Bodysnatcher
Hell Is Here, Hell Is Home


3.7
great

Review

by Futures STAFF
April 14th, 2026 | 7 replies


Release Date: 04/10/2026 | Tracklist

Review Summary: Blunt force catharsis.

I like to feel the full spectrum of emotions while listening to music. It’s important to experience that range to stay balanced as a person. What are life’s triumphs without its tragedies? Just as important is finding a release for those emotions, and music can be one of the most effective outlets. For music aficionados, it’s common to match what you’re listening to with how you feel. There are deep psychological reasons for this, but it often comes down to understanding and catharsis. Albums can provide a space to mentally unload your emotional baggage, making it easier to process and move forward. You’re allowed to feel heard without judgment, which is a big part of why music is so personal. My last review covered the latest Twilight Sad album, a deeply moving piece centered around the loss of the lead singer’s mother to dementia. If that record was pure sorrow in musical form, then Hell Is Here, Hell Is Home is pure rage.

There are a lot of different interpretations of what the ideal expression of rage in music looks like, but I tend to lean toward something in the vein of Bodysnatcher. Musically, it’s almost entirely pummeling chugs, beefy, bass-heavy production, furious callouts, and towering breakdowns. It’s a classic case of simple but effective. If you’re thinking of mid-era Acacia Strain for comparison, you’d be right. They share so much musical DNA that they feel like cousins. Vocalist Kyle Medina delivers his shouts and lower growls with a comparable raw power to Vincent Bennett. The real connective tissue, though, is their shared love of beatdown hardcore. Hell, Scott Vogel, the legendary frontman of Terror, even shows up for a memorable feature, complete with a two-step, which tells you exactly where this band is coming from. Blending that influence with downtempo deathcore feels completely natural, acting like a steroid boost to a genre already defined by aggression. Sure, it’s pretty one-note, with only a few moments of respite, but its workmanlike approach does exactly what it sets out to do in an efficient 34 minutes.

That, of course, is being as pissed off as possible. Yet another aspect Bodysnatcher shares with The Acacia Strain is their penchant for lyrics centered around misanthropic fury, with opening track “The Maker” serving as the album's thesis statement. It posits that humans are violent by nature, tracing that violence back to our shared ancestry with Cro-Magnons and early hunters. It’s a straightforward, savage rejection of the evils of modern society, which the album expands on through loosely connected stories of contemporary monsters. “Two Empty Caskets” deals with a drunk driver killing someone, “May Your Memory Rot” touches on absent fathers, “Violent Obsession” centers on domestic abuse, and no deathcore record would be complete without an anti-religious anthem in “No Savior.” These are different expressions of violence, often told from the perspective of the enraged, offering the listener a chance to participate in a kind of righteous anger. There’s a clear logic to the pairing of the caveman-esque musical punishment with lyrics that hit as bluntly as a bloodstained hammer.

Much like people seeking emotional release, the music itself relies on that same kind of release. It builds tension that feels ready to snap at any moment. The musical equivalent of that release is, of course, the breakdown. No strain of hardcore exists without them, and Bodysnatcher has a keen ear for writing effective ones. The callouts here are not easily forgotten. Dynamics are used in a straightforward but effective way, with songs often slowing to a crawl before delivering a raw, vulgar vocal punch or abruptly picking up pace. “The Maker” features a section near the end that cuts to an isolated chug, drops into pure silence for a few seconds, and then builds back into a nuclear breakdown. During the escalation, the song asks “Are you scared?” before hitting with “You ***ing should be.” It does not get much more primal than that. That track is not alone, “Violent Obsession” ends with “You are nothing but a ***ing crime scene,” and my personal favorite line appears in “May Your Memory Rot”: “Happy Father’s Day Mike, *** you.” That personal edge makes it a line that I will remember for a long time. The production is deliberately hulking and overbearing, the kind of artificial weight that perfectly suits the obscene energy of the lyrics, with breakdowns that land with the force of a concussive grenade.

Hell Is Here, Hell Is Home isn’t trying to push boundaries or rewrite the playbook. It follows the tried-and-true formula of beatdown and downtempo to a tee. In that sense, it’s the Iowa football of music. You know exactly what to expect every year under Kirk Ferentz: ground and pound, a strong offensive line, great defense, and disciplined fundamentals. It might not earn widespread critical praise, but there’s a real beauty in that kind of consistency. This is a basic formula, refined to a sharp edge. It sets out to be heavy and angry, and nothing more. Mission accomplished. We might be living in a golden age of beatdown, with its brute force pushing into more corners of heavy music than ever before. So the next time you’re having “one of those days,” as Limp Bizkit once put it, reach for Hell Is Here, Hell Is Home, and break something.



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user ratings (15)
3.4
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
Futures
Staff Reviewer
April 14th 2026


18167 Comments

Album Rating: 3.7

envisioned this as really quick and concise. and i suppose it is compared to my other work lol. easy and entertaining to write about. been so much quality writing going on, made me want to do something about it and keep up! hope you dig it!



fun album! check it out if you want some simple but crushing junz. not complicated but it's pure heaviness is executed well. if you're a fan of beatdown/downtempo you'll get something out of this.

AlkemestRedux
Contributing Reviewer
April 14th 2026


1958 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Listening to the first song and I can practically see the trash cans getting tossed around the pit. Gotta give this a listen tomorrow! Sweet writeup too.

Hawks
Staff Reviewer
April 14th 2026


122947 Comments


Gotta check this. Last album didn't do much for me, but the review makes me wanna jam HARD.

RodKneeBrucey
April 14th 2026


41 Comments


great review - rly sold me with that Iowa football metaphor, damn! these dudes are so fun live.

Meborphus
April 14th 2026


517 Comments


I've been looking forward to this one - dug their 2024 EP a lot.
If you have a chance to see them, do it.

jrlikestodance
April 14th 2026


8250 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

Fun record. Don't typically go for downtempo deathcore but this hits the right spots

Futures
Staff Reviewer
April 14th 2026


18167 Comments

Album Rating: 3.7

thanks fellas! i think you'd dig this one hawks, seems like most think this is their best work. bit more hardcore influence. 34 mins in and out, does it's job! sometimes you need a quick hitter like this.



rod i felt like that reference was just for me but i am beyond thrilled someone pointed it out haha! it was so fitting i had to throw it in. my day is made, appreciate you!





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