As long as Roger and Vinnie are in the band, it's Agnostic Front to me. The first thing I noticed was a bigger guitar sound, as they launch into a rapid-fire attack with anthemic hardcore gang vocals on the chorus, as expected, along with some more melodic nuances. Though the overall rousing aggression of the album delivers more of what you expect from these guys.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/10/agnostic-front-echoes-in-eternity.html
9-Pupil Slicer-"Fleshwork."
This British band is back with a catchier, more hardcore-leaning take on the grind-core styled metal core they hit you with on their last album. The sounds are more layered into the stomping fray on this, but still hammer at you with more aggression. There are some marginally more melodic moments that their spastic excursion leads them across. When they slow down to a more deliberate pace, it takes on a sludge-ridden weight, as the vocals are screamed with convincing anger.
8-SPACED-"No Escape."
Last year's "All We Ever Get" only earned an 8 because it leaned too heavily into a Turnstile-inspired sound. They have come into their own on this EP. Couple that with the fact that Turnstile is more of a pop band than a hardcore band now, and it leaves a void that must be filled, which finds SPACED stepping up their game to claim the empty throne. The songwriting is hookier, though the chorus tends to follow a similar formula that proves effective for the first three songs, all of which are under three minutes, making this perfect for the ADHD TikTok generation
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/09/spaced-no-escape.html
7-Butcher Bird-"Drought/ Deluge."
This hardcore band from London has a metallic groove to their feedback-squealing attack. The vocals are the most straightforward thing about the overall sound, as they are delivered with the kind of angry shout you expect from hardcore. They throw some breakdowns at you, but they come from less expected places, so they work. Despite the jerking whiplash of the mathy riffs, they are more straightforward in a more rock n roll manner than, say, Full of Hell. They are willing to give into the atmosphere, with unwieldy sections of choruses colliding at you in a manner that reminds me more of Rollins Band than Black Flag.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/04/butcherbird-drought-deluge.html
6-Death Goals- "Survival is an Act of Defiance."
This British hardcore band is confrontational, sometimes leaning in an almost spastic noise rock direction, with the clanging dissonance that the guitars attack you with. The vocals are screamed with conviction, sometimes throat breaking into more of a growl, though the metal influences are minimal. I would say this is aggressive without the testosterone of hardcore, yet it's explosive with hardcore energy.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/09/death-goals-survival-is-act-of-defiance.html
5- Idle Heirs-"Life is Violence."
Sean Ingram of Coalesce has not made any music for at least a decade, so fans of Coalesce should be thankful to have this, as it touches on many of the same sonic aspects of that band. Perhaps more melodic and less jarring, we hear more of Ingram's singing voice here. Josh Barber, who is partnering with Ingram here, understands where he is coming from musically, so it works. Things get more ominous , though they maintain dynamics with pulsing grooves that hold a tension you can bob your head to.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/03/idle-heirs-life-is-violence.html
4-Ingrown- "Idaho"
Off the bat, what I like about this band is how they pack a great deal of riffage into the minute and forty seconds. They have in-your-face pummelling sections that are rapid-fire but give you something to sink your teeth into and headbang a bit. These guys to not just make music that is heavy as fuck, but to keep you engaged in the songs where most bands are just going to pound you in the head with a dense sound rather than write catchy songs
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/01/ingrown-idaho.html
3-Biohazard- "Divided We Fall."
I was surprised by how what they do works in 2025, even with the occasional rapped verse. They were some of the forerunners of the kind of gang, vocal jump up and down, get stupid in the pit kind of break downs. They temper the grooves with the hardcore tempos that stay in your face. It is true to who they were in the 90s, but produced in a way that makes it relevant.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/10/biohazard-divided-we-fall.html
2-Lowheaven-"Ritual Decay"
The debut from this Canadian band hits you with an explosion of screamo intensity against a stark, apocalyptic mood that bears more resemblance to Neurosis. Lighter-sung vocals provide a counterpoint that brings Glassjaw to mind, as they hover over the crushing, sludge-drenched stomp. This is broken up by moments of atmosphere before building to a scathing climax of intense sonics.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/07/lowheaven-ritual-decay.html
1-Deadguy-"Near-Death Travel Services."
30 years after Victory Records hardcore band Deadguy cemented their legendary status with their album "Fixation on Coworker ". The band is not just back to reaffirm their relevance; this album has the benefit of 2025 production value, so it sounds far better than the more metallic guitar sound they debuted with. This makes for an album that is heavier with the guitars, creating a more organic wall of sound. They hit you with a more fully realized onslaught. The vocals did retain their command, which has always been similar to Henry Rollins in their confrontational tone. Coming back stronger is what hardcore is about, and this album is the epitome.
https://abysmalhymns.blogspot.com/2025/06/deadguy-near-death-travel-services.html
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