#nightside — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #nightside, aggregated by home.social.
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NightSide with Dan Rea – Rundown for February 20, 2026 | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/583535/ #Baseball #DanRea #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea #NipponProfessionalBaseball #NPB
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NightSide with Dan Rea – Rundown for February 20, 2026 | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/583535/ #Baseball #DanRea #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea #NipponProfessionalBaseball #NPB
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Japanese Star Kazuma Okamoto Makes MLB Decision: Report | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/569995/ #agreement #Baseball #DanRea #decision #japanese #JeffPassan #KazumaOkamoto #MLB #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea #NipponProfessionalBaseball #NPB #report #sources #TorontoBlueJays
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Japanese Star Kazuma Okamoto Makes MLB Decision: Report | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.rawchili.com/mlb/569995/ #agreement #Baseball #DanRea #decision #japanese #JeffPassan #KazumaOkamoto #MLB #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea #NipponProfessionalBaseball #NPB #report #sources #TorontoBlueJays
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Record(s) o’ the Month – February 2025
By Steel Druhm
2025 is rolling along at a disturbingly brisk pace, and because of this (and through no fault of our own), we find ourselves a few months behind with our Record(s) o’ the Month pieces. February had a collection of big-time releases, and no matter what we selected, some quality albums would get unfairly shafted. As always, we used our proprietary blend of democratic voting and top-down dictatorial edicts to arrive at the big winners. This is the violence forever inherent in the AMG system, and it’s worked for us so far.1 Embrace it.
Should it come as any surprise that the Finnish warriors in Havukruunu claimed the throne for February by laying waste to all pretenders and false prophets? They’ve been ruling the Bathorycore roost with an iron fist for years, and on Tavastland, they keep the swords sharp and shields stout. As before, the burly Viking metal sound references Bathory, Immortal, and Moonsorrow at their best, as Havukruunu march across muddy fields of battle in blood-spattered armor. This is martial music to be spun with axe in hand and glory in thine heart. Epic, sweeping soundscapes unfold with a vintage black metal energy, propelling robust tales of heroes and conquests. War chants join pounding drums and scathing riffs, and you’ll feel like He-Manowar by the end of the first song. As a loincloth-clad and oiled-up Doc Grier proudly proclaimed, “Not only does Tavastland continue to show a band that never disappoints—and continues to get better—but it’s one of their best-produced records.” Get this or be cast off Crom’s Mountain.
Runner(s) up:
Grima // Nightside – From Russia with love comes the atmospheric black/folk sounds of Grima once again. On Nightside, the accordion is still the law, and urgency and aggression are at a premium. Traces of grand symphonic doom flit around the edges as Grima plays with a sweeping tapestry of sound, keeping the atmosphere at the forefront. The writing is sharp and slick, and the folk elements are used adroitly to accent and offset the heaviness. As a well-impressed Carcharodon gushed, “Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date.” Accordions never lie.
Maud the Moth // The Distaff – Putting genre labels on Maud the Moth feels futile, but the project of vocalist Amaya López-Carromero references darkwave, post-rock, and prog as The Distaff weaves its odd and unique spellcraft. Through twists and turns, López-Carromero is the guiding light, leading the listener through myriad moods and emotions, always enchanting, beguiling. The Distaff may not qualify as a metal album, but it lurks outside the genre, waiting to strike the unwary. It left a stunned Dolphin Whisperer gasping, ” Without a peer, Maud the Moth threatens to fly freely at the top of its own constructed throne.” Leave the lights on and let the right one fly in.
#2025 #Grima #Havukruunu #MaudTheMoth #Nightside #RecordSOTheMonth #Tavastland #TheDistaff
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Record(s) o’ the Month – February 2025
By Steel Druhm
2025 is rolling along at a disturbingly brisk pace, and because of this (and through no fault of our own), we find ourselves a few months behind with our Record(s) o’ the Month pieces. February had a collection of big-time releases, and no matter what we selected, some quality albums would get unfairly shafted. As always, we used our proprietary blend of democratic voting and top-down dictatorial edicts to arrive at the big winners. This is the violence forever inherent in the AMG system, and it’s worked for us so far.1 Embrace it.
Should it come as any surprise that the Finnish warriors in Havukruunu claimed the throne for February by laying waste to all pretenders and false prophets? They’ve been ruling the Bathorycore roost with an iron fist for years, and on Tavastland, they keep the swords sharp and shields stout. As before, the burly Viking metal sound references Bathory, Immortal, and Moonsorrow at their best, as Havukruunu march across muddy fields of battle in blood-spattered armor. This is martial music to be spun with axe in hand and glory in thine heart. Epic, sweeping soundscapes unfold with a vintage black metal energy, propelling robust tales of heroes and conquests. War chants join pounding drums and scathing riffs, and you’ll feel like He-Manowar by the end of the first song. As a loincloth-clad and oiled-up Doc Grier proudly proclaimed, “Not only does Tavastland continue to show a band that never disappoints—and continues to get better—but it’s one of their best-produced records.” Get this or be cast off Crom’s Mountain.
Runner(s) up:
Grima // Nightside – From Russia with love comes the atmospheric black/folk sounds of Grima once again. On Nightside, the accordion is still the law, and urgency and aggression are at a premium. Traces of grand symphonic doom flit around the edges as Grima plays with a sweeping tapestry of sound, keeping the atmosphere at the forefront. The writing is sharp and slick, and the folk elements are used adroitly to accent and offset the heaviness. As a well-impressed Carcharodon gushed, “Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date.” Accordions never lie.
Maud the Moth // The Distaff – Putting genre labels on Maud the Moth feels futile, but the project of vocalist Amaya López-Carromero references darkwave, post-rock, and prog as The Distaff weaves its odd and unique spellcraft. Through twists and turns, López-Carromero is the guiding light, leading the listener through myriad moods and emotions, always enchanting, beguiling. The Distaff may not qualify as a metal album, but it lurks outside the genre, waiting to strike the unwary. It left a stunned Dolphin Whisperer gasping, ” Without a peer, Maud the Moth threatens to fly freely at the top of its own constructed throne.” Leave the lights on and let the right one fly in.
#2025 #Grima #Havukruunu #MaudTheMoth #Nightside #RecordSOTheMonth #Tavastland #TheDistaff
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Record(s) o’ the Month – February 2025
By Steel Druhm
2025 is rolling along at a disturbingly brisk pace, and because of this (and through no fault of our own), we find ourselves a few months behind with our Record(s) o’ the Month pieces. February had a collection of big-time releases, and no matter what we selected, some quality albums would get unfairly shafted. As always, we used our proprietary blend of democratic voting and top-down dictatorial edicts to arrive at the big winners. This is the violence forever inherent in the AMG system, and it’s worked for us so far.1 Embrace it.
Should it come as any surprise that the Finnish warriors in Havukruunu claimed the throne for February by laying waste to all pretenders and false prophets? They’ve been ruling the Bathorycore roost with an iron fist for years, and on Tavastland, they keep the swords sharp and shields stout. As before, the burly Viking metal sound references Bathory, Immortal, and Moonsorrow at their best, as Havukruunu march across muddy fields of battle in blood-spattered armor. This is martial music to be spun with axe in hand and glory in thine heart. Epic, sweeping soundscapes unfold with a vintage black metal energy, propelling robust tales of heroes and conquests. War chants join pounding drums and scathing riffs, and you’ll feel like He-Manowar by the end of the first song. As a loincloth-clad and oiled-up Doc Grier proudly proclaimed, “Not only does Tavastland continue to show a band that never disappoints—and continues to get better—but it’s one of their best-produced records.” Get this or be cast off Crom’s Mountain.
Runner(s) up:
Grima // Nightside – From Russia with love comes the atmospheric black/folk sounds of Grima once again. On Nightside, the accordion is still the law, and urgency and aggression are at a premium. Traces of grand symphonic doom flit around the edges as Grima plays with a sweeping tapestry of sound, keeping the atmosphere at the forefront. The writing is sharp and slick, and the folk elements are used adroitly to accent and offset the heaviness. As a well-impressed Carcharodon gushed, “Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date.” Accordions never lie.
Maud the Moth // The Distaff – Putting genre labels on Maud the Moth feels futile, but the project of vocalist Amaya López-Carromero references darkwave, post-rock, and prog as The Distaff weaves its odd and unique spellcraft. Through twists and turns, López-Carromero is the guiding light, leading the listener through myriad moods and emotions, always enchanting, beguiling. The Distaff may not qualify as a metal album, but it lurks outside the genre, waiting to strike the unwary. It left a stunned Dolphin Whisperer gasping, ” Without a peer, Maud the Moth threatens to fly freely at the top of its own constructed throne.” Leave the lights on and let the right one fly in.
#2025 #Grima #Havukruunu #MaudTheMoth #Nightside #RecordSOTheMonth #Tavastland #TheDistaff
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Record(s) o’ the Month – February 2025
By Steel Druhm
2025 is rolling along at a disturbingly brisk pace, and because of this (and through no fault of our own), we find ourselves a few months behind with our Record(s) o’ the Month pieces. February had a collection of big-time releases, and no matter what we selected, some quality albums would get unfairly shafted. As always, we used our proprietary blend of democratic voting and top-down dictatorial edicts to arrive at the big winners. This is the violence forever inherent in the AMG system, and it’s worked for us so far.1 Embrace it.
Should it come as any surprise that the Finnish warriors in Havukruunu claimed the throne for February by laying waste to all pretenders and false prophets? They’ve been ruling the Bathorycore roost with an iron fist for years, and on Tavastland, they keep the swords sharp and shields stout. As before, the burly Viking metal sound references Bathory, Immortal, and Moonsorrow at their best, as Havukruunu march across muddy fields of battle in blood-spattered armor. This is martial music to be spun with axe in hand and glory in thine heart. Epic, sweeping soundscapes unfold with a vintage black metal energy, propelling robust tales of heroes and conquests. War chants join pounding drums and scathing riffs, and you’ll feel like He-Manowar by the end of the first song. As a loincloth-clad and oiled-up Doc Grier proudly proclaimed, “Not only does Tavastland continue to show a band that never disappoints—and continues to get better—but it’s one of their best-produced records.” Get this or be cast off Crom’s Mountain.
Runner(s) up:
Grima // Nightside – From Russia with love comes the atmospheric black/folk sounds of Grima once again. On Nightside, the accordion is still the law, and urgency and aggression are at a premium. Traces of grand symphonic doom flit around the edges as Grima plays with a sweeping tapestry of sound, keeping the atmosphere at the forefront. The writing is sharp and slick, and the folk elements are used adroitly to accent and offset the heaviness. As a well-impressed Carcharodon gushed, “Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date.” Accordions never lie.
Maud the Moth // The Distaff – Putting genre labels on Maud the Moth feels futile, but the project of vocalist Amaya López-Carromero references darkwave, post-rock, and prog as The Distaff weaves its odd and unique spellcraft. Through twists and turns, López-Carromero is the guiding light, leading the listener through myriad moods and emotions, always enchanting, beguiling. The Distaff may not qualify as a metal album, but it lurks outside the genre, waiting to strike the unwary. It left a stunned Dolphin Whisperer gasping, ” Without a peer, Maud the Moth threatens to fly freely at the top of its own constructed throne.” Leave the lights on and let the right one fly in.
#2025 #Grima #Havukruunu #MaudTheMoth #Nightside #RecordSOTheMonth #Tavastland #TheDistaff
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Boston’s Crackdown on Food-App Delivery Drivers | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.diningandcooking.com/1978250/bostons-crackdown-on-food-app-delivery-drivers-wbz-newsradio-1030/ #DanRea #food #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea
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Boston’s Crackdown on Food-App Delivery Drivers | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.diningandcooking.com/1978250/bostons-crackdown-on-food-app-delivery-drivers-wbz-newsradio-1030/ #DanRea #food #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea
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Boston’s Crackdown on Food-App Delivery Drivers | WBZ NewsRadio 1030 https://www.diningandcooking.com/1978250/bostons-crackdown-on-food-app-delivery-drivers-wbz-newsradio-1030/ #DanRea #food #nightside #NightsideWithDanRea
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Interview: Grima on ‘Nightside’ – “This new record captures the most expressive and defining aspects of Grima”
#Grima #Nightside #Interview #NewAlbum #NapalmRecords #FebruaryReleases
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Interview: Grima on ‘Nightside’ – “This new record captures the most expressive and defining aspects of Grima”
#Grima #Nightside #Interview #NewAlbum #NapalmRecords #FebruaryReleases
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By Carcharodon
Siberia’s Grima and I are old friends. Even though I only managed to snaffle reviewing rights on their last outing, 2022’s Frostbitten, each of their three releases since I started my indeterminate sentence here at AMG Industries has made my year-end Lists. From the raw, folksy, accordion-driven black metal charms of Will of the Primordial (2019), through the more grandiose (if ever so slightly tropey) atmoblack of Rotten Garden (2021) to pick-of-the-pack Frostbitten, Grima has my number. Keeping runtimes tight (apart from their 2015 debut, always in that 43-48 minute sweetspot), accordions high and temperatures close to absolute zero, brothers Vilhelm and Morbius (also of Second to Sun1) just know how to construct great albums. Since we last saw them, however, Grima has moved away from the great black metal label Naturmacht Productions, to join Napalm Records. While no doubt very good for the band, and deserved recognition of their labors, this left me doing infuriating battle with Napalm’s stream-only version of latest outing, Nightside. Have the repeated pauses and refusals to play2 dented my enjoyment?
At this point, it feels like Grima’s songwriting is quite deliberate. That may feel like an odd thing to say. Isn’t songwriting always deliberate? Well, yes. And no. Perhaps “reflective” would be a better descriptor. What I mean is that it seems like the brothers take time to digest their last work before tweaking the dials to lock in what worked while refining other parts. We saw the ‘atmoblack’ dial being cranked for Rotten Garden, while it was nudged back down again and the ‘speed’ knob twizzled for Frostbitten. For Nightside, the dial marked “accordion/bayan” has had a damn good thrashing (courtesy of Sergey Pastukh, once again) and, if there were an adjustment labelled “urgency,” that has also hit 11. Nightside feels vibrant, alive and dripping atmosphere (“The Nightside”), with guest drummer Vlad in propulsive gear (“Beyond the Dark Horizon”), while Vilhelm and Morbius’ dual guitar attack channels every crystalline, hoarfrost encrusted tremolo we could want (“Where We Are Lost”).
Taking everything that was great about Frostbitten, Grima has circled back to sweep up some of the more traditional influences on Will of the Primordial, combining them with liquid smooth pacing that shifts perfectly track to track. It seems unnecessary at this point to note that Vilhelm’s harsh vox are among the best black metal rasps available today, marshalling the iciest of tundra winds to shred your eardrums. On “Impending Death Premonition” and “Curse of the Void,” he is joined by guests Savely Nevzorov and Ilya Panyuko, who contribute deep, clean backing vocals that elevate the sound further. Echoing this vocal feel, in the slower moments of Nightside, there’s something teetering on the edge of a symphonic doom sound (the opening to “Flight of the Silver Storm” and mid-sections of “Skull Gatherers”). While, in the faster passages (including the accordion … riff? … that rears up during instrumental “Intro (Cult)”), there is a sort of rabid intensity that hits peak Grima (front half of “The Nightside” and back half of next track “Where we are Lost,” forming a great arc).
Mixed and mastered, as before, by Second to Sun guitarist Vladimir Lehtinen, Grima sound just as good on Nightside as they did on Frostbitten (subject to the caveats around only having a stream, yada yada, etc.). The guitars are quite forward in the mix but their crystalline tone means they don’t dominate, while the accordion is given a lot of space to do its wonderful thing. Vilhelm’s vocals are well-balanced and cut through like the proverbial icy wind, giving the whole an extra bite. Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date. If I have one criticism of this record, it’s that I’d like it to just go a little harder in a few places. The one-two of mid-album cuts “The Nightside” and “Where we are Lost” is some of, if not the, best material Grima has ever written, and that is because they go hard.
So, did the stream ruin Nightside for me? Well, no, but it tried its bloody hardest. And I do think that, if I’d been able to enjoy this record’s obvious flow without it constantly stopping, refusing to play, and so on, the score could have been even higher than it is. While that may see Steel celebrating, and I hope the new deal serves Grima well, I don’t know why it’s so hard for labels—if they insist on sharing stream-only promo—to make those streams, I don’t know how to put this, um, work? Since it tends to be higher profile bands that are impacted by this, the labels are only harming their most valuable assets.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream only
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: grima.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/grimablackmetal
Releases Worldwide: February 28th, 2025#2025 #40 #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #Feb25 #FolkMetal #Grima #NapalmRecords #Nightside #Review #Reviews #RussianMetal #SecondToSun
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By Carcharodon
Siberia’s Grima and I are old friends. Even though I only managed to snaffle reviewing rights on their last outing, 2022’s Frostbitten, each of their three releases since I started my indeterminate sentence here at AMG Industries has made my year-end Lists. From the raw, folksy, accordion-driven black metal charms of Will of the Primordial (2019), through the more grandiose (if ever so slightly tropey) atmoblack of Rotten Garden (2021) to pick-of-the-pack Frostbitten, Grima has my number. Keeping runtimes tight (apart from their 2015 debut, always in that 43-48 minute sweetspot), accordions high and temperatures close to absolute zero, brothers Vilhelm and Morbius (also of Second to Sun1) just know how to construct great albums. Since we last saw them, however, Grima has moved away from the great black metal label Naturmacht Productions, to join Napalm Records. While no doubt very good for the band, and deserved recognition of their labors, this left me doing infuriating battle with Napalm’s stream-only version of latest outing, Nightside. Have the repeated pauses and refusals to play2 dented my enjoyment?
At this point, it feels like Grima’s songwriting is quite deliberate. That may feel like an odd thing to say. Isn’t songwriting always deliberate? Well, yes. And no. Perhaps “reflective” would be a better descriptor. What I mean is that it seems like the brothers take time to digest their last work before tweaking the dials to lock in what worked while refining other parts. We saw the ‘atmoblack’ dial being cranked for Rotten Garden, while it was nudged back down again and the ‘speed’ knob twizzled for Frostbitten. For Nightside, the dial marked “accordion/bayan” has had a damn good thrashing (courtesy of Sergey Pastukh, once again) and, if there were an adjustment labelled “urgency,” that has also hit 11. Nightside feels vibrant, alive and dripping atmosphere (“The Nightside”), with guest drummer Vlad in propulsive gear (“Beyond the Dark Horizon”), while Vilhelm and Morbius’ dual guitar attack channels every crystalline, hoarfrost encrusted tremolo we could want (“Where We Are Lost”).
Taking everything that was great about Frostbitten, Grima has circled back to sweep up some of the more traditional influences on Will of the Primordial, combining them with liquid smooth pacing that shifts perfectly track to track. It seems unnecessary at this point to note that Vilhelm’s harsh vox are among the best black metal rasps available today, marshalling the iciest of tundra winds to shred your eardrums. On “Impending Death Premonition” and “Curse of the Void,” he is joined by guests Savely Nevzorov and Ilya Panyuko, who contribute deep, clean backing vocals that elevate the sound further. Echoing this vocal feel, in the slower moments of Nightside, there’s something teetering on the edge of a symphonic doom sound (the opening to “Flight of the Silver Storm” and mid-sections of “Skull Gatherers”). While, in the faster passages (including the accordion … riff? … that rears up during instrumental “Intro (Cult)”), there is a sort of rabid intensity that hits peak Grima (front half of “The Nightside” and back half of next track “Where we are Lost,” forming a great arc).
Mixed and mastered, as before, by Second to Sun guitarist Vladimir Lehtinen, Grima sound just as good on Nightside as they did on Frostbitten (subject to the caveats around only having a stream, yada yada, etc.). The guitars are quite forward in the mix but their crystalline tone means they don’t dominate, while the accordion is given a lot of space to do its wonderful thing. Vilhelm’s vocals are well-balanced and cut through like the proverbial icy wind, giving the whole an extra bite. Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date. If I have one criticism of this record, it’s that I’d like it to just go a little harder in a few places. The one-two of mid-album cuts “The Nightside” and “Where we are Lost” is some of, if not the, best material Grima has ever written, and that is because they go hard.
So, did the stream ruin Nightside for me? Well, no, but it tried its bloody hardest. And I do think that, if I’d been able to enjoy this record’s obvious flow without it constantly stopping, refusing to play, and so on, the score could have been even higher than it is. While that may see Steel celebrating, and I hope the new deal serves Grima well, I don’t know why it’s so hard for labels—if they insist on sharing stream-only promo—to make those streams, I don’t know how to put this, um, work? Since it tends to be higher profile bands that are impacted by this, the labels are only harming their most valuable assets.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream only
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: grima.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/grimablackmetal
Releases Worldwide: February 28th, 2025#2025 #40 #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #Feb25 #FolkMetal #Grima #NapalmRecords #Nightside #Review #Reviews #RussianMetal #SecondToSun
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By Carcharodon
Siberia’s Grima and I are old friends. Even though I only managed to snaffle reviewing rights on their last outing, 2022’s Frostbitten, each of their three releases since I started my indeterminate sentence here at AMG Industries has made my year-end Lists. From the raw, folksy, accordion-driven black metal charms of Will of the Primordial (2019), through the more grandiose (if ever so slightly tropey) atmoblack of Rotten Garden (2021) to pick-of-the-pack Frostbitten, Grima has my number. Keeping runtimes tight (apart from their 2015 debut, always in that 43-48 minute sweetspot), accordions high and temperatures close to absolute zero, brothers Vilhelm and Morbius (also of Second to Sun1) just know how to construct great albums. Since we last saw them, however, Grima has moved away from the great black metal label Naturmacht Productions, to join Napalm Records. While no doubt very good for the band, and deserved recognition of their labors, this left me doing infuriating battle with Napalm’s stream-only version of latest outing, Nightside. Have the repeated pauses and refusals to play2 dented my enjoyment?
At this point, it feels like Grima’s songwriting is quite deliberate. That may feel like an odd thing to say. Isn’t songwriting always deliberate? Well, yes. And no. Perhaps “reflective” would be a better descriptor. What I mean is that it seems like the brothers take time to digest their last work before tweaking the dials to lock in what worked while refining other parts. We saw the ‘atmoblack’ dial being cranked for Rotten Garden, while it was nudged back down again and the ‘speed’ knob twizzled for Frostbitten. For Nightside, the dial marked “accordion/bayan” has had a damn good thrashing (courtesy of Sergey Pastukh, once again) and, if there were an adjustment labelled “urgency,” that has also hit 11. Nightside feels vibrant, alive and dripping atmosphere (“The Nightside”), with guest drummer Vlad in propulsive gear (“Beyond the Dark Horizon”), while Vilhelm and Morbius’ dual guitar attack channels every crystalline, hoarfrost encrusted tremolo we could want (“Where We Are Lost”).
Taking everything that was great about Frostbitten, Grima has circled back to sweep up some of the more traditional influences on Will of the Primordial, combining them with liquid smooth pacing that shifts perfectly track to track. It seems unnecessary at this point to note that Vilhelm’s harsh vox are among the best black metal rasps available today, marshalling the iciest of tundra winds to shred your eardrums. On “Impending Death Premonition” and “Curse of the Void,” he is joined by guests Savely Nevzorov and Ilya Panyuko, who contribute deep, clean backing vocals that elevate the sound further. Echoing this vocal feel, in the slower moments of Nightside, there’s something teetering on the edge of a symphonic doom sound (the opening to “Flight of the Silver Storm” and mid-sections of “Skull Gatherers”). While, in the faster passages (including the accordion … riff? … that rears up during instrumental “Intro (Cult)”), there is a sort of rabid intensity that hits peak Grima (front half of “The Nightside” and back half of next track “Where we are Lost,” forming a great arc).
Mixed and mastered, as before, by Second to Sun guitarist Vladimir Lehtinen, Grima sound just as good on Nightside as they did on Frostbitten (subject to the caveats around only having a stream, yada yada, etc.). The guitars are quite forward in the mix but their crystalline tone means they don’t dominate, while the accordion is given a lot of space to do its wonderful thing. Vilhelm’s vocals are well-balanced and cut through like the proverbial icy wind, giving the whole an extra bite. Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date. If I have one criticism of this record, it’s that I’d like it to just go a little harder in a few places. The one-two of mid-album cuts “The Nightside” and “Where we are Lost” is some of, if not the, best material Grima has ever written, and that is because they go hard.
So, did the stream ruin Nightside for me? Well, no, but it tried its bloody hardest. And I do think that, if I’d been able to enjoy this record’s obvious flow without it constantly stopping, refusing to play, and so on, the score could have been even higher than it is. While that may see Steel celebrating, and I hope the new deal serves Grima well, I don’t know why it’s so hard for labels—if they insist on sharing stream-only promo—to make those streams, I don’t know how to put this, um, work? Since it tends to be higher profile bands that are impacted by this, the labels are only harming their most valuable assets.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream only
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: grima.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/grimablackmetal
Releases Worldwide: February 28th, 2025#2025 #40 #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #Feb25 #FolkMetal #Grima #NapalmRecords #Nightside #Review #Reviews #RussianMetal #SecondToSun
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By Carcharodon
Siberia’s Grima and I are old friends. Even though I only managed to snaffle reviewing rights on their last outing, 2022’s Frostbitten, each of their three releases since I started my indeterminate sentence here at AMG Industries has made my year-end Lists. From the raw, folksy, accordion-driven black metal charms of Will of the Primordial (2019), through the more grandiose (if ever so slightly tropey) atmoblack of Rotten Garden (2021) to pick-of-the-pack Frostbitten, Grima has my number. Keeping runtimes tight (apart from their 2015 debut, always in that 43-48 minute sweetspot), accordions high and temperatures close to absolute zero, brothers Vilhelm and Morbius (also of Second to Sun1) just know how to construct great albums. Since we last saw them, however, Grima has moved away from the great black metal label Naturmacht Productions, to join Napalm Records. While no doubt very good for the band, and deserved recognition of their labors, this left me doing infuriating battle with Napalm’s stream-only version of latest outing, Nightside. Have the repeated pauses and refusals to play2 dented my enjoyment?
At this point, it feels like Grima’s songwriting is quite deliberate. That may feel like an odd thing to say. Isn’t songwriting always deliberate? Well, yes. And no. Perhaps “reflective” would be a better descriptor. What I mean is that it seems like the brothers take time to digest their last work before tweaking the dials to lock in what worked while refining other parts. We saw the ‘atmoblack’ dial being cranked for Rotten Garden, while it was nudged back down again and the ‘speed’ knob twizzled for Frostbitten. For Nightside, the dial marked “accordion/bayan” has had a damn good thrashing (courtesy of Sergey Pastukh, once again) and, if there were an adjustment labelled “urgency,” that has also hit 11. Nightside feels vibrant, alive and dripping atmosphere (“The Nightside”), with guest drummer Vlad in propulsive gear (“Beyond the Dark Horizon”), while Vilhelm and Morbius’ dual guitar attack channels every crystalline, hoarfrost encrusted tremolo we could want (“Where We Are Lost”).
Taking everything that was great about Frostbitten, Grima has circled back to sweep up some of the more traditional influences on Will of the Primordial, combining them with liquid smooth pacing that shifts perfectly track to track. It seems unnecessary at this point to note that Vilhelm’s harsh vox are among the best black metal rasps available today, marshalling the iciest of tundra winds to shred your eardrums. On “Impending Death Premonition” and “Curse of the Void,” he is joined by guests Savely Nevzorov and Ilya Panyuko, who contribute deep, clean backing vocals that elevate the sound further. Echoing this vocal feel, in the slower moments of Nightside, there’s something teetering on the edge of a symphonic doom sound (the opening to “Flight of the Silver Storm” and mid-sections of “Skull Gatherers”). While, in the faster passages (including the accordion … riff? … that rears up during instrumental “Intro (Cult)”), there is a sort of rabid intensity that hits peak Grima (front half of “The Nightside” and back half of next track “Where we are Lost,” forming a great arc).
Mixed and mastered, as before, by Second to Sun guitarist Vladimir Lehtinen, Grima sound just as good on Nightside as they did on Frostbitten (subject to the caveats around only having a stream, yada yada, etc.). The guitars are quite forward in the mix but their crystalline tone means they don’t dominate, while the accordion is given a lot of space to do its wonderful thing. Vilhelm’s vocals are well-balanced and cut through like the proverbial icy wind, giving the whole an extra bite. Grima’s songwriting continues to progress, and Nightside feels like the most nuanced and best-paced outing to date. If I have one criticism of this record, it’s that I’d like it to just go a little harder in a few places. The one-two of mid-album cuts “The Nightside” and “Where we are Lost” is some of, if not the, best material Grima has ever written, and that is because they go hard.
So, did the stream ruin Nightside for me? Well, no, but it tried its bloody hardest. And I do think that, if I’d been able to enjoy this record’s obvious flow without it constantly stopping, refusing to play, and so on, the score could have been even higher than it is. While that may see Steel celebrating, and I hope the new deal serves Grima well, I don’t know why it’s so hard for labels—if they insist on sharing stream-only promo—to make those streams, I don’t know how to put this, um, work? Since it tends to be higher profile bands that are impacted by this, the labels are only harming their most valuable assets.
Rating: 4.0/5.0
DR: N/A | Format Reviewed: Stream only
Label: Napalm Records
Websites: grima.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/grimablackmetal
Releases Worldwide: February 28th, 2025#2025 #40 #AtmosphericBlackMetal #BlackMetal #Feb25 #FolkMetal #Grima #NapalmRecords #Nightside #Review #Reviews #RussianMetal #SecondToSun
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The Rain Within plays TONIGHT at Madame X on Houston St!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
The Rain Within plays TONIGHT at Madame X on Houston St!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
The Rain Within plays TONIGHT at Madame X on Houston St!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
The Rain Within plays TONIGHT at Madame X on Houston St!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
The Rain Within plays TONIGHT at Madame X on Houston St!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
If you're looking for something to do in January, we have Andy Deane's other band The Rain Within playing on Houston St on the 19th!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire #bellamorte -
Decided to redo my #introduction post even though I've been on fedi in some form or another for 4 years (first on koyu-dot-space but they closed so now I'm on one of the more main instances).
I'm Lord Draken BlackKnight, Keeper of the Scroll of The Court of Lazarus, original salon noir within the #nyc #nightside #vampire #occult community. I used to post prolifically on Fakebook until I deleted that account in June 2021 and I only brought it back because of nightside stuff.
1/ -
Yes, The @courtoflazarus is ceasing operations effective at the close of Court on 2/16/2025. We meet every 3rd Sunday of the month until then. Come join us!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #goth #nightside #occult #nycoccult #vampire -
Yes, The @courtoflazarus is ceasing operations effective at the close of Court on 2/16/2025. We meet every 3rd Sunday of the month until then. Come join us!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #goth #nightside #occult #nycoccult #vampire -
Yes, The @courtoflazarus is ceasing operations effective at the close of Court on 2/16/2025. We meet every 3rd Sunday of the month until then. Come join us!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #goth #nightside #occult #nycoccult #vampire -
Yes, The @courtoflazarus is ceasing operations effective at the close of Court on 2/16/2025. We meet every 3rd Sunday of the month until then. Come join us!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #goth #nightside #occult #nycoccult #vampire -
Yes, The @courtoflazarus is ceasing operations effective at the close of Court on 2/16/2025. We meet every 3rd Sunday of the month until then. Come join us!
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #goth #nightside #occult #nycoccult #vampire -
I have said that each month we meet is a historical occasion. No nightside Court in modern times has been able to meet each and every single month for over 22 years, and certainly not through a pandemic.
Your chance to be a part of history is going to be history in several months. We gather 5 more times. The time to come out is now.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113182987522001588
#nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire -
I have said that each month we meet is a historical occasion. No nightside Court in modern times has been able to meet each and every single month for over 22 years, and certainly not through a pandemic.
Your chance to be a part of history is going to be history in several months. We gather 5 more times. The time to come out is now.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113182987522001588
#nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult #goth #nightside #occult #vampire -
There are only 5 more gatherings of The @courtoflazarus left. If you want to attend, the 3rd Sunday of October, November, December, January, or February are the dates.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113182987522001588
#nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult
#goth #nightside #occult #nyc #vampire -
There are only 5 more gatherings of The @courtoflazarus left. If you want to attend, the 3rd Sunday of October, November, December, January, or February are the dates.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113182987522001588
#nycgoth #nycnightside #nycoccult
#goth #nightside #occult #nyc #vampire -
If you ever want to go to The Court of Lazarus, this month would be a very good time. As would the 5 after that. Because that is all that are left. After February's Court, the Gates will be closed.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113078911354944779
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nightside #goth #vampire #occult -
If you ever want to go to The Court of Lazarus, this month would be a very good time. As would the 5 after that. Because that is all that are left. After February's Court, the Gates will be closed.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/113078911354944779
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #nightside #goth #vampire #occult -
There are only 6 more public gatherings of The @courtoflazarus. It is simply time for you to come out next Sunday, 9/15 at 9PM at 94 West Houston St.
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #vampire #goth #nightside #occult
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There are only 6 more public gatherings of The @courtoflazarus. It is simply time for you to come out next Sunday, 9/15 at 9PM at 94 West Houston St.
#nyc #nycgoth #nycnightside #vampire #goth #nightside #occult
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If you're in or around the #nyc area tomorrow night, come around to The @courtoflazarus!
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/112945130558663762
#goth #nightside -
If you're in or around #nyc, come down to a bar on West Houston St this Sunday night.
https://mastodon.online/@courtoflazarus/112945130558663762
#goth #nightside -
in case you're trying to catch up on good underground #extrememetal of 2023, here's a rundown of my favorites of the second quarter in a spotify playlist
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0pUJNPyCiKGN1J5KyEdZfm
mostly all kinds of #blackmetal with a little bit of #doom and #symphony
#solanvarma #argenthorns #unhallowed #stutyr #voidhaven #fjoergyn #helleruin #morkera #victimarum #nightside
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in case you're trying to catch up on good underground #extrememetal of 2023, here's a rundown of my favorites of the second quarter in a spotify playlist
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0pUJNPyCiKGN1J5KyEdZfm
mostly all kinds of #blackmetal with a little bit of #doom and #symphony
#solanvarma #argenthorns #unhallowed #stutyr #voidhaven #fjoergyn #helleruin #morkera #victimarum #nightside
-
in case you're trying to catch up on good underground #extrememetal of 2023, here's a rundown of my favorites of the second quarter in a spotify playlist
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0pUJNPyCiKGN1J5KyEdZfm
mostly all kinds of #blackmetal with a little bit of #doom and #symphony
#solanvarma #argenthorns #unhallowed #stutyr #voidhaven #fjoergyn #helleruin #morkera #victimarum #nightside
-
in case you're trying to catch up on good underground #extrememetal of 2023, here's a rundown of my favorites of the second quarter in a spotify playlist
https://open.spotify.com/playlist/0pUJNPyCiKGN1J5KyEdZfm
mostly all kinds of #blackmetal with a little bit of #doom and #symphony
#solanvarma #argenthorns #unhallowed #stutyr #voidhaven #fjoergyn #helleruin #morkera #victimarum #nightside