
Panic Room With a View is not simply a pandemic diary, nor a catalogue of setbacks, though its creation survived…

With Suspect Your Elders, Last Hyena proves that instrumental rock can be both technically dazzling and emotionally charged in a…

The record never pretends to fix the world’s fractures. Instead, it throws itself into them, finding catharsis in noise, unity…

Moletrap’s EP Mid Welsh, Pt. 1 is a declaration as much as it is a release. Across five tracks, the…

It’s theatrical without slipping into parody and experimental without becoming indulgent. In short, it’s Frog at their most unpredictable.

Confessions Of A Pub Talker is loud, witty, and proudly Irish, but its stories and energy are built to travel…

Rather than coasting on nostalgia, the band has pushed themselves into new territory.

Pale Wizard Records’ Wish You Were Here – 50 Years Later is more than a nostalgia trip. It’s a demonstration…

Unflinching honesty wrapped in explosive and anthemic alt-rock grit, Silver Dollar Room confronts shadows with their fearless sophomore record.

The EP turns fatigue, frustration, and absurdity into fuel for some of Problem Patterns’ sharpest work yet.

Volatility sculpted into craft and grit sharpened into melody.

A seven-track journey built from chaos, struggle, and survival.

A fresh expression of creative freedom. One that embraces chance and immediacy over careful planning.

An unrelenting thesis on how extreme music can interrogate the present without losing its appetite for sonic violence.

A Beginning is the kind of release that proves how extreme metal can be – brutal, beautiful, and intelligent all…

A concentrated freight train that captures the experience of what Orchid Symmetry’s live set feels and sounds like.

Prove Me Wrong arrives as a confident and lean statement.

The Cycles of Extinction succeeds because it takes big risks with story driven metal, orchestral grandeur, and science fiction themes…

Crop’s upcoming sophomore release S.S.R.I (August 22nd) is an album that refuses to play it safe. Where their self-titled debut…

The riffs are tight, the choruses are big, and the energy is constant.