#fighter-records — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #fighter-records, aggregated by home.social.
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Ravenspell – Obsidian King Review By HoldeneyeWhen old-school Traditional Heavy Metal looks fondly upon its family tree, it sees that it has birthed a host of sub-genre descendants as numerous as the stars of the sky and the grains of sand on the seashore. And like most ancestors, it looks out upon its progeny with both pride and revulsion. For instance, it seriously doubts that “progressive dissonant blackened death metal” can actually be related to it and eyes that genre’s mail/milk person with suspicion. But then it sees the New Wave of Traditional Heavy Metal and smiles at the straightlaced apple that didn’t fall too far from the proverbial tree. But even then, the Old Timer sees two different shades of its mini-me, one that incorporates all the bells and whistles of today’s newfangled production values, and one that wears the thrift shop aesthetic of olden days. I really dig bands that can pull off the latter effectively, bands like Century, Lord Mountain, and the gold standard of my recent memory, Legendry. 1
Quebec’s Ravenspell is hoping to join that mighty new-olde company with their debut full-length effort, Obsidian King. Sample the embedded single and album opener “God the Watcher”, and you’ll hear Ravenspell chain its pocket watch to its three-piece suit as it tries to sound as long in the tooth as possible. The song blasts off like a saint out of hell with some rapid riffing and a siren wail from vocalist Alisander the Seer. Clocking in at under four minutes, it sets a blistering tone for an album that will constantly walk the line between classic and speed metals.
Like genre leaders Visigoth and Eternal Champion, these guys channel old granddads of metal Manilla Road and Iron Maiden as they serve up sword and sorcery sermons with sweet earworm choruses. Good luck getting “Onwards We March” or “Book of the Dead” out of your head—the latter earns bonus points for kicking things off with a sample from Army of Darkness. Interspersed throughout the more balanced tracks are sub-three-minute, cocaine-fueled speed racers (“Hellstorm” and “Battleaxe Apocalypse”) that hit you and disappear before you even know what happened.
This war wagon nearly made it to the finish line before one of the wheels began to fall off. “Atilla” positions itself to be the Obsidian King’s epic finale, and while it has some cool musical ideas, it ultimately falls flat. Literally. The main vocal lines and backing vocals try to harmonize, but end up clashing in a really unpleasant way. The track also breaks Ravenspell’s winning formula, the one they spent the previous 32 minutes perfecting: classic metal songs at four minutes, speed metal at three. “Atilla” is eight minutes, and in its current form, it just doesn’t work, hun. Production-wise, Obsidian King aims for that old-timey aesthetic of yesteryear, and it mostly hits, despite sounding overly loud to my ears.
Overall, Ravenspell has done the old geezers of metal proud. Obsidian King sounds like it could have been released in the 80s, and for the most part, it delivers the goods. While it may end with a doozy of a misstep, there is over half an hour of quality music here that should please fans of geriatric metal.
Rating: 3.0/5.0
#2026 #30 #CanadianMetal #EternalChampion #FighterRecords #HeavyMetal #IronMaiden #ManillaRoad #Mar26 #ObsidianKing #Ravenspell #Review #Reviews #SpeedMetal #Visigoth
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Fighter Records
Websites: ravenspell.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/ravenspellofficial
Releases Worldwide: March 12th, 2026 -
HyperioN (IT) – Cybergenesis Review By Spicie ForrestFormed in Bologna, Italy, HyperioN has been kicking around since 2015. When they visited these halls in 2017, Eldritch Elitist called their debut, Dangerous Days, “the strongest 3.0 possible,” citing its ability to “effortlessly [inject] elements of trash and power metal into the proceedings” and its “significant room for future growth.” HyperioN returns now in 2026 with their third full-length,1 Cybergenesis, a concept album chronicling an interdimensional war, humanity’s enslavement, and their eventual rebellion and liberation. Although still a five-piece, HyperioN sports an entirely new lineup save for founding guitarist Davide Cotti. Can this massive injection of fresh blood catapult these space-age heavy metallers to the greater heights Eldritch Elitist saw in the band?
New blood or not, HyperioN has a vision for their sound and proudly stays the course. Like previous efforts, Cybergenesis is heavily inspired by the likes of Metal Church and Judas Priest. But thematically rooted in sci-fi territory, HyperioN establishes the futuristic, dystopian backdrop of Cybergenesis’ narrative in much the same fashion that Blaze Bayley did on Silicon Messiah. A neoclassical opening gives way to a “Deafening” detonation of traditional heavy metal, soaring and gritty vocals, and Mozartian fills. HyperioN maintains this momentum with sticky choruses (“Yet We Still Fight,” “Blood over Chrome”), courtesy of new vocalist Max Morelli, and the strong axe work of Cotti and newcomer Francis Dipasquale (“Rewire, Rebuild,” “The Shackles of Chronitus,” “Rhizome Rider”). The potential Eldritch Elitist saw is brutally obvious when the band comes together to exceed their mathematical sum. Moments like the ends of “Grain of Sand”—where a squealing guitar lead cranks up the intensity of the final chorus—and “The Shackles of Chronitus”—where the solo extends to usher Morelli back to center stage—are particularly well done.
From a songwriting perspective, Cybergenesis is largely on par with previous efforts—aside from the baffling spoken word intro on “The Whole of Time”—but it’s not executed as well. Morelli is a fairly good vocalist, but he is much different than HyperioN’s previous vocalist and can’t reach the clean, clear highs of Dangerous Days. Rather than find ways to highlight the registers where he does excel, Morelli struggles to mimic previous efforts and seems shoved into too rigid a box. Bassist Simone Cauli employs a tone notably rougher than before. It’s got a retro sound that feels at odds with the futuristic subject matter of Cybergenesis. Where the bass was velvety on Dangerous Days, it’s much grittier or more textured here. Similar to HyperioN’s debut, drummer Francesco Madonna puts in a serviceable but largely unremarkable performance.
Structurally, Cybergenesis isn’t breaking any new ground. Most songs fall in the 4-5 minute range and follow a standard verse-chorus-verse-chorus pattern. No risks are taken here, and this is a fundamentally safe album. This isn’t a criticism per se—HyperioN’s ability to competently utilize well-established constructions is certainly impressive—but it does hold Cybergenesis back from being greater. To its credit, it’s a pretty lean record, clocking in at just under 40 minutes. The music moves along at a good pace, and there’s no real bloat to be found here. But especially in the back half, Cybergenesis can get repetitive as its lack of originality becomes more apparent, which somewhat counteracts the album’s good pacing and brisk runtime.
HyperioN boasts some great guitar work, especially in solos and hooks and such, but I struggled to find much else on Cybergenesis that stood out. I see the same opportunity for growth that Eldritch Elitist did on their debut, but this feels like a step back. It’s marred by a vocal performance that struggles to match the music and a general lack of novel material. Nonetheless, Cybergenesis is solid meat-and-potatoes fare. It’s good background music and playlist filler, but it’s nothing to write home about. You won’t find any new metal converts worshipping at the altar of Cybergenesis, but for those who dig trad/heavy metal muchly, HyperioN’s newest offering should be plenty filling.
Rating: 2.5/5.0
#25 #2026 #BlazeBayley #Cybergenesis #FighterRecords #HeavyMetal #Hyperion #ItalianMetal #Jan26 #JudasPriest #MetalChurch #Review #Reviews
DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Fighter Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
Releases Worldwide: Jan 15th, 2026 -
Review: HyperioN – “Cybergenesis”
Release date: January 15th, 2026
Label: Fighter Records
4 minutesPablo Rumel
Cybergenesis marks a new chapter for HyperioN—a rebirth within traditional heavy metal that fuses the legacy of bands like Metal Church, Queensrÿche, and Judas Priest with a modern, progressive energy. After several lineup changes, guitarist and main composer Davide Cotti leads this return with a tighter sound, sharp riffs, and refined production that solidifies the band’s identity. With the addition of vocalist Max Morelli, the album stands as a work of maturity and renewal, preserving the classic essence while propelling HyperioN into the future.
Review
Deafening: A neoclassical lick in high notes and a spiraling, fast riff open the first movement of Cybergenesis. Quick shifts between galloping rhythms and power chords create an energetic track, with slow, emotional sections midway through. The guitar solo weaves with the rhythm guitar, building harmonies and opening a dynamic palette of colors that expand with every listen.
Max Morelli’s voice isn’t that of a virtuoso, but he hits the high notes well and delivers the narratively charged, theatrical parts with clarity. His tone leans closer to the heavy prog of the eighties than to the operatic techniques of nineties power metal.
It’s on Rewire, Rebuild where Morelli’s strength truly shines. He handles falsettos and sustains notes with a steady vibrato, adding rougher, raspier refrains, moving far more comfortably in mid and aggressive registers than in excessively high ones.
As for percussion, we’re dealing with a drummer who knows how to handle rhythmic changes, pounding the snare with force in the most intense parts, giving space to the lead guitars through clever snare work, never overplaying fills or crashing cymbals.
The neoclassical solos and shifting structures bring progressive versatility, breaking monotony with every turn and riff. If you listen closely to Yet We Still Fight, you’ll hear its progressive opening before it downshifts into traditional heavy metal, adding timeless power chords and bursts of rapid single-string picking, layered choirs full of grandeur, and a powerful close between verses, with a thunderous snare and stellar artificial harmonics. One of the album’s highlights.
The Shackles of Chronitus is the classic slow, heavy track, perfect for lowering the pace and entering a darker, more powerful realm. Yet, it must be said, the vocal reverb is too high, which hurts the final mix. It doesn’t sound bad, but the voice borders on saturation, and while it doesn’t drown the guitars, its brightness breaks the balance that worked so well in the other songs.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U57MUq5Bf8A
Until the fifth track, Blood Over Chrome, the bass lines were barely audible, something corrected here with an intro led by sharp, bright, pick-driven bass. It takes the lead in rhythmic sections, with quick scales and greater presence in the composition. The song takes a classic heavy metal route, with tight rhythmic sections, razor-edged twin guitars trading rapid runs, and Simone Cauli’s bass at the forefront. The closing with stadium-style choruses gives it the epic vibe the track demands.
Grain of Sand shows HyperioN fully owning their style. A fast riff spirals and twists through chromatic breaks, heading straight into solo guitars and another furious charge: all within thirty seconds. The vocal phrasing, as noted, is raw and not technically extravagant, yet it bursts with force and grit, especially in the chorus and atmospheric clean-guitar parts.
We reach Rhizoma Rider, what a title! With a pure metal intro crafted in progressive fashion, it develops into a mid-tempo song, thick and pounding, recalling Judas Priest’s Ripper Owens era and much of Grave Digger’s raw energy. What The Shackles of Chronitus aimed for is achieved here. The percussion hits like a hammer, the twin guitars attack in unison, supported by strong bass lines, and everything sounds at full power, on a professional level. This track is the gem for fans of heavier metal… Listen to that palm-muted section in the final third! Classic as a leather jacket, as effective and simple as a hammer striking an anvil.
The journey ends with the ultra-epic The Whole of Time. As a closing piece, it’s clear the band gives everything here: a cybernetic voice intro, memorable choirs backed by synths, martial-like percussion, and a mid-tempo rhythm that narrates the story in pure heavy metal form. It’s a dramatic song with guitar-hero solos and an excellent finale.
Conclusion
We’ve focused on the musical aspects of the album, but attention must also be paid to its concept, to the narrative unfolding between songs. Of course, the music takes precedence, since a song can hold a poem or a novel within it, but if the music fails, nothing else matters. That’s not the case here. Music and concept, from the artwork onward, move as one. The album runs close to forty minutes, which is always a good sign.
TheNwothm Score: 8.5/10
Links
Bandcamp:https://hyperionbandheavy.bandcamp.com/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/hyperionbandheavy
Instagram:https://www.instagram.com/hyperionband
Label:https://www.fighter-records.com/
Read More Reviews
#FighterRecords #HeavyMetal #italian #ItalianHeavyMetal #JudasPriest #metalChurch #NewAlbum #NWOTHM
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HyperioN unleash lyric video for “Rewire, Rebuild” ahead of new album ‘Cybergenesis’
Rising from the heart of Italy’s heavy metal underground, HyperioN have dropped a gripping lyric video for “Rewire, Rebuild,” the second single from their forthcoming album, Cybergenesis. Watch it now on YouTube:
http://www.youtu.be/F_t3ubeiPMc
The track is streaming across all major platforms, including Bandcamp, Spotify, Apple Music, Amazon Music, Tidal, Pandora, AWA, and Deezer.
Set for release on January 15th, 2026 via Fighter Records, Cybergenesis marks HyperioN’s third full-length studio album and is now available for pre-order: hyperionbandheavy.bandcamp.com/album/cybergenesis
A concept-driven record steeped in classic sci-fi lore, Cybergenesis delivers eight tracks of high-octane traditional heavy metal. The album’s narrative follows a doomed space mission that triggers the awakening of the Choir—an ancient alien hive mind—and humanity’s descent into a brutal war against cyborg overlords. At the center of this rebellion stands the Rhizome Rider, a fallen commander reborn to lead the final charge for freedom.
Drawing inspiration from genre-defining works like Star Trek and Ghost in the Shell, Cybergenesis explores themes of resistance, sacrifice, and the enduring strength of the human spirit.
The album’s cover art was hand-painted by UK illustrator Ryan T. Hancock, known for his work with Seven Sisters, Blood Star, and Stormborn. HyperioN deliberately chose a traditional canvas approach to reflect the album’s raw, human essence.
Tracklist:
- Deafening
- Rewire, Rebuild
- Yet We Still Fight
- The Shackles of Chronitus
- Blood Over Chrome
- Grain of Sand
- Rhizome Rider
- The Whole of Time
Current Line-up:
- Davide Cotti – Guitars
- Francesco Madonna – Drums
- Max Morelli – Vocals
- Simone “Nega” Cauli – Bass
- Francis Dipasquale – Guitars
About HyperioN: Founded in 2015 by drummer Jason Beghelli and guitarist Davide Cotti, HyperioN emerged with a mission to revive traditional heavy metal, channeling the spirit of Metal Church, early Queensrÿche, and Judas Priest. Their debut album Dangerous Days (2017) earned critical acclaim and led to live appearances alongside Italian metal stalwarts.
Following lineup changes and the release of Into The Maelstrom (2020), the band weathered the pandemic and expanded their global reach via Bandcamp and streaming platforms. With a refreshed lineup and renewed creative fire, HyperioN now present Cybergenesis—a bold new chapter that honors their roots while pushing their sound into cinematic, sci-fi territory.
LInktree: linktr.ee/hyperionband
Fighter Records: fighter-records.com
#Cybergenesis #FighterRecords #HeavyMetal #HyperioN #metal #NewAlbum #NWOTHM #rewireRebuild #thenwothm #thenwothmCom
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Ültra Raptör – Fossilized Review
By Grin Reaper
Cybernetic dinosaurs skirmish with a squad of Starship Troopers-inspired foot soldiers on a battle-scarred field. Eerie green mist cloaks a gutted refinery where small fires continue to blaze. Above, pocked moons loom menacingly low, while farther up, chrome font adorned with gratuitous umlauts irradiates the sky. Conventional wisdom says not to judge a book by its cover, but this is album art you can hear. If you’re not conjuring vivacious guitar acrobatics, lock-step rhythmic thunder, and macho bellows, then you aren’t paying attention. Ültra Raptör is here to crack open a cold one and unleash sophomore effort Fossilized. So buckle up, buckaroo. Grab your mandatory Molson and let this quintet of Canucks hit you “Hard ‘N Fast” with their take on heavy speed metal.
Have I ever wondered what Judas Priest might sound like if they teamed up with Blaze Bayley to write Screaming for Vengeance II? No. But Ültra Raptör approximates that hypothetical effort on Fossilized. Musically speaking, Fossilized sits comfortably between Priest’s 80s era and modern Riot V. Slick guitar leads, rumbly bass grooves, and punchy drums support hooky-as-fook choruses and flashy solos. The music is kinetic, and anyone who appreciates a slice of NWoBHM should find plenty of toe-tapping, headbangable moments. Ültra Raptör doesn’t do anything new on Fossilized, but they never claim to. These fellas are just here to cook up tales of heavy metal, dinosaurs, and haulin’ ass, and by God, they do that with aplomb.
Fossilized charms effortlessly, churning out melodies and earworms so sticky that I can’t shake them from my gray matter. The first four tracks set an imposing standard, where “Fossilized” and “Hard ‘N Fast” are my personal favorites, and “Spinosaurus” and “Living’ for the Riff” never falter. Guitarists Criss Raptör and Zoltan Saurus lead the assault, with riffs, licks, and leads blitzing your ears with cocksure blasts.1 From the opening moments of “Fossilized,” the six-string theatrics never let up. I’ve listened to my share of albums where I was duped by a single, only to discover the rest of the album failed to live up to the soaring heights promised. Ültra Raptör peddles no such dreck. Growling bottom-end Dick Van Heuß bolsters each track with brawny bass. Though spotlights are rare, Van Heuß constantly lurks below, ever present if you listen past the rest of the electrifying onslaught. No laggard himself, drummer Tony Bronco revs up the kit and does a tremendous job of setting a searing pace (“X-Celerator”2). Meanwhile, vocalist Phil T. Lung croons through nine tracks with his gritty baritone. I expect his voice will be the most divisive part of Ültra Raptör’s sound, and while he’s capable, it’s not the typical torsion-induced falsettos regularly featured in the genre. Though he mostly evokes Blaze Bayley, a few moments ring of Dave Brockie. The ensuing amalgam is a potent brewski—one best consumed with a mullet and a pack of cigs crammed into your denim jacket.
Ültra Raptör’s fearlessness begets a raucous and engaging listen, though adjustments could have elevated Fossilized. In total, they deliver forty-one minutes of filler-less heavy metal (less instrumental “Le Voyageur d’Oort,” a decent but unremarkable minute). The mix permits everyone to shine and contains enough depth to appreciate what passes for nuance in such an outrageous concept. Revisiting the vocals, Lung is proficient and never lacks the gusto to match the music’s energy. Despite that, I wish there was more variety in his singing. Either harnessing more falsettos like on debut Tyrants or bringing in a guest singer could add enough extra spice to kick things up a notch. Singing aside, the chief knock on Fossilized is a lack of originality. I don’t believe this will or should prevent anyone from enjoying what Ültra Raptör does here, but it defines a ceiling that’s extremely difficult to push past.
Ültra Raptör pumps testosterone-fueled, chest-thumping vigor into Fossilized, constructing an over-the-top arrogance that would crumble with less conviction. The album exudes fun because of the utter commitment to the bit, and unless you’re allergic to a good time, I highly recommend checking out Fossilized. It’s not an album that will change anyone’s mind about what heavy or speed metal offers, but it is an excellent example of what makes a very good record within those confines.
Rating: Very Good
DR: 5 | Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
Label: Fighter Records
Websites: Bandcamp | Facebook
Releases Worldwide: October 7th, 2025#2025 #35 #BlazeBayley #CanadianMetal #FighterRecords #Fossilized #HeavyMetal #JudasPriest #Oct25 #Review #Reviews #Riot #RiotV #SpeedMetal #ÜltraRaptör