ALBUM REVIEW: Slaves of the Wolf by Bear Mace

There’s a brutal clarity to Slaves of the Wolf (June 6th) that hits with the force of a war cry. Bear Mace’s third full-length doesn’t just lean into the traditions of old-school death metal. It fucking weaponises them. Riffs churn with militant precision, vocals roar like battlefield commands, and the album’s structure feels deliberate, even tactical. From the opening title track to the crushing closer, this is music with a mission. To bury one under its weighty themes and punishing grooves.

Tracks like “Drown Them In Their Blood” slow the pace by letting every note feel like a final blow, while “Captured And Consumed” brings in Kam Lee (Massacre) for a vocal trade-off that doubles down on the horror. The band’s historical lens of WWII atrocities, mob executioners, and faceless soldiers adds a layer of narrative heft that sets them apart from death metal’s usual gore-for-gore’s-sake.

That focus carries over to the production. With Sanford Parker behind the boards and Damian Herring on mix and master duties, Slaves of the Wolf is both raw and razor-sharp. Nothing feels smoothed over. This is Bear Mace exactly as they want to be heard. The years together as a steady lineup show in their chemistry of locked-tight rhythm work, dual guitars that circle like vultures, and frontman Chris Scearce snarling through each track like a man exhuming the past by force.

Slaves of the Wolf isn’t here to innovate. It’s here to conquer. And it does.