Abysmal Hymns
darker shades of metal, hymns of goth and post-punk ...all for the worship of darkness
Thursday, July 2, 2026
Emptiness : "Nowhere Speaks"
Anatomy of Habit : "Paired Sentinels"
This is the third album I've reviewed by this band, and with each one, they seem to be getting it a little more dialed in. The album has four songs, two of which are over thirteen minutes. The second and last song, respectively.The seven and a half minutes. opening track to this one finds them taking the post-industrial throb and jamming it out with a hypnotic drone that adds layers of sound to build it dynamically. Not complex arrangements, really just taking the theme and running with it. The baritone vocals calling out amid it all. It works in this context, but not sure I would want an entire album of this.
The second song, "Conditions of Freedom," finds the bass line opening things up, and strummed guitars adding texture. The vocals are less ominous and sound like Interpol trying to pay tribute to Swans, as they are more of a chant than a verse-chorus arrangement. The Swans' influence is much more present here than on the first song, but not as obvious to the common ear as on their last album. Midway into the second song, they ease the build down and add more dynamics. It also gets moodier. before bringing it back in with a pound that recalls Swan's earlier angrier days.
"The Importance of Risk" is more rooted in their own identity. The bass line grooves more. The vocals shift away from the Michael Gira influence and toward more of a stoned speculation. There is a bit of a hypnotic drone even here, which is just this band's thing. The vocals are a narrative, but not adding a great dealaside a human element. There is a little brighter, more hopeful mood to the title track that closes the album. The guitar melody that comes in brings a more melancholic edge. This might be the album's melodic moment that also brings a tinge of Pink Floyd to things for this reason.They also get closest to their momst metal moment on this album with the riff it all builds up into . I will give this album a 9, as I think they continue to grow as a band.
Lockstep : "I Know What I Saw"
This Nashville-based band nails the shoegaze sound, which is apparent from all the key elements being in place. The reverb warble of guitars and the breathy coo of the vocals, but just dialing in a sound is no feat, so how are their songs? This is the question that really matters. The first two songs show they are not afraid of their distortion pedals, but it's the indie rock groover mixed with a narcotic pulse on "Tilt of the World" that sells me on what they are doing. This album does sound great through headphones, so they have taken great care in capturing these songs in the studio.
They back off into a dreamier haze with "Soft Gauze of Time," and they bring in a dynamic shift and very deliberately chug up some power chords to contrast how the song opened. The guitar players have a decent sense of melody and carry the weight when the vocals get lost in the mix. I think the whispery vocals will get old for me before the guitar tones. They are smart to keep the songs all under the four and a half minute mark, rather than sprawling everything out into a drone.
"Dog in the House of Plenty' is nap-inducing even with the sonic heft of the bass and the guitars' more feed back biting tones. For fans of shoegaze, we have to not just settle for what we have heard done before, as this is what separates quality from quantity. Thankfully, they give things more space with the bass line to "Half Measures". It is a little darker and does not rely on drifting in the same clouds. There is a slight angular swagger in the verse riff.
They are going in a heavier direction with "Solvent Sound", it is a subtle shift, but it works, as the drums give more of a punch in their accents. The syncopation the bass line creates works well and gives the guitar more room.. They jam out the fade-out ending of this one. The last song, "Return" is the first one that actually legit rocks out. By rock out, it's in a doomy way. I will give this album a 9, as they carve their own place out in this genre that is becoming overcrowded in 2026, but they earn a spot. Dropping July 24th on Profound Lore.
Snag : " All The Cages Holding Us Will One Day Turn To Dust"
The Menzingers :'everything I Ever Saw"
The band's 2019 album "Hello Exile" became the high-water mark against which the album that followed would be weighed, as it balanced country-drenched Americana with the band's punk roots in a way that was honest and carved out its own niche. They seemed to be trying to find their way back in that direction on this album. The opening track "Chance Encounters" gives more drive by finding its strum for Greg Barnett's voice to bleat out his emotional croon. This is accented by Tom May's grittier approach.
"Better Angels" might take some time to grow on me, as it does not connect with me in the same manner as the opening track or "Romanticism". There is something about 'Other People's Money" that makes me think this is what it might sound like if the Dropkick Murphys wrote songs for the radio/ "Gasoline and Matches" puts indie rock in the back of it's beat up pick up tuckand takes a drive out into wide-open farmlands, which is the best plae for these guys. The vocals are pretty heartfelt here. "the Fool" just kinda of breezes along with a more casual strum, that crooses over into a late 90s puink feel. I had to listen to it twice before it clicked with me.
"Nobody's Heroes' taps into their more reliable songwriting magic."Breath With Me" follows this path as well, though is marginally more anthemic as the tempo finds a little more vigor. The synths that ring out going into "When She Enters My Dreams" give things more of an 80s feel. There is a great vocal performance on this one. "Parade Day' might stand out more if they had not already loaded this album down with some high-powered emotional punches that a re more memorable. They turn up the dials a little for the title track and hold some of the punk influence that steers them toward Social Distortion. I will give this album a 9.t as it finds the band recapturing the balance of sounds that works best for them and polishing them more with the production value being even bigger using Turnstile's producer.Out July 7th on Epitaph
Tuesday, June 30, 2026
Dry Wedding : "Thw Back of Beyond"
No Cure : "It is Going to Get Dark"
This band plays an in-your-face version of metallic hardcore. You could call it metal core, but I think it's truer to hardcore and feels pretty fucking legit. Jayway from Bayway appears on "Brain Matter" and drops a rap that works well in a less-than-nu-metal manner. I had to go back and give 'Slowly Turning Blue" another listen as they were pretty blistering going into it, and the album starts to collide with your ears as it's a relentless pounding after another. "Ironclad" has a pretty heavy groove. The guitar sound of this album si dense and heavy as fuck.
There is perhaps an even more confrontational edge to "Starved in Sanctuary"; there are more gang vocals than breakdowns, so that leans them into the hardcore side of the fence. The meanest riff so far gives Slayer vibes on "My World in Flames.". They keep dialing up the heavy as fuck factor with "Convulsing in the dark". "Sharpen the Blade" doubles down on both groove and brutality in equal measure. "Purity Spiral" brings back the more punk elements and gang vocals. But also works in some metal riffs that are pretty crushing.
"I am Still Fucking Straight Edge" is the first song that really clues me in on their stance with this, and I did not know they were a straight edge band going into this album. They close the album on a darker note with "Everything I Love is Dead or Dying". I will have to spend more time with this album; it's as heavy as you can get with this sort of thing, and they still are mindful of the songwriting, so I will give it a 9.5. If you want straightedge hardcore that is heavier than the 90s, then here you go. GIVE IT A 9.5

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