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#metalbladerecords — Public Fediverse posts

Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #metalbladerecords, aggregated by home.social.

  1. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Slayer's 40th-Anniversary reissues of 'Hell Awaits' are OFFICIALLY OUT NOW!: Celebrate FOUR thrashing decades of some of the heaviest and most aggressive metal your ears will ever hear!

    Order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/slayer/ dlvr.it/TSYSPg LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  2. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Gozu - Gozu VI (FULL ALBUM): ARTIST: Gozu
    ALBUM: Gozu VI
    RELEASE DATE: 05/15/2026

    Buy: gozu.bandcamp.com/album/gozu-vi

    01. Corinthian Leatherface (00:00)
    02. Midnight Express (05:06)
    03. Killer Khan (11:27)
    04. Corner Lariat (16:09)
    05. Banacek (22:57)
    06. They Did Know Karate (27:17)
    07. Gimme the Lute (34:40)
    08. Corvette Summer (40:30) dlvr.it/TSY522 LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  3. Metal Blade Video 🤘 MADNESS ON WHEELS• The first of a 13-part interview series with the dudes in Endseeker!: Final EP, 'Coffin Born' out June 19th!
    Pre-order here: metalblade.com/endseeker/ dlvr.it/TSXj2j LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  4. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Mid-week vibe check with new tunes from If These Trees Could Talk! 🌳 “Blurry Creatures” now playing!: If These Trees Could Talk unveil their upcoming album, 'The Hidden Hand' - out July 10th!

    Pre-order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/ifthesetreescou dlvr.it/TSWvTL LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  5. Metal Blade Video 🤘 WE BECOME THE SCOURGE! Cattle Decapitation unleashed 'Terrasite' unto the world THREE years ago!: A non-stop skull-crusher from start to finish...AS EXPECTED!

    Stream/order HERE: metalblade.com/cattledecapitat dlvr.it/TSVt6w LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  6. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Yoth Iria's new video for "Harut Government Fallen" is now playing! New album OUT NOW!: Yoth Iria's new video for "Harut Government Fallen" is now playing! Check it out HERE: youtu.be/k7-HJ7YQ4XM

    New album, 'Gone With The Devil' OUT NOW!
    Order here: metalblade.com/yothiria/ dlvr.it/TSVmpt LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  7. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Yoth Iria - Harut, Government, Fallen (Official Video): Buy here: metalblade.com/yothiria
    "True change begins when we refine our character, discipline, and inner power. A transformed person creates a transformed reality. Personal evolution becomes a universal shift—a new order of existence. The world changes when the self is reborn."

    "This time we entered the studio with the… dlvr.it/TSTkml LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  8. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Lifesick - Love and Other Lies (FULL EP): ARTIST: Lifesick
    ALBUM: Love and Other Lies
    RELEASE DATE: 01/12/2024

    Listen / Buy: metalblade.com/lifesick

    01. Every Unpleasant Emotion (00:00)
    02. Rude Awakening [feat. Mark Whelan of Fuming Mouth] (04:19)
    03. Reverse Birth [feat. Todd Jones of Nails] (07:22) dlvr.it/TSRz6n LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  9. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Ingested - Oaths Betrayed (Lyric Video): Buy here: metalblade.com/ingested
    "Denigration" out May 8. 2026
    ingested.co.uk
    INGESTED’s latest single comes in advance of the band’s upcoming tour of North America this Spring.

    Tickets are on sale now at ingested.co.uk/tour

    Video by Andrea Mantelli

    INGESTED: Chaos & Carnage Tour w/ Thy Art Is Murder, Carnifex,… dlvr.it/TSRcYY LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  10. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Yoth Iria’s new record, ‘Gone With The Devil’ is OUT NOW!: Stream/order HERE: metalblade.com/yothiria/ dlvr.it/TSRSl0 LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  11. Ingested – Denigration Review By Lavender Larcenist

    It is hard to believe that Ingested is hitting their eighth record. A band that managed to bring slam to the relative mainstream, combining the grotesque, guttural brutality of extreme music with more core-infused elements. Their previous record, The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams, leaned a little too hard into these elements. Losing much of the slam and focusing on simplified song structures to its detriment. Their latest release, Denigration, marks the first without founding vocalist Jason Evans, someone who defined the sound of Ingested. Unfortunately for the band, the album is also marked by tumult. With the departure of Evans, his replacement was quickly outed over sexual assault allegations, and at the last minute, guitarists Sean Haynes and Andrew Virrueta took over. The album was re-tooled to replace the vocals (something I commend the band for wholeheartedly), but was something excised in the process, or is it a return to form for a band that had seemingly lost its extreme roots?

    I hate to break it to you, but Denigration is an album as messy as the story behind its creation. The album starts strongly, and unfortunately enough, with what is probably its best track. Half the band screams the opening line before the song drops into an absolute blast of destructive drumming. The track is simple but effective, and contains just enough variety and speed to keep things interesting. Haynes and Virrueta do an admirable job bringing heft and technical skill to each track, but they too often devolve into the same bouncing slam riffs to the point of bleeding together. Individual songs are hard to tell apart, and while founding drummer Lyn Jeffs has always been talented, the snare production basically kills his entire performance. This is nearly St. Anger levels of snare-tragedy, and the drums aren’t the only victim; production across the record is uniformly terrible.

    Denigration’s Achilles heel is its soundscape. While dynamic range isn’t necessarily a surefire sign of quality, this album has songs that go as low as a 2 on the scale. Tracks are a cacophony in the worst way; the snare is downright grating and overly loud, while the rest blends into a miasma of noise and chuggery. This is an album with so little range between individual tracks that it can feel like one long song, which is grueling for a slam record. Top this with the fact that the last-minute fill-in vocalists are clearly amateurs, especially compared to Evans, and you get an album that sounds like a debut by a young band making early mistakes. I have to imagine replacing the vocals at the last minute did serious damage to their original mix, but Ingested has a history of production issues on top of this. Combining these two has made for an album that can hurt to listen to at times.

    I don’t mean to disparage the band; in fact, this was a record I was genuinely hoping would be great. I have always had a soft spot for Ingested’s unique brand of slamcore. Evans vocals are top-tier, and they were always willing to take the genre to creative places. Julia Frau’s vocals on “Ashes Lie Still,” Kirk Windstein’s epic chorus on “Another Breath,” and Josh Middleton’s on “Expect to Fail” define the band’s willingness to explore their sound. On Denigration, the guests only work to divert from the monotony between tracks; even then, their addition feels perfunctory. This doesn’t feel like the band that wrote bangers like “Misery Leech,” “Skinned and Fucked,” or “The List.” At least they are trying to emulate their slam roots with a more streamlined sound built around the classic Chug & Guttural™ combo. There will be those who find this record more palatable than Ingested’s recent deathcore-adjacent trajectory, even if the production takes crushed and curb-stomps it.

    When I originally started spinning Denigration for review, numerous elements kept coming to my attention that now feel obvious, seeing how many things changed at the last minute. What should have been a creative refresh for a band that felt like it was relying a little too much on vocal talent has turned into the exact opposite. Denigration fails to bring the hooks, a key to any good slam record, while also being hamstrung by terrible production, middling vocals, and a lack of creativity. Hopefully, Ingested can come back stronger from all this and make the great album I know they are capable of, but all Denigration did was send me straight to the band’s better records.

    Rating: Bad
    DR: 3| Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Official Site
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #15 #2026 #BritishMetal #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Denigration #Ingested #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #Slam
  12. Ingested – Denigration Review By Lavender Larcenist

    It is hard to believe that Ingested is hitting their eighth record. A band that managed to bring slam to the relative mainstream, combining the grotesque, guttural brutality of extreme music with more core-infused elements. Their previous record, The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams, leaned a little too hard into these elements. Losing much of the slam and focusing on simplified song structures to its detriment. Their latest release, Denigration, marks the first without founding vocalist Jason Evans, someone who defined the sound of Ingested. Unfortunately for the band, the album is also marked by tumult. With the departure of Evans, his replacement was quickly outed over sexual assault allegations, and at the last minute, guitarists Sean Haynes and Andrew Virrueta took over. The album was re-tooled to replace the vocals (something I commend the band for wholeheartedly), but was something excised in the process, or is it a return to form for a band that had seemingly lost its extreme roots?

    I hate to break it to you, but Denigration is an album as messy as the story behind its creation. The album starts strongly, and unfortunately enough, with what is probably its best track. Half the band screams the opening line before the song drops into an absolute blast of destructive drumming. The track is simple but effective, and contains just enough variety and speed to keep things interesting. Haynes and Virrueta do an admirable job bringing heft and technical skill to each track, but they too often devolve into the same bouncing slam riffs to the point of bleeding together. Individual songs are hard to tell apart, and while founding drummer Lyn Jeffs has always been talented, the snare production basically kills his entire performance. This is nearly St. Anger levels of snare-tragedy, and the drums aren’t the only victim; production across the record is uniformly terrible.

    Denigration’s Achilles heel is its soundscape. While dynamic range isn’t necessarily a surefire sign of quality, this album has songs that go as low as a 2 on the scale. Tracks are a cacophony in the worst way; the snare is downright grating and overly loud, while the rest blends into a miasma of noise and chuggery. This is an album with so little range between individual tracks that it can feel like one long song, which is grueling for a slam record. Top this with the fact that the last-minute fill-in vocalists are clearly amateurs, especially compared to Evans, and you get an album that sounds like a debut by a young band making early mistakes. I have to imagine replacing the vocals at the last minute did serious damage to their original mix, but Ingested has a history of production issues on top of this. Combining these two has made for an album that can hurt to listen to at times.

    I don’t mean to disparage the band; in fact, this was a record I was genuinely hoping would be great. I have always had a soft spot for Ingested’s unique brand of slamcore. Evans vocals are top-tier, and they were always willing to take the genre to creative places. Julia Frau’s vocals on “Ashes Lie Still,” Kirk Windstein’s epic chorus on “Another Breath,” and Josh Middleton’s on “Expect to Fail” define the band’s willingness to explore their sound. On Denigration, the guests only work to divert from the monotony between tracks; even then, their addition feels perfunctory. This doesn’t feel like the band that wrote bangers like “Misery Leech,” “Skinned and Fucked,” or “The List.” At least they are trying to emulate their slam roots with a more streamlined sound built around the classic Chug & Guttural™ combo. There will be those who find this record more palatable than Ingested’s recent deathcore-adjacent trajectory, even if the production takes crushed and curb-stomps it.

    When I originally started spinning Denigration for review, numerous elements kept coming to my attention that now feel obvious, seeing how many things changed at the last minute. What should have been a creative refresh for a band that felt like it was relying a little too much on vocal talent has turned into the exact opposite. Denigration fails to bring the hooks, a key to any good slam record, while also being hamstrung by terrible production, middling vocals, and a lack of creativity. Hopefully, Ingested can come back stronger from all this and make the great album I know they are capable of, but all Denigration did was send me straight to the band’s better records.

    Rating: Bad
    DR: 3| Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Official Site
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #15 #2026 #BritishMetal #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Denigration #Ingested #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #Slam
  13. Ingested – Denigration Review By Lavender Larcenist

    It is hard to believe that Ingested is hitting their eighth record. A band that managed to bring slam to the relative mainstream, combining the grotesque, guttural brutality of extreme music with more core-infused elements. Their previous record, The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams, leaned a little too hard into these elements. Losing much of the slam and focusing on simplified song structures to its detriment. Their latest release, Denigration, marks the first without founding vocalist Jason Evans, someone who defined the sound of Ingested. Unfortunately for the band, the album is also marked by tumult. With the departure of Evans, his replacement was quickly outed over sexual assault allegations, and at the last minute, guitarists Sean Haynes and Andrew Virrueta took over. The album was re-tooled to replace the vocals (something I commend the band for wholeheartedly), but was something excised in the process, or is it a return to form for a band that had seemingly lost its extreme roots?

    I hate to break it to you, but Denigration is an album as messy as the story behind its creation. The album starts strongly, and unfortunately enough, with what is probably its best track. Half the band screams the opening line before the song drops into an absolute blast of destructive drumming. The track is simple but effective, and contains just enough variety and speed to keep things interesting. Haynes and Virrueta do an admirable job bringing heft and technical skill to each track, but they too often devolve into the same bouncing slam riffs to the point of bleeding together. Individual songs are hard to tell apart, and while founding drummer Lyn Jeffs has always been talented, the snare production basically kills his entire performance. This is nearly St. Anger levels of snare-tragedy, and the drums aren’t the only victim; production across the record is uniformly terrible.

    Denigration’s Achilles heel is its soundscape. While dynamic range isn’t necessarily a surefire sign of quality, this album has songs that go as low as a 2 on the scale. Tracks are a cacophony in the worst way; the snare is downright grating and overly loud, while the rest blends into a miasma of noise and chuggery. This is an album with so little range between individual tracks that it can feel like one long song, which is grueling for a slam record. Top this with the fact that the last-minute fill-in vocalists are clearly amateurs, especially compared to Evans, and you get an album that sounds like a debut by a young band making early mistakes. I have to imagine replacing the vocals at the last minute did serious damage to their original mix, but Ingested has a history of production issues on top of this. Combining these two has made for an album that can hurt to listen to at times.

    I don’t mean to disparage the band; in fact, this was a record I was genuinely hoping would be great. I have always had a soft spot for Ingested’s unique brand of slamcore. Evans vocals are top-tier, and they were always willing to take the genre to creative places. Julia Frau’s vocals on “Ashes Lie Still,” Kirk Windstein’s epic chorus on “Another Breath,” and Josh Middleton’s on “Expect to Fail” define the band’s willingness to explore their sound. On Denigration, the guests only work to divert from the monotony between tracks; even then, their addition feels perfunctory. This doesn’t feel like the band that wrote bangers like “Misery Leech,” “Skinned and Fucked,” or “The List.” At least they are trying to emulate their slam roots with a more streamlined sound built around the classic Chug & Guttural™ combo. There will be those who find this record more palatable than Ingested’s recent deathcore-adjacent trajectory, even if the production takes crushed and curb-stomps it.

    When I originally started spinning Denigration for review, numerous elements kept coming to my attention that now feel obvious, seeing how many things changed at the last minute. What should have been a creative refresh for a band that felt like it was relying a little too much on vocal talent has turned into the exact opposite. Denigration fails to bring the hooks, a key to any good slam record, while also being hamstrung by terrible production, middling vocals, and a lack of creativity. Hopefully, Ingested can come back stronger from all this and make the great album I know they are capable of, but all Denigration did was send me straight to the band’s better records.

    Rating: Bad
    DR: 3| Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Official Site
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #15 #2026 #BritishMetal #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Denigration #Ingested #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #Slam
  14. Ingested – Denigration Review By Lavender Larcenist

    It is hard to believe that Ingested is hitting their eighth record. A band that managed to bring slam to the relative mainstream, combining the grotesque, guttural brutality of extreme music with more core-infused elements. Their previous record, The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams, leaned a little too hard into these elements. Losing much of the slam and focusing on simplified song structures to its detriment. Their latest release, Denigration, marks the first without founding vocalist Jason Evans, someone who defined the sound of Ingested. Unfortunately for the band, the album is also marked by tumult. With the departure of Evans, his replacement was quickly outed over sexual assault allegations, and at the last minute, guitarists Sean Haynes and Andrew Virrueta took over. The album was re-tooled to replace the vocals (something I commend the band for wholeheartedly), but was something excised in the process, or is it a return to form for a band that had seemingly lost its extreme roots?

    I hate to break it to you, but Denigration is an album as messy as the story behind its creation. The album starts strongly, and unfortunately enough, with what is probably its best track. Half the band screams the opening line before the song drops into an absolute blast of destructive drumming. The track is simple but effective, and contains just enough variety and speed to keep things interesting. Haynes and Virrueta do an admirable job bringing heft and technical skill to each track, but they too often devolve into the same bouncing slam riffs to the point of bleeding together. Individual songs are hard to tell apart, and while founding drummer Lyn Jeffs has always been talented, the snare production basically kills his entire performance. This is nearly St. Anger levels of snare-tragedy, and the drums aren’t the only victim; production across the record is uniformly terrible.

    Denigration’s Achilles heel is its soundscape. While dynamic range isn’t necessarily a surefire sign of quality, this album has songs that go as low as a 2 on the scale. Tracks are a cacophony in the worst way; the snare is downright grating and overly loud, while the rest blends into a miasma of noise and chuggery. This is an album with so little range between individual tracks that it can feel like one long song, which is grueling for a slam record. Top this with the fact that the last-minute fill-in vocalists are clearly amateurs, especially compared to Evans, and you get an album that sounds like a debut by a young band making early mistakes. I have to imagine replacing the vocals at the last minute did serious damage to their original mix, but Ingested has a history of production issues on top of this. Combining these two has made for an album that can hurt to listen to at times.

    I don’t mean to disparage the band; in fact, this was a record I was genuinely hoping would be great. I have always had a soft spot for Ingested’s unique brand of slamcore. Evans vocals are top-tier, and they were always willing to take the genre to creative places. Julia Frau’s vocals on “Ashes Lie Still,” Kirk Windstein’s epic chorus on “Another Breath,” and Josh Middleton’s on “Expect to Fail” define the band’s willingness to explore their sound. On Denigration, the guests only work to divert from the monotony between tracks; even then, their addition feels perfunctory. This doesn’t feel like the band that wrote bangers like “Misery Leech,” “Skinned and Fucked,” or “The List.” At least they are trying to emulate their slam roots with a more streamlined sound built around the classic Chug & Guttural™ combo. There will be those who find this record more palatable than Ingested’s recent deathcore-adjacent trajectory, even if the production takes crushed and curb-stomps it.

    When I originally started spinning Denigration for review, numerous elements kept coming to my attention that now feel obvious, seeing how many things changed at the last minute. What should have been a creative refresh for a band that felt like it was relying a little too much on vocal talent has turned into the exact opposite. Denigration fails to bring the hooks, a key to any good slam record, while also being hamstrung by terrible production, middling vocals, and a lack of creativity. Hopefully, Ingested can come back stronger from all this and make the great album I know they are capable of, but all Denigration did was send me straight to the band’s better records.

    Rating: Bad
    DR: 3| Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Official Site
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #15 #2026 #BritishMetal #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Denigration #Ingested #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #Slam
  15. Ingested – Denigration Review By Lavender Larcenist

    It is hard to believe that Ingested is hitting their eighth record. A band that managed to bring slam to the relative mainstream, combining the grotesque, guttural brutality of extreme music with more core-infused elements. Their previous record, The Tide of Death and Fractured Dreams, leaned a little too hard into these elements. Losing much of the slam and focusing on simplified song structures to its detriment. Their latest release, Denigration, marks the first without founding vocalist Jason Evans, someone who defined the sound of Ingested. Unfortunately for the band, the album is also marked by tumult. With the departure of Evans, his replacement was quickly outed over sexual assault allegations, and at the last minute, guitarists Sean Haynes and Andrew Virrueta took over. The album was re-tooled to replace the vocals (something I commend the band for wholeheartedly), but was something excised in the process, or is it a return to form for a band that had seemingly lost its extreme roots?

    I hate to break it to you, but Denigration is an album as messy as the story behind its creation. The album starts strongly, and unfortunately enough, with what is probably its best track. Half the band screams the opening line before the song drops into an absolute blast of destructive drumming. The track is simple but effective, and contains just enough variety and speed to keep things interesting. Haynes and Virrueta do an admirable job bringing heft and technical skill to each track, but they too often devolve into the same bouncing slam riffs to the point of bleeding together. Individual songs are hard to tell apart, and while founding drummer Lyn Jeffs has always been talented, the snare production basically kills his entire performance. This is nearly St. Anger levels of snare-tragedy, and the drums aren’t the only victim; production across the record is uniformly terrible.

    Denigration’s Achilles heel is its soundscape. While dynamic range isn’t necessarily a surefire sign of quality, this album has songs that go as low as a 2 on the scale. Tracks are a cacophony in the worst way; the snare is downright grating and overly loud, while the rest blends into a miasma of noise and chuggery. This is an album with so little range between individual tracks that it can feel like one long song, which is grueling for a slam record. Top this with the fact that the last-minute fill-in vocalists are clearly amateurs, especially compared to Evans, and you get an album that sounds like a debut by a young band making early mistakes. I have to imagine replacing the vocals at the last minute did serious damage to their original mix, but Ingested has a history of production issues on top of this. Combining these two has made for an album that can hurt to listen to at times.

    I don’t mean to disparage the band; in fact, this was a record I was genuinely hoping would be great. I have always had a soft spot for Ingested’s unique brand of slamcore. Evans vocals are top-tier, and they were always willing to take the genre to creative places. Julia Frau’s vocals on “Ashes Lie Still,” Kirk Windstein’s epic chorus on “Another Breath,” and Josh Middleton’s on “Expect to Fail” define the band’s willingness to explore their sound. On Denigration, the guests only work to divert from the monotony between tracks; even then, their addition feels perfunctory. This doesn’t feel like the band that wrote bangers like “Misery Leech,” “Skinned and Fucked,” or “The List.” At least they are trying to emulate their slam roots with a more streamlined sound built around the classic Chug & Guttural™ combo. There will be those who find this record more palatable than Ingested’s recent deathcore-adjacent trajectory, even if the production takes crushed and curb-stomps it.

    When I originally started spinning Denigration for review, numerous elements kept coming to my attention that now feel obvious, seeing how many things changed at the last minute. What should have been a creative refresh for a band that felt like it was relying a little too much on vocal talent has turned into the exact opposite. Denigration fails to bring the hooks, a key to any good slam record, while also being hamstrung by terrible production, middling vocals, and a lack of creativity. Hopefully, Ingested can come back stronger from all this and make the great album I know they are capable of, but all Denigration did was send me straight to the band’s better records.

    Rating: Bad
    DR: 3| Format Reviewed: 320 kbps mp3
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites: Bandcamp | Official Site
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #15 #2026 #BritishMetal #DeathMetal #Deathcore #Denigration #Ingested #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #Slam
  16. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Yoth Iria - Gone with the Devil (FULL ALBUM): ARTIST: Yoth Iria
    ALBUM: Gone with the Devil
    RELEASE DATE: 05/08/2026

    US Store: metalblade.indiemerch.com/coll
    EU Store: shop.metalblade.de/collections

    01. Dare to Rebel (00:00)
    02. Woven Spells of a Demon (05:05)
    03. The Blind Eye of Antichrist (09:43)
    04. I, Totem (14:02)
    05. 3am (18:46)
    06. Give 'Em My Beautiful Hell (23:26)
    07. Once in a Blue Moon (27:43)… dlvr.it/TSR7Rb LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  17. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Ingested - Denigration (FULL ALBUM): ARTIST: Ingested
    ALBUM: Denigration
    RELEASE DATE: 05/08/2026

    US Store: metalblade.indiemerch.com/coll
    EU Store: shop.metalblade.de/collections

    01. Dragged Apart [feat. Skyler Conder] (00:00)
    02. Merciless Reflection [feat. PeelingFlesh] (05:31)
    03. Watch You Fold [feat. John Gallagher] (08:44)
    04. Stitch by Stitch (12:37)
    05. We Are All Inherently Evil (17:03)
    06.… dlvr.it/TSR7Pz LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  18. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Take another dive into Endseeker's "Enemies Of Peace"!: After twelve years of seeking, Endseeker have finally found the end. Their new EP 'Coffin Born' out June 19th, will mark the final chapter as a band.

    Check out their first single/video for "Enemies Of Peace" and pre-order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/endseeker/ dlvr.it/TSPTlR LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  19. Metal Blade Video 🤘 If These Trees Could Talk - Blurry Creatures (Official): Buy here: metalblade.com/ifthesetreescou
    In 2024, acclaimed instrumental post-rock band IF THESE TREES COULD TALK released a single, “Trail Of Whispering Giants,” the group’s first new music in eight years. Fans clamored for more. The wait is over with The Hidden Hand, a full album of nine stellar, provocative songs set for release on July 10th… dlvr.it/TSNc3x LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  20. Metal Blade Video 🤘 If These Trees Could Talk unveil their new single "Blurry Creatures"! New album out July 10th!: If These Trees Could Talk unveil their upcoming album, 'The Hidden Hand' - out July 10th!

    Pre-order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/ifthesetreescou dlvr.it/TSNc2y LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  21. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Lifesick - Die with Me (Official Music Video): Buy here: metalblade.com/lifesick
    “Die With Me is about staring death in the face and not backing down. Pure aggression from start to finish, with the ‘Die With Me’ chant pushing everything forward. It’s meant to feel overwhelming — like everything hitting at once.” – Lifesick

    “Die With Me” Lyrics
    Die with me Die with me Die with me, die Die with… dlvr.it/TSNRDZ LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  22. Yoth Iria – Gone with the Devil Review By Spicie Forrest

    When I see the title of Yoth Iria’s third full-length, Gone with the Devil, I can’t help but think of the Spanish farewell, “vaya con Dios,” or “go with God.” Originally—and still, in some circles—the phrase was an earnest blessing and wish for safety; however, centuries have stained it with a negative connotation. The phrase can now showcase a speaker’s disapproval for the recipient’s intended actions, implying that whatever they’re going to do is dumb enough that only God will be able to get them through it. After two enjoyable-to-impressive albums, is Yoth Iria’s cheeky inversion of the phrase a genuine wish for guidance from the Son of the Morning, or is Gone with the Devil a hot mess only Satan can save?

    On 2021 debut As the Flame Withers and 2024 follow-up Blazing Inferno, Yoth Iria’s sound was focused—Hellenic black metal injected with a mix of 70s-80s metal and Middle Eastern atmospherics. Gone with the Devil sees the Athens-based five-piece employ a more exploratory, instinctual, and unrestricted approach to composition…or so the promo material says. In actuality, Yoth Iria leans into accessibility. Elements of their original Hellenic sound remain (“The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” “Woven Spells of a Demon”), infusing the album with a warmth typically absent in black metal. But with tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on an Equilibrium record (“Dare to Rebel”), the newest Arch Enemy (“I Totem,” “Blessed Be He Who Enters”), or a metalized Imagine Dragons (“3AM,” “Once in a Blue Moon”), Gone with the Devil feels fundamentally different from previous releases.

    In pursuing wider appeal, Yoth Iria dilutes much of what made them unique, and Gone with the Devil is less engaging for it. The markers of heavy music are all still present—blast beats, harsh vocals, distorted guitars, etc.—but the soul that gives an album weight is totally absent. “3AM” is as forgettable as elevator muzak, and much of the back half of Gone with the Devil1 shares a similar mid/slow-paced rhythm that barely gets my eyes open, let alone my heart pumping. Predictable song structures and played-out tropes, like whispers preceding a heavier passage (“I Totem”) or synths/folk instrumentals returning to bolster a final chorus (“Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), give the impression that Yoth Iria is just going through the motions or following someone else’s recipe.

    This isn’t to say Gone with the Devil is bad. Yoth Iria, as a band, is obviously wildly talented, and what they do play, they play well. There are some songwriting bungles, like the end of “I Totem,” the pacing of “Harut-Government-Fallen,” and the choral chanting of “The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” but the album flows well and sounds great. Guitarists Nikolas Perlepe and Naberius weave a lush tapestry of blackened trem-picked riffs and retro leads (“I Totem,” “Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), while bassist Jim Mutilator’s (ex-Rotting Christ, ex-Varathron) presence and influence infuse every second of Gone with the Devil. Vocalist HE and drummer Bill “Vongaar” Stavrianidis have excellent synergy, driving the album’s atmosphere and the ebb and flow of its tension. These performances shine thanks to Gone with the Devil’s production. The vocals might be a smidge forward and the rhythm guitars a touch back, but the mix is both intimate and spacious, offering warmth and clarity on an open soundstage.

    Sound and performance can’t save an album, though. Where once Yoth Iria demanded my attention with a unique sound, Gone with the Devil seems geared toward maximum radio engagement or being inoffensive corporate playlist fodder. During my time with the album, I often felt like I was listening to a Temu version of Havukruunu. A seemingly intentional forfeiture of individuality, vapid filler track energy,2 and uninteresting—though adeptly played—instrumental performances make Yoth Iria’s latest a far cry from their previous work. Again, Gone with the Devil isn’t a bad album per se. It’s just milquetoast and unremarkable.

    Rating: 2.0/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: PCM
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites:Official | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #20 #2026 #ArchEnemy #BlackMetal #Equilibrium #GoneWithTheDevil #GreekMetal #Havukruunu #ImagineDragons #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist #Varathron #YothIria
  23. Yoth Iria – Gone with the Devil Review By Spicie Forrest

    When I see the title of Yoth Iria’s third full-length, Gone with the Devil, I can’t help but think of the Spanish farewell, “vaya con Dios,” or “go with God.” Originally—and still, in some circles—the phrase was an earnest blessing and wish for safety; however, centuries have stained it with a negative connotation. The phrase can now showcase a speaker’s disapproval for the recipient’s intended actions, implying that whatever they’re going to do is dumb enough that only God will be able to get them through it. After two enjoyable-to-impressive albums, is Yoth Iria’s cheeky inversion of the phrase a genuine wish for guidance from the Son of the Morning, or is Gone with the Devil a hot mess only Satan can save?

    On 2021 debut As the Flame Withers and 2024 follow-up Blazing Inferno, Yoth Iria’s sound was focused—Hellenic black metal injected with a mix of 70s-80s metal and Middle Eastern atmospherics. Gone with the Devil sees the Athens-based five-piece employ a more exploratory, instinctual, and unrestricted approach to composition…or so the promo material says. In actuality, Yoth Iria leans into accessibility. Elements of their original Hellenic sound remain (“The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” “Woven Spells of a Demon”), infusing the album with a warmth typically absent in black metal. But with tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on an Equilibrium record (“Dare to Rebel”), the newest Arch Enemy (“I Totem,” “Blessed Be He Who Enters”), or a metalized Imagine Dragons (“3AM,” “Once in a Blue Moon”), Gone with the Devil feels fundamentally different from previous releases.

    In pursuing wider appeal, Yoth Iria dilutes much of what made them unique, and Gone with the Devil is less engaging for it. The markers of heavy music are all still present—blast beats, harsh vocals, distorted guitars, etc.—but the soul that gives an album weight is totally absent. “3AM” is as forgettable as elevator muzak, and much of the back half of Gone with the Devil1 shares a similar mid/slow-paced rhythm that barely gets my eyes open, let alone my heart pumping. Predictable song structures and played-out tropes, like whispers preceding a heavier passage (“I Totem”) or synths/folk instrumentals returning to bolster a final chorus (“Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), give the impression that Yoth Iria is just going through the motions or following someone else’s recipe.

    This isn’t to say Gone with the Devil is bad. Yoth Iria, as a band, is obviously wildly talented, and what they do play, they play well. There are some songwriting bungles, like the end of “I Totem,” the pacing of “Harut-Government-Fallen,” and the choral chanting of “The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” but the album flows well and sounds great. Guitarists Nikolas Perlepe and Naberius weave a lush tapestry of blackened trem-picked riffs and retro leads (“I Totem,” “Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), while bassist Jim Mutilator’s (ex-Rotting Christ, ex-Varathron) presence and influence infuse every second of Gone with the Devil. Vocalist HE and drummer Bill “Vongaar” Stavrianidis have excellent synergy, driving the album’s atmosphere and the ebb and flow of its tension. These performances shine thanks to Gone with the Devil’s production. The vocals might be a smidge forward and the rhythm guitars a touch back, but the mix is both intimate and spacious, offering warmth and clarity on an open soundstage.

    Sound and performance can’t save an album, though. Where once Yoth Iria demanded my attention with a unique sound, Gone with the Devil seems geared toward maximum radio engagement or being inoffensive corporate playlist fodder. During my time with the album, I often felt like I was listening to a Temu version of Havukruunu. A seemingly intentional forfeiture of individuality, vapid filler track energy,2 and uninteresting—though adeptly played—instrumental performances make Yoth Iria’s latest a far cry from their previous work. Again, Gone with the Devil isn’t a bad album per se. It’s just milquetoast and unremarkable.

    Rating: 2.0/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: PCM
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites:Official | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #20 #2026 #ArchEnemy #BlackMetal #Equilibrium #GoneWithTheDevil #GreekMetal #Havukruunu #ImagineDragons #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist #Varathron #YothIria
  24. Yoth Iria – Gone with the Devil Review By Spicie Forrest

    When I see the title of Yoth Iria’s third full-length, Gone with the Devil, I can’t help but think of the Spanish farewell, “vaya con Dios,” or “go with God.” Originally—and still, in some circles—the phrase was an earnest blessing and wish for safety; however, centuries have stained it with a negative connotation. The phrase can now showcase a speaker’s disapproval for the recipient’s intended actions, implying that whatever they’re going to do is dumb enough that only God will be able to get them through it. After two enjoyable-to-impressive albums, is Yoth Iria’s cheeky inversion of the phrase a genuine wish for guidance from the Son of the Morning, or is Gone with the Devil a hot mess only Satan can save?

    On 2021 debut As the Flame Withers and 2024 follow-up Blazing Inferno, Yoth Iria’s sound was focused—Hellenic black metal injected with a mix of 70s-80s metal and Middle Eastern atmospherics. Gone with the Devil sees the Athens-based five-piece employ a more exploratory, instinctual, and unrestricted approach to composition…or so the promo material says. In actuality, Yoth Iria leans into accessibility. Elements of their original Hellenic sound remain (“The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” “Woven Spells of a Demon”), infusing the album with a warmth typically absent in black metal. But with tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on an Equilibrium record (“Dare to Rebel”), the newest Arch Enemy (“I Totem,” “Blessed Be He Who Enters”), or a metalized Imagine Dragons (“3AM,” “Once in a Blue Moon”), Gone with the Devil feels fundamentally different from previous releases.

    In pursuing wider appeal, Yoth Iria dilutes much of what made them unique, and Gone with the Devil is less engaging for it. The markers of heavy music are all still present—blast beats, harsh vocals, distorted guitars, etc.—but the soul that gives an album weight is totally absent. “3AM” is as forgettable as elevator muzak, and much of the back half of Gone with the Devil1 shares a similar mid/slow-paced rhythm that barely gets my eyes open, let alone my heart pumping. Predictable song structures and played-out tropes, like whispers preceding a heavier passage (“I Totem”) or synths/folk instrumentals returning to bolster a final chorus (“Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), give the impression that Yoth Iria is just going through the motions or following someone else’s recipe.

    This isn’t to say Gone with the Devil is bad. Yoth Iria, as a band, is obviously wildly talented, and what they do play, they play well. There are some songwriting bungles, like the end of “I Totem,” the pacing of “Harut-Government-Fallen,” and the choral chanting of “The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” but the album flows well and sounds great. Guitarists Nikolas Perlepe and Naberius weave a lush tapestry of blackened trem-picked riffs and retro leads (“I Totem,” “Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), while bassist Jim Mutilator’s (ex-Rotting Christ, ex-Varathron) presence and influence infuse every second of Gone with the Devil. Vocalist HE and drummer Bill “Vongaar” Stavrianidis have excellent synergy, driving the album’s atmosphere and the ebb and flow of its tension. These performances shine thanks to Gone with the Devil’s production. The vocals might be a smidge forward and the rhythm guitars a touch back, but the mix is both intimate and spacious, offering warmth and clarity on an open soundstage.

    Sound and performance can’t save an album, though. Where once Yoth Iria demanded my attention with a unique sound, Gone with the Devil seems geared toward maximum radio engagement or being inoffensive corporate playlist fodder. During my time with the album, I often felt like I was listening to a Temu version of Havukruunu. A seemingly intentional forfeiture of individuality, vapid filler track energy,2 and uninteresting—though adeptly played—instrumental performances make Yoth Iria’s latest a far cry from their previous work. Again, Gone with the Devil isn’t a bad album per se. It’s just milquetoast and unremarkable.

    Rating: 2.0/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: PCM
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites:Official | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #20 #2026 #ArchEnemy #BlackMetal #Equilibrium #GoneWithTheDevil #GreekMetal #Havukruunu #ImagineDragons #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist #Varathron #YothIria
  25. Yoth Iria – Gone with the Devil Review By Spicie Forrest

    When I see the title of Yoth Iria’s third full-length, Gone with the Devil, I can’t help but think of the Spanish farewell, “vaya con Dios,” or “go with God.” Originally—and still, in some circles—the phrase was an earnest blessing and wish for safety; however, centuries have stained it with a negative connotation. The phrase can now showcase a speaker’s disapproval for the recipient’s intended actions, implying that whatever they’re going to do is dumb enough that only God will be able to get them through it. After two enjoyable-to-impressive albums, is Yoth Iria’s cheeky inversion of the phrase a genuine wish for guidance from the Son of the Morning, or is Gone with the Devil a hot mess only Satan can save?

    On 2021 debut As the Flame Withers and 2024 follow-up Blazing Inferno, Yoth Iria’s sound was focused—Hellenic black metal injected with a mix of 70s-80s metal and Middle Eastern atmospherics. Gone with the Devil sees the Athens-based five-piece employ a more exploratory, instinctual, and unrestricted approach to composition…or so the promo material says. In actuality, Yoth Iria leans into accessibility. Elements of their original Hellenic sound remain (“The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” “Woven Spells of a Demon”), infusing the album with a warmth typically absent in black metal. But with tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on an Equilibrium record (“Dare to Rebel”), the newest Arch Enemy (“I Totem,” “Blessed Be He Who Enters”), or a metalized Imagine Dragons (“3AM,” “Once in a Blue Moon”), Gone with the Devil feels fundamentally different from previous releases.

    In pursuing wider appeal, Yoth Iria dilutes much of what made them unique, and Gone with the Devil is less engaging for it. The markers of heavy music are all still present—blast beats, harsh vocals, distorted guitars, etc.—but the soul that gives an album weight is totally absent. “3AM” is as forgettable as elevator muzak, and much of the back half of Gone with the Devil1 shares a similar mid/slow-paced rhythm that barely gets my eyes open, let alone my heart pumping. Predictable song structures and played-out tropes, like whispers preceding a heavier passage (“I Totem”) or synths/folk instrumentals returning to bolster a final chorus (“Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), give the impression that Yoth Iria is just going through the motions or following someone else’s recipe.

    This isn’t to say Gone with the Devil is bad. Yoth Iria, as a band, is obviously wildly talented, and what they do play, they play well. There are some songwriting bungles, like the end of “I Totem,” the pacing of “Harut-Government-Fallen,” and the choral chanting of “The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” but the album flows well and sounds great. Guitarists Nikolas Perlepe and Naberius weave a lush tapestry of blackened trem-picked riffs and retro leads (“I Totem,” “Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), while bassist Jim Mutilator’s (ex-Rotting Christ, ex-Varathron) presence and influence infuse every second of Gone with the Devil. Vocalist HE and drummer Bill “Vongaar” Stavrianidis have excellent synergy, driving the album’s atmosphere and the ebb and flow of its tension. These performances shine thanks to Gone with the Devil’s production. The vocals might be a smidge forward and the rhythm guitars a touch back, but the mix is both intimate and spacious, offering warmth and clarity on an open soundstage.

    Sound and performance can’t save an album, though. Where once Yoth Iria demanded my attention with a unique sound, Gone with the Devil seems geared toward maximum radio engagement or being inoffensive corporate playlist fodder. During my time with the album, I often felt like I was listening to a Temu version of Havukruunu. A seemingly intentional forfeiture of individuality, vapid filler track energy,2 and uninteresting—though adeptly played—instrumental performances make Yoth Iria’s latest a far cry from their previous work. Again, Gone with the Devil isn’t a bad album per se. It’s just milquetoast and unremarkable.

    Rating: 2.0/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: PCM
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites:Official | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #20 #2026 #ArchEnemy #BlackMetal #Equilibrium #GoneWithTheDevil #GreekMetal #Havukruunu #ImagineDragons #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist #Varathron #YothIria
  26. Yoth Iria – Gone with the Devil Review By Spicie Forrest

    When I see the title of Yoth Iria’s third full-length, Gone with the Devil, I can’t help but think of the Spanish farewell, “vaya con Dios,” or “go with God.” Originally—and still, in some circles—the phrase was an earnest blessing and wish for safety; however, centuries have stained it with a negative connotation. The phrase can now showcase a speaker’s disapproval for the recipient’s intended actions, implying that whatever they’re going to do is dumb enough that only God will be able to get them through it. After two enjoyable-to-impressive albums, is Yoth Iria’s cheeky inversion of the phrase a genuine wish for guidance from the Son of the Morning, or is Gone with the Devil a hot mess only Satan can save?

    On 2021 debut As the Flame Withers and 2024 follow-up Blazing Inferno, Yoth Iria’s sound was focused—Hellenic black metal injected with a mix of 70s-80s metal and Middle Eastern atmospherics. Gone with the Devil sees the Athens-based five-piece employ a more exploratory, instinctual, and unrestricted approach to composition…or so the promo material says. In actuality, Yoth Iria leans into accessibility. Elements of their original Hellenic sound remain (“The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” “Woven Spells of a Demon”), infusing the album with a warmth typically absent in black metal. But with tracks that wouldn’t be out of place on an Equilibrium record (“Dare to Rebel”), the newest Arch Enemy (“I Totem,” “Blessed Be He Who Enters”), or a metalized Imagine Dragons (“3AM,” “Once in a Blue Moon”), Gone with the Devil feels fundamentally different from previous releases.

    In pursuing wider appeal, Yoth Iria dilutes much of what made them unique, and Gone with the Devil is less engaging for it. The markers of heavy music are all still present—blast beats, harsh vocals, distorted guitars, etc.—but the soul that gives an album weight is totally absent. “3AM” is as forgettable as elevator muzak, and much of the back half of Gone with the Devil1 shares a similar mid/slow-paced rhythm that barely gets my eyes open, let alone my heart pumping. Predictable song structures and played-out tropes, like whispers preceding a heavier passage (“I Totem”) or synths/folk instrumentals returning to bolster a final chorus (“Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), give the impression that Yoth Iria is just going through the motions or following someone else’s recipe.

    This isn’t to say Gone with the Devil is bad. Yoth Iria, as a band, is obviously wildly talented, and what they do play, they play well. There are some songwriting bungles, like the end of “I Totem,” the pacing of “Harut-Government-Fallen,” and the choral chanting of “The Blind Eye of Antichrist,” but the album flows well and sounds great. Guitarists Nikolas Perlepe and Naberius weave a lush tapestry of blackened trem-picked riffs and retro leads (“I Totem,” “Give ‘Em My Beautiful Hell”), while bassist Jim Mutilator’s (ex-Rotting Christ, ex-Varathron) presence and influence infuse every second of Gone with the Devil. Vocalist HE and drummer Bill “Vongaar” Stavrianidis have excellent synergy, driving the album’s atmosphere and the ebb and flow of its tension. These performances shine thanks to Gone with the Devil’s production. The vocals might be a smidge forward and the rhythm guitars a touch back, but the mix is both intimate and spacious, offering warmth and clarity on an open soundstage.

    Sound and performance can’t save an album, though. Where once Yoth Iria demanded my attention with a unique sound, Gone with the Devil seems geared toward maximum radio engagement or being inoffensive corporate playlist fodder. During my time with the album, I often felt like I was listening to a Temu version of Havukruunu. A seemingly intentional forfeiture of individuality, vapid filler track energy,2 and uninteresting—though adeptly played—instrumental performances make Yoth Iria’s latest a far cry from their previous work. Again, Gone with the Devil isn’t a bad album per se. It’s just milquetoast and unremarkable.

    Rating: 2.0/5.0
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: PCM
    Label: Metal Blade Records
    Websites:Official | Bandcamp | Facebook | Instagram
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    #20 #2026 #ArchEnemy #BlackMetal #Equilibrium #GoneWithTheDevil #GreekMetal #Havukruunu #ImagineDragons #May26 #MetalBladeRecords #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist #Varathron #YothIria
  27. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Looks like we had a Dååthiversary yesterday; celebrating TWO years of Dååth's 'The Deceivers'!: Buy here: metalblade.com/daath/ dlvr.it/TSMYpk LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  28. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Whitechapel vinyl reissues for Mark Of The Blade / Our Endless War hit the shops!: Mark Of The Blade (10th Anniversary Reissue)
    Our Endless War

    Indie Merch (US): metalblade.indiemerch.com/coll

    Kings Road Merch (EU): shop.metalblade.de/collections dlvr.it/TSKLbH LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  29. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Endseeker drops new single from their final EP. Check out "Enemies Of Peace" NOW! #metal: After twelve years of seeking, Endseeker have finally found the end. Their new EP 'Coffin Born' out June 19th, will mark the final chapter as a band.

    Check out their first single/video for "Enemies Of Peace" and pre-order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/endseeker/ dlvr.it/TSJWdL LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  30. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Endseeker - Enemies of Peace (Official Video): Buy here: metalblade.com/endseeker
    After twelve years of seeking, German death metal hellraisers ENDSEEKER have finally found the end. The fiery "Coffin Born" EP, set for release on June 19, 2026 via Metal Blade Records, will mark the final chapter as a band.

    "We’ve accomplished more than we have ever imagined in our wildest… dlvr.it/TSJWbk LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  31. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Whitechapel - Mark Of The Blade / Our Endless War (Unboxing): Heads up Whitechapel fans! Two new chapel reissues have officially hit the shop!

    Mark Of The Blade (10th Anniversary Reissue)
    Our Endless War

    Indie Merch (US): metalblade.indiemerch.com/coll

    Kings Road Merch (EU): shop.metalblade.de/collections dlvr.it/TSHbnq LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  32. Metalheads can laugh too🤘😉

    📍 Junkyard Dortmund
    💿 #MetalBladeRecords

    | #IOTUNN | Oliver Svensson | Angela Curiello | Jens Nicolai | Jesper Gras | Bjørn Wind | Jón Aldara | Eskil Rask

  33. Metalheads can laugh too🤘😉

    📍 Junkyard Dortmund
    💿 #MetalBladeRecords

    | #IOTUNN | Oliver Svensson | Angela Curiello | Jens Nicolai | Jesper Gras | Bjørn Wind | Jón Aldara | Eskil Rask

  34. Metalheads can laugh too🤘😉

    📍 Junkyard Dortmund
    💿 #MetalBladeRecords

    | #IOTUNN | Oliver Svensson | Angela Curiello | Jens Nicolai | Jesper Gras | Bjørn Wind | Jón Aldara | Eskil Rask

  35. Metalheads can laugh too🤘😉

    📍 Junkyard Dortmund
    💿 #MetalBladeRecords

    | #IOTUNN | Oliver Svensson | Angela Curiello | Jens Nicolai | Jesper Gras | Bjørn Wind | Jón Aldara | Eskil Rask

  36. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Time to take another shot! Dive back into Armored Saint's "Hit A Moonshot"!: Watch/listen here: youtu.be/sHSBGCitqYc
    Armored Saint's new album, 'Emotion Factory Reset' out May 22nd!
    Pre-order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/armoredsaint/ dlvr.it/TSGjpT LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  37. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Six Feet Under - Mister Blood and Guts (Official Video): Buy here: metalblade.com/sixfeetunder
    "Next To Die" marks a new creative high for SIX FEET UNDER, its dozen songs marking the band’s fifteenth album since 1995’s Haunted. The record is essentially broken down into two different sides – Death and Groove – resulting in an aural masterwork that satisfies SIX FEET UNDER as artists,… dlvr.it/TSGZq5 LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  38. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Six Feet Under's new video for "Mister Blood And Guts" is now playing!: New album, 'Next To Die' OUT NOW!
    Stream/order here: metalblade.com/sixfeetunder/ dlvr.it/TSGZpL LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  39. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Goo Goo Dolls - Hold Me Up / Jed (Unboxing): Two Goo Goo Dolls classics are getting the reissue treatment on wax!

    'Jed' (1989)
    'Hold Me Up' (1990)

    Order here: metalblade.indiemerch.com/sear dlvr.it/TSGQK0 LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  40. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Two Goo Goo Dolls classics are getting the reissue treatment on wax!: Order here: metalblade.indiemerch.com/sear

    'Jed' (1989)
    'Hold Me Up' (1990) dlvr.it/TSGQJC LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal

  41. Metal Blade Video 🤘 Six Feet Under's new record, 'Next To Die' is officially out NOW! New video dropping Tuesday!: Stream/order your copy HERE: metalblade.com/sixfeetunder/

    Set a reminder for the "Mister Blood & Guts" video premiere here: youtu.be/Kdjjlki1M1E dlvr.it/TSCSJL LinkInBio for More 🤘 #MetalBladeRecords #HeavyMetal #Metal