: Hip Hop
Label: Mello Music Group

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Ardours: Anatomy of a Moment

Gender: Alt Metal
Label: Frontiers

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Bad Breeding: Human Capital

Gender: Punk / Noise Rock
Label: One Little Independent

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Begrime Exemious: Rotting in the Aftermath

Gender: Death Metal
Label: Dark Descent

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Berries: How We Function

Gender: Alt Rock
Label: Xtra Mile Recordings

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Blackwater Drowning: Sonder // Satori

Gender: Melodeath
Label: Blood Blast Distribution

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Blind Channel: Lifestyles Of The Sick & Dangerous

Gender: Violent Pop
Label: Century Media

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Caterina Barbieri: Spirit Exit

Gender: Electronic / Drone
Label: light-years

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Drive-By Bukkake: Bastards of Slime

Gender: Thrash Metal
Label: Self Released

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Grenadier: Trumpets Blare in


2020 | 2021

2022 :: Q1 | Q2 | Q3 | Q4

Sputnikmusic Staff’s Q2 Playlist 2022

Welcome to the second installment of our 2022 quarterly playlist! Feel free to jam the playlist below while reading what our writers had to say about each selection. Tell us what your favorites are in the comments, as well as any new artists you may have discovered here — or, alternatively, tell us what we missed! Thanks for reading/listening.


Tracklist:

Artificial Brain – “Celestial Cyst”
Artificial Brain

Unsurprisingly, the eponymous third chapter from Long Island’s singular dissonant machine stands as one of the finest death metal albums to come out in the first half of 2022. The first single, “Celestial Cyst”, with its dense psychedelic(ish) slow-paced section, is not only Artificial Brain‘s most iconic moment, but also epitomizes its unforeseen emotional weight. –TheNotrap

Asian Glow – “Look Close, Nose the Reflection”
Stalled Flutes, means

The biggest and bestest track on Asian Glow’s tangled knockout of a new album might just be the most impressive thing to come out of the whole of 5th wave emo. It is momentous; it is ambitious, perhaps a little too much so; it is maudlin yet you can almost dance to it; it has best bits and they don’t last forever. It’s


 

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Gospel – The Loser


 

There was never an intense desire for The Moon is a Dead World to finally have a sequel. In the realm of screamo or screamo-adjacent music, one-offs are par for the course, with the genre littered with classics delivered by groups that endured for a handful of years at best. These titans gradually generate their own mythology, and they transform into stories told ‘round the campfire by weathered stalwarts—tales of triumph we must strive to recreate. Of all those predecessors, however, it can be reasonably asserted that Moon was the most irreplicable of them all. The scene at large didn’t dare to take a stab at it; observing the trajectory of Gospel’s associated music influences reveals how few, if any, tried to capitalize off their work. It was equal parts the daunting critical reception, the eclectic grab-bag of genres, and the stunning musicianship required to tie it all together. It’s not likely for that drumming performance to reappear, nor is it probable for progressive rock sensibilities and keyboards to reunite in a category seemingly adverse to them.

Who else to perform Gospel again than, well, Gospel themselves? From the obscurity they once disappeared to, they decided to return in what could be the most shocking comeback witnessed in the industry. It’s impressive not only for the absurd waiting period between releases, but also due to its quality; The…


The city of Columbus has changed much over the past decade. Ohio’s reputation as ‘that lame Midwestern state’ certainly persists, but it’d be hard to figure that when observing the growth of the state’s capital; it’s undergoing one of the highest growth rates of all Midwestern metropoles. It’s no longer simply a domain for the Buckeye faithful (and the broken, battered Blue Jackets fans), but a combination of diverse people arriving from all corners of the United States. It’s a change that can be observed in the heightened enrollment rates of The Ohio State University. It can be felt in the explosive crowds filling the stands of the novel Lower.com stadium. It can be witnessed in the outdoor Shakespeare shows and the sprawling Arts Festival. Most importantly, for us at least, it can be heard in the bustling live music scene.

As a consequence of Columbus’ rise to prominence, its music market has considerably increased. Beyond the multitude of stadiums and theaters that can serve as concert venues, there are a plethora of smaller locales with their own personality and show miscellany. A trip to north downtown’s King of Clubs might feature the legends of melodic death metal Dark Tranquillity, a brutal combo of Thy Art is Murder and After the Burial, or an amateur wrestling display. KEMBA Live can provide The Shins, Wiz Khalifa, or Meshuggah. For something off the beaten path, The Rambling House exhibits bluegrass jam sessions, jazz and stand-up comedy. Regardless of…


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Here’s a list of major new releases for the week of July 1st, 2022.  Please feel free to request reviews for any of the following albums from staff and/or contributors.

– List of Releases: July 1st, 2022 –

blcak cilice

Black Cilice: Esoteric Atavism

Genre: Raw Black Metal
Label: Iron Bonehead Productions

blood cammanf
Blood Command: Praise Armageddonism

Genre: Punk Rock
Label: Hassle Records

pathos
Conjurer: Páthos

Genre: Hardcore, Sludge, Doom
Label: Nuclear Blast

the dear hunter
The Dear Hunter: Antimai

Genre: Progressive Rock
Label: Cave & Canary Goods

frayle
Frayle: Skin & Sorrow

Genre: Gothic, Doom Rock
Label: Aqualamb Records

ghost woman
Ghost Woman: Ghost Woman

Genre: Cinematic Punk Rock
Label: Tower

guided by voices
Guided by Voices: Tremblers And Goggles By Rank

Genre: Indie Rock
Label: Rockathon

mirror
Greg Puciato: Mirrorcell

Genre: Experimental Metal
Label: Federal Prisoner

imagine dragon
Imagine Dragons: Mercury – Act 2

Genre: Pop Rock
Label: Kidinakorner, Interscope

the mountaun jing
The Mountain King: Tsunami Of Hope

Genre: symphonic poems about the status quo of humanity
Label: Independent

elec brain
Municipal Waste: Electrified Brain

Genre: Thrash 
Label: Nuclear Blast

paolo_nutini-last_night_in_the_bittersweet_a
Paolo Nutini: Last Night In The Bittersweet

Genre: Singer/Songwriter
Label: Atlantic

Protector-300x300
Protector: Excessive Outburst Of Depravity

Genre: Thrash, Death Metal
Label: High Roller Records

shinedown
Shinedown: Planet Zero

Genre: Rock
Label: Atlantic

thun
Thūn: II

Genre: Cthulhu, Death Metal
Label: Independent

fragments
Vidres A La Sang: Fragments De L’Esdevenir

Genre: Death Metal, Black Metal
Label: Abstract Emotions

155430-Xaon-The-Lethean
Xaon: The Lethean

Genre: Symphonic Death Metal
Label: Independent

zorya
Zorya: Escapism [EP]

Genre: Blackgaze
Label: Self-Released

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