nachtmystium
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The magical monthly segment where I briefly touch down on a gauntlet of albums I didn’t get a chance to review this past month. These are just my short, straightforward, passionate, biased opinions. These are the albums I touch down on: Killjoy Club – Reindeer Games Grouper – Ruins Wiley – Snakes
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Murmur’s self-titled sophomore album is a impressively executed fusion of black metal and progressive rock.
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On Silencing Machine, Nachtmystium’s experiments with the sounds of black metal are subtle, but very effective. It’s mostly the band’s great songwriting that carries this record. WATCH THE REVIEW
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Watch this interesting, nicely shot 4-part video series looking into the making of the new Nachtmystium album, Silencing Machine. It’s pretty awesome seeing the writing dynamic of the band on this new record–especially with the addition of longtime producer Sanford Parker as a contributing member of the group.
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Another track drops from the forthcoming Nachtmystium album, Silencing Machine, and it’s just as anthemic and awesome as the previous track to drop from this LP. This album is dropping at the end of this month via Century Media, and it seems to be shaping up to be a
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Here, we have a new track dropping from the forthcoming Nachtmystium album, Silencing Machine. I actually dig it lot more than the first, which had some pretty furious, relentless, mechanical drums on it. This new track, “Borrowed Hope and Broken Dreams,” moves at a much more moderate pace, but manages
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Black metal modernists Nachtmystium drop the first single from the band’s forthcoming album on Century Medium, Silencing Machine. “As Made,” with its sequenced drums and calculated shots of abrasive noise, is a nice industrially tinged piece of sacrilege. I usually don’t care for drum machines in my black