#nonestdeus — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #nonestdeus, aggregated by home.social.
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Burn it down 🏴
From the ashes well start to create!
https://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/burn-it-down
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Burn it down 🏴
From the ashes well start to create!
https://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/burn-it-down
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Burn it down 🏴
From the ashes well start to create!
https://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/burn-it-down
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Burn it down 🏴
From the ashes well start to create!
https://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/burn-it-down
-
Burn it down 🏴
From the ashes well start to create!
https://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/burn-it-down
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Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review
To receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an…
#NewsBeep #News #Music #2.5 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsandCurses #Entertainment #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #review #Reviews #RottingChrist #UK #UnitedKingdom
https://www.newsbeep.com/uk/523539/ -
Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review By Lavender LarcenistTo receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an exciting prospect. I tend to agree with Carcharodon when it comes to their critical consensus, and Kanonenfieber is one of my favorite acts around. So, when I was (presumptively) lucky enough to review the latest Non Est Deus record, Blessings and Curses, I was excited to say the least. We have lavished praise here at AMG across the Noise spectrum, and while his projects range in quality, that quality remains firmly in the top tier of melodic black metal. So, with all that out of the way, is the latest noise from Noise a blessing of black metal righteousness or a curse on the venerable artist’s output?
Out of the gate, Blessing and Curses works to establish a more unique sound for Non Est Deus in comparison to Noise’s other projects. Whereas Legacy could lean a little too close to Kanonenfieber or Leiþa at times, this latest record makes a clear differentiation between the new Non Est Deus and the old. Noise’s vocals are clear and crisp, sung completely in English, and never hit the heaviness of Kanonenfieber or the tortured emotion of Leiþa. In fact, the first band that came to mind when spinning Blessings and Curses was Rotting Christ. At first glance, this feels like a clear step in a better direction for a project that needed a more unique identity, but upon further inspection, it hampers the album at nearly every turn.
Blessings and Curses by Non Est Deus
Blessings and Curses has a strong artistic foundation and conceptual structure, with three interludes (Prayer I, II, and III, respectively) and psalms scourging every major track. The album feels unique in the way that it follows a believer in God who loses their way and becomes disillusioned, directly mirroring the diptych on the album cover, as well as the title of the record. Phenomenal album cover aside, the musical progression isn’t as pronounced as I had hoped based on the concept, and Blessings and Curses is repetitive throughout. Nearly every track follows a similar structure, including choruses that repeat the same cadence and emotional beats on a majority of the songs. Noise returns to refrains that have a main line (usually the song title) followed by a “whispered” section that either repeats that same idea or only a slight variation on it (“Show Mercy”, “My Lord”, “The Forsaken”, “The Indulgence”). It leaves Blessings and Curses sounding like someone trying to replicate Noise as opposed to Noise himself.
To Blessings and Curses’ detriment, spoken word sections are back, and the album remains worse for it. The opening “Prayer I” feels entirely throwaway, and the interludes are so quick as to make them feel like an afterthought. The psalms on each track also kill momentum, with their placement typically towards the finale of the song. Derailing every track, the psalms are the vegetables before getting to the meat of it all. While they serve the album conceptually, they are half-baked throughout. The idea of splitting the album is an interesting one, and the best tracks are in the back half, but Blessings and Curses is sonically stagnant. “Show Mercy” and “Forgive Me” (an album highlight) play with some very light black n’ roll elements, making me wish the first half had gone all in on that idea, leaving the second half to be a blasting blackened death beast. Unfortunately, neither is that diverse, sitting in this mid space that just sounds a bit like Noise on autopilot. None of the songs are bad, some are even great, but the album as a whole feels like it wastes a phenomenal concept.
If you told me I would be reviewing Noise for AMG in 2026, I would call you a fuckin’ liar and that you shouldn’t play with my emotions. If you told me that I would be the one to give Noise a proper tongue lashing, I would be doubly upset. As a stalwart fan of the artist, I still enjoyed Blessings and Curses on a lizard-brain level, and there are some truly great tracks (Forgive Me, Kora, Transgression). I appreciate Non Est Deus doing more to differentiate itself from the rest of Noise’s work, but I would love to see it pushed even further and move out of its melodic black metal safe zone. As it stands, a mediocre Noise record is still better than most other offerings out there, but for an artist with such incredible albums under his belt, I prayed for more.
Rating: Mixed
#25 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsAndCurses #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist
DR: N/A| Format Reviewed: A dreamy streamy
Label: Noisebringer Records
Websites: Website | Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 3rd, 2026 -
Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review By Lavender LarcenistTo receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an exciting prospect. I tend to agree with Carcharodon when it comes to their critical consensus, and Kanonenfieber is one of my favorite acts around. So, when I was (presumptively) lucky enough to review the latest Non Est Deus record, Blessings and Curses, I was excited to say the least. We have lavished praise here at AMG across the Noise spectrum, and while his projects range in quality, that quality remains firmly in the top tier of melodic black metal. So, with all that out of the way, is the latest noise from Noise a blessing of black metal righteousness or a curse on the venerable artist’s output?
Out of the gate, Blessing and Curses works to establish a more unique sound for Non Est Deus in comparison to Noise’s other projects. Whereas Legacy could lean a little too close to Kanonenfieber or Leiþa at times, this latest record makes a clear differentiation between the new Non Est Deus and the old. Noise’s vocals are clear and crisp, sung completely in English, and never hit the heaviness of Kanonenfieber or the tortured emotion of Leiþa. In fact, the first band that came to mind when spinning Blessings and Curses was Rotting Christ. At first glance, this feels like a clear step in a better direction for a project that needed a more unique identity, but upon further inspection, it hampers the album at nearly every turn.
Blessings and Curses by Non Est Deus
Blessings and Curses has a strong artistic foundation and conceptual structure, with three interludes (Prayer I, II, and III, respectively) and psalms scourging every major track. The album feels unique in the way that it follows a believer in God who loses their way and becomes disillusioned, directly mirroring the diptych on the album cover, as well as the title of the record. Phenomenal album cover aside, the musical progression isn’t as pronounced as I had hoped based on the concept, and Blessings and Curses is repetitive throughout. Nearly every track follows a similar structure, including choruses that repeat the same cadence and emotional beats on a majority of the songs. Noise returns to refrains that have a main line (usually the song title) followed by a “whispered” section that either repeats that same idea or only a slight variation on it (“Show Mercy”, “My Lord”, “The Forsaken”, “The Indulgence”). It leaves Blessings and Curses sounding like someone trying to replicate Noise as opposed to Noise himself.
To Blessings and Curses’ detriment, spoken word sections are back, and the album remains worse for it. The opening “Prayer I” feels entirely throwaway, and the interludes are so quick as to make them feel like an afterthought. The psalms on each track also kill momentum, with their placement typically towards the finale of the song. Derailing every track, the psalms are the vegetables before getting to the meat of it all. While they serve the album conceptually, they are half-baked throughout. The idea of splitting the album is an interesting one, and the best tracks are in the back half, but Blessings and Curses is sonically stagnant. “Show Mercy” and “Forgive Me” (an album highlight) play with some very light black n’ roll elements, making me wish the first half had gone all in on that idea, leaving the second half to be a blasting blackened death beast. Unfortunately, neither is that diverse, sitting in this mid space that just sounds a bit like Noise on autopilot. None of the songs are bad, some are even great, but the album as a whole feels like it wastes a phenomenal concept.
If you told me I would be reviewing Noise for AMG in 2026, I would call you a fuckin’ liar and that you shouldn’t play with my emotions. If you told me that I would be the one to give Noise a proper tongue lashing, I would be doubly upset. As a stalwart fan of the artist, I still enjoyed Blessings and Curses on a lizard-brain level, and there are some truly great tracks (Forgive Me, Kora, Transgression). I appreciate Non Est Deus doing more to differentiate itself from the rest of Noise’s work, but I would love to see it pushed even further and move out of its melodic black metal safe zone. As it stands, a mediocre Noise record is still better than most other offerings out there, but for an artist with such incredible albums under his belt, I prayed for more.
Rating: Mixed
#25 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsAndCurses #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist
DR: N/A| Format Reviewed: A dreamy streamy
Label: Noisebringer Records
Websites: Website | Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 3rd, 2026 -
Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review By Lavender LarcenistTo receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an exciting prospect. I tend to agree with Carcharodon when it comes to their critical consensus, and Kanonenfieber is one of my favorite acts around. So, when I was (presumptively) lucky enough to review the latest Non Est Deus record, Blessings and Curses, I was excited to say the least. We have lavished praise here at AMG across the Noise spectrum, and while his projects range in quality, that quality remains firmly in the top tier of melodic black metal. So, with all that out of the way, is the latest noise from Noise a blessing of black metal righteousness or a curse on the venerable artist’s output?
Out of the gate, Blessing and Curses works to establish a more unique sound for Non Est Deus in comparison to Noise’s other projects. Whereas Legacy could lean a little too close to Kanonenfieber or Leiþa at times, this latest record makes a clear differentiation between the new Non Est Deus and the old. Noise’s vocals are clear and crisp, sung completely in English, and never hit the heaviness of Kanonenfieber or the tortured emotion of Leiþa. In fact, the first band that came to mind when spinning Blessings and Curses was Rotting Christ. At first glance, this feels like a clear step in a better direction for a project that needed a more unique identity, but upon further inspection, it hampers the album at nearly every turn.
Blessings and Curses by Non Est Deus
Blessings and Curses has a strong artistic foundation and conceptual structure, with three interludes (Prayer I, II, and III, respectively) and psalms scourging every major track. The album feels unique in the way that it follows a believer in God who loses their way and becomes disillusioned, directly mirroring the diptych on the album cover, as well as the title of the record. Phenomenal album cover aside, the musical progression isn’t as pronounced as I had hoped based on the concept, and Blessings and Curses is repetitive throughout. Nearly every track follows a similar structure, including choruses that repeat the same cadence and emotional beats on a majority of the songs. Noise returns to refrains that have a main line (usually the song title) followed by a “whispered” section that either repeats that same idea or only a slight variation on it (“Show Mercy”, “My Lord”, “The Forsaken”, “The Indulgence”). It leaves Blessings and Curses sounding like someone trying to replicate Noise as opposed to Noise himself.
To Blessings and Curses’ detriment, spoken word sections are back, and the album remains worse for it. The opening “Prayer I” feels entirely throwaway, and the interludes are so quick as to make them feel like an afterthought. The psalms on each track also kill momentum, with their placement typically towards the finale of the song. Derailing every track, the psalms are the vegetables before getting to the meat of it all. While they serve the album conceptually, they are half-baked throughout. The idea of splitting the album is an interesting one, and the best tracks are in the back half, but Blessings and Curses is sonically stagnant. “Show Mercy” and “Forgive Me” (an album highlight) play with some very light black n’ roll elements, making me wish the first half had gone all in on that idea, leaving the second half to be a blasting blackened death beast. Unfortunately, neither is that diverse, sitting in this mid space that just sounds a bit like Noise on autopilot. None of the songs are bad, some are even great, but the album as a whole feels like it wastes a phenomenal concept.
If you told me I would be reviewing Noise for AMG in 2026, I would call you a fuckin’ liar and that you shouldn’t play with my emotions. If you told me that I would be the one to give Noise a proper tongue lashing, I would be doubly upset. As a stalwart fan of the artist, I still enjoyed Blessings and Curses on a lizard-brain level, and there are some truly great tracks (Forgive Me, Kora, Transgression). I appreciate Non Est Deus doing more to differentiate itself from the rest of Noise’s work, but I would love to see it pushed even further and move out of its melodic black metal safe zone. As it stands, a mediocre Noise record is still better than most other offerings out there, but for an artist with such incredible albums under his belt, I prayed for more.
Rating: Mixed
#25 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsAndCurses #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist
DR: N/A| Format Reviewed: A dreamy streamy
Label: Noisebringer Records
Websites: Website | Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 3rd, 2026 -
Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review By Lavender LarcenistTo receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an exciting prospect. I tend to agree with Carcharodon when it comes to their critical consensus, and Kanonenfieber is one of my favorite acts around. So, when I was (presumptively) lucky enough to review the latest Non Est Deus record, Blessings and Curses, I was excited to say the least. We have lavished praise here at AMG across the Noise spectrum, and while his projects range in quality, that quality remains firmly in the top tier of melodic black metal. So, with all that out of the way, is the latest noise from Noise a blessing of black metal righteousness or a curse on the venerable artist’s output?
Out of the gate, Blessing and Curses works to establish a more unique sound for Non Est Deus in comparison to Noise’s other projects. Whereas Legacy could lean a little too close to Kanonenfieber or Leiþa at times, this latest record makes a clear differentiation between the new Non Est Deus and the old. Noise’s vocals are clear and crisp, sung completely in English, and never hit the heaviness of Kanonenfieber or the tortured emotion of Leiþa. In fact, the first band that came to mind when spinning Blessings and Curses was Rotting Christ. At first glance, this feels like a clear step in a better direction for a project that needed a more unique identity, but upon further inspection, it hampers the album at nearly every turn.
Blessings and Curses by Non Est Deus
Blessings and Curses has a strong artistic foundation and conceptual structure, with three interludes (Prayer I, II, and III, respectively) and psalms scourging every major track. The album feels unique in the way that it follows a believer in God who loses their way and becomes disillusioned, directly mirroring the diptych on the album cover, as well as the title of the record. Phenomenal album cover aside, the musical progression isn’t as pronounced as I had hoped based on the concept, and Blessings and Curses is repetitive throughout. Nearly every track follows a similar structure, including choruses that repeat the same cadence and emotional beats on a majority of the songs. Noise returns to refrains that have a main line (usually the song title) followed by a “whispered” section that either repeats that same idea or only a slight variation on it (“Show Mercy”, “My Lord”, “The Forsaken”, “The Indulgence”). It leaves Blessings and Curses sounding like someone trying to replicate Noise as opposed to Noise himself.
To Blessings and Curses’ detriment, spoken word sections are back, and the album remains worse for it. The opening “Prayer I” feels entirely throwaway, and the interludes are so quick as to make them feel like an afterthought. The psalms on each track also kill momentum, with their placement typically towards the finale of the song. Derailing every track, the psalms are the vegetables before getting to the meat of it all. While they serve the album conceptually, they are half-baked throughout. The idea of splitting the album is an interesting one, and the best tracks are in the back half, but Blessings and Curses is sonically stagnant. “Show Mercy” and “Forgive Me” (an album highlight) play with some very light black n’ roll elements, making me wish the first half had gone all in on that idea, leaving the second half to be a blasting blackened death beast. Unfortunately, neither is that diverse, sitting in this mid space that just sounds a bit like Noise on autopilot. None of the songs are bad, some are even great, but the album as a whole feels like it wastes a phenomenal concept.
If you told me I would be reviewing Noise for AMG in 2026, I would call you a fuckin’ liar and that you shouldn’t play with my emotions. If you told me that I would be the one to give Noise a proper tongue lashing, I would be doubly upset. As a stalwart fan of the artist, I still enjoyed Blessings and Curses on a lizard-brain level, and there are some truly great tracks (Forgive Me, Kora, Transgression). I appreciate Non Est Deus doing more to differentiate itself from the rest of Noise’s work, but I would love to see it pushed even further and move out of its melodic black metal safe zone. As it stands, a mediocre Noise record is still better than most other offerings out there, but for an artist with such incredible albums under his belt, I prayed for more.
Rating: Mixed
#25 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsAndCurses #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist
DR: N/A| Format Reviewed: A dreamy streamy
Label: Noisebringer Records
Websites: Website | Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 3rd, 2026 -
Non Est Deus – Blessings and Curses Review By Lavender LarcenistTo receive the honor of reviewing duties for Noise’s latest as a superfan of his output is an exciting prospect. I tend to agree with Carcharodon when it comes to their critical consensus, and Kanonenfieber is one of my favorite acts around. So, when I was (presumptively) lucky enough to review the latest Non Est Deus record, Blessings and Curses, I was excited to say the least. We have lavished praise here at AMG across the Noise spectrum, and while his projects range in quality, that quality remains firmly in the top tier of melodic black metal. So, with all that out of the way, is the latest noise from Noise a blessing of black metal righteousness or a curse on the venerable artist’s output?
Out of the gate, Blessing and Curses works to establish a more unique sound for Non Est Deus in comparison to Noise’s other projects. Whereas Legacy could lean a little too close to Kanonenfieber or Leiþa at times, this latest record makes a clear differentiation between the new Non Est Deus and the old. Noise’s vocals are clear and crisp, sung completely in English, and never hit the heaviness of Kanonenfieber or the tortured emotion of Leiþa. In fact, the first band that came to mind when spinning Blessings and Curses was Rotting Christ. At first glance, this feels like a clear step in a better direction for a project that needed a more unique identity, but upon further inspection, it hampers the album at nearly every turn.
Blessings and Curses by Non Est Deus
Blessings and Curses has a strong artistic foundation and conceptual structure, with three interludes (Prayer I, II, and III, respectively) and psalms scourging every major track. The album feels unique in the way that it follows a believer in God who loses their way and becomes disillusioned, directly mirroring the diptych on the album cover, as well as the title of the record. Phenomenal album cover aside, the musical progression isn’t as pronounced as I had hoped based on the concept, and Blessings and Curses is repetitive throughout. Nearly every track follows a similar structure, including choruses that repeat the same cadence and emotional beats on a majority of the songs. Noise returns to refrains that have a main line (usually the song title) followed by a “whispered” section that either repeats that same idea or only a slight variation on it (“Show Mercy”, “My Lord”, “The Forsaken”, “The Indulgence”). It leaves Blessings and Curses sounding like someone trying to replicate Noise as opposed to Noise himself.
To Blessings and Curses’ detriment, spoken word sections are back, and the album remains worse for it. The opening “Prayer I” feels entirely throwaway, and the interludes are so quick as to make them feel like an afterthought. The psalms on each track also kill momentum, with their placement typically towards the finale of the song. Derailing every track, the psalms are the vegetables before getting to the meat of it all. While they serve the album conceptually, they are half-baked throughout. The idea of splitting the album is an interesting one, and the best tracks are in the back half, but Blessings and Curses is sonically stagnant. “Show Mercy” and “Forgive Me” (an album highlight) play with some very light black n’ roll elements, making me wish the first half had gone all in on that idea, leaving the second half to be a blasting blackened death beast. Unfortunately, neither is that diverse, sitting in this mid space that just sounds a bit like Noise on autopilot. None of the songs are bad, some are even great, but the album as a whole feels like it wastes a phenomenal concept.
If you told me I would be reviewing Noise for AMG in 2026, I would call you a fuckin’ liar and that you shouldn’t play with my emotions. If you told me that I would be the one to give Noise a proper tongue lashing, I would be doubly upset. As a stalwart fan of the artist, I still enjoyed Blessings and Curses on a lizard-brain level, and there are some truly great tracks (Forgive Me, Kora, Transgression). I appreciate Non Est Deus doing more to differentiate itself from the rest of Noise’s work, but I would love to see it pushed even further and move out of its melodic black metal safe zone. As it stands, a mediocre Noise record is still better than most other offerings out there, but for an artist with such incredible albums under his belt, I prayed for more.
Rating: Mixed
#25 #2026 #Apr26 #BlackMetal #BlessingsAndCurses #GermanMetal #Kanonenfieber #Leitha #MelodicBlackMetal #NoisebringerRecords #NonEstDeus #Review #Reviews #RottingChrist
DR: N/A| Format Reviewed: A dreamy streamy
Label: Noisebringer Records
Websites: Website | Bandcamp
Releases Worldwide: April 3rd, 2026 -
NON EST DEUS (Alemanya) presenta nou àlbum: "Blessings and Curses" #NonEstDeus #BlackMetal #Abril2026 #Alemanya #NouÀlbum #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
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NON EST DEUS (Alemanya) presenta nou àlbum: "Blessings and Curses" #NonEstDeus #BlackMetal #Abril2026 #Alemanya #NouÀlbum #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
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Morgen wird das neue #Album von #Noise, genau genommen von #NonEstDeus veröffentlicht. Hab die Edition mit Jewel Case CD und BD Disk vorbestellt, das bisher verfügbare Material (#ShowMercy) aber bewusst noch nicht gehört. Der Hype Train rollt bei mir gerade bösartig los und ich freue mich total auf morgen!
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Morgen wird das neue #Album von #Noise, genau genommen von #NonEstDeus veröffentlicht. Hab die Edition mit Jewel Case CD und BD Disk vorbestellt, das bisher verfügbare Material (#ShowMercy) aber bewusst noch nicht gehört. Der Hype Train rollt bei mir gerade bösartig los und ich freue mich total auf morgen!
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Morgen wird das neue #Album von #Noise, genau genommen von #NonEstDeus veröffentlicht. Hab die Edition mit Jewel Case CD und BD Disk vorbestellt, das bisher verfügbare Material (#ShowMercy) aber bewusst noch nicht gehört. Der Hype Train rollt bei mir gerade bösartig los und ich freue mich total auf morgen!
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https://www.europesays.com/nl/133029/ Kanonenfieber – Soldatenschicksale | Zware Metalen #1914 #2026 #Amusement #antrisch #CenturyMediaRecords #death #DeathMetal #Duitsland #Dutch #EersteWereldoorlog #Entertainment #kanonenfieber #kommandant #MelodicBlack #MelodicBlackMetal #minenwerfer #Music #Muziek #Nederland #Nederlanden #Nederlands #Netherlands #NL #NonEstDeus #panzerfaust #prognan #recensie #soldatenschicksale #SonyMusic #ZwareMetalen
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NON EST DEUS (Alemanya) presenta nou single: "Show Mercy" #NonEstDeus #BlackMetal #Desembre2025 #Alemanya #NouSingle #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
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NON EST DEUS (Alemanya) presenta nou single: "Show Mercy" #NonEstDeus #BlackMetal #Desembre2025 #Alemanya #NouSingle #Metall #Metal #MúsicaMetal #MetalMusic
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They keep grinding the unfortunate
Burning down disbelief and freedom
Executing deniers for pleasure
Crucifying every approval of goodnessI can’t stand
This vainglory
They confess
Their everlasting greedI can’t stand
This overconfidence
That is grounded
On lethal wordsCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructhttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #Celebrate_the_Selfdestruct
-
They keep grinding the unfortunate
Burning down disbelief and freedom
Executing deniers for pleasure
Crucifying every approval of goodnessI can’t stand
This vainglory
They confess
Their everlasting greedI can’t stand
This overconfidence
That is grounded
On lethal wordsCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructhttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #Celebrate_the_Selfdestruct
-
They keep grinding the unfortunate
Burning down disbelief and freedom
Executing deniers for pleasure
Crucifying every approval of goodnessI can’t stand
This vainglory
They confess
Their everlasting greedI can’t stand
This overconfidence
That is grounded
On lethal wordsCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructhttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #Celebrate_the_Selfdestruct
-
Celebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Until your eyes are shuthttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #CelebrateTheSelfDestruct
3/3
-
Celebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Until your eyes are shuthttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #CelebrateTheSelfDestruct
3/3
-
Celebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Revel in this lie constructCelebrate the self-destruct
Destroy in the name of god
Celebrate the self-destruct
Until your eyes are shuthttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/celebrate-the-selfdestruct
#NowPlaying #NonEstDeus #Impious #CelebrateTheSelfDestruct
3/3
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A moment to clarify
Your god is based on a lie
A lie for which you would dieConstruct of human minds
Through which they justify
Cruelties and disgusting ritesMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll dieThey claim your free will and life
They devise a reason to fight
They take your human rightsTheir hate you can’t survive
They’ll find, you can not hide
Without honor and prideMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll diehttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/christraping-polka
-
A moment to clarify
Your god is based on a lie
A lie for which you would dieConstruct of human minds
Through which they justify
Cruelties and disgusting ritesMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll dieThey claim your free will and life
They devise a reason to fight
They take your human rightsTheir hate you can’t survive
They’ll find, you can not hide
Without honor and prideMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll diehttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/christraping-polka
-
A moment to clarify
Your god is based on a lie
A lie for which you would dieConstruct of human minds
Through which they justify
Cruelties and disgusting ritesMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll dieThey claim your free will and life
They devise a reason to fight
They take your human rightsTheir hate you can’t survive
They’ll find, you can not hide
Without honor and prideMake your choice
And it should be wise
It may decide
Which way you’ll diehttps://noisebringer-records.bandcamp.com/track/christraping-polka
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No honor. No dignity. No right to inhabit this planet
Despited by every living being
Religion the excuse. As it always was, as it always will be.
An excuse that always will be exploited.
Violence, death and injustice. -
No honor. No dignity. No right to inhabit this planet
Despited by every living being
Religion the excuse. As it always was, as it always will be.
An excuse that always will be exploited.
Violence, death and injustice. -
No honor. No dignity. No right to inhabit this planet
Despited by every living being
Religion the excuse. As it always was, as it always will be.
An excuse that always will be exploited.
Violence, death and injustice. -
Breathing it in
Fertilizing your thoughts
Inseminated with the spunkRaped by the shaft
Written in the bibleHabited thoughts
Unfounded rumors
A stack of lies
Puked into the mindSlaughter, extinction and rape
What does it stand for
Celebrating deadly sins
In a fuckfest of blood -
Breathing it in
Fertilizing your thoughts
Inseminated with the spunkRaped by the shaft
Written in the bibleHabited thoughts
Unfounded rumors
A stack of lies
Puked into the mindSlaughter, extinction and rape
What does it stand for
Celebrating deadly sins
In a fuckfest of blood -
Breathing it in
Fertilizing your thoughts
Inseminated with the spunkRaped by the shaft
Written in the bibleHabited thoughts
Unfounded rumors
A stack of lies
Puked into the mindSlaughter, extinction and rape
What does it stand for
Celebrating deadly sins
In a fuckfest of blood -
Ich finde es ja immer wieder beeindruckend wie krass überwältigend die #Musik von #Ein_Mann_Projekten, von #Multiinstrumentalisten sein kann. Ob #Noise (#NonEstDeus, #Kanonenfieber, #Leipa), #SCOURGE666, #Lurker_of_Chalice oder meine #Neuentdeckung #Luroga, irgendwie scheint es ein Vorteil zu sein keine Kompromisse eingehen zu müssen und die eigene Vision so umsetzen zu können wie es einem gerade richtig scheint!
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Ich finde es ja immer wieder beeindruckend wie krass überwältigend die #Musik von #Ein_Mann_Projekten, von #Multiinstrumentalisten sein kann. Ob #Noise (#NonEstDeus, #Kanonenfieber, #Leipa), #SCOURGE666, #Lurker_of_Chalice oder meine #Neuentdeckung #Luroga, irgendwie scheint es ein Vorteil zu sein keine Kompromisse eingehen zu müssen und die eigene Vision so umsetzen zu können wie es einem gerade richtig scheint!
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Ich finde es ja immer wieder beeindruckend wie krass überwältigend die #Musik von #Ein_Mann_Projekten, von #Multiinstrumentalisten sein kann. Ob #Noise (#NonEstDeus, #Kanonenfieber, #Leipa), #SCOURGE666, #Lurker_of_Chalice oder meine #Neuentdeckung #Luroga, irgendwie scheint es ein Vorteil zu sein keine Kompromisse eingehen zu müssen und die eigene Vision so umsetzen zu können wie es einem gerade richtig scheint!
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In the fire of justice it shall burn
Cauterize the gaping wound
Fill it up with free eagerness
From the ashes well start to createRotten stench of thousand years
Burn them to dust
Poisonous words that filled our ears
Burn them to dust
Letters that raped our soul and mind
Burn them to dust
The hostage of the humankind
Burn them to dust -
In the fire of justice it shall burn
Cauterize the gaping wound
Fill it up with free eagerness
From the ashes well start to createRotten stench of thousand years
Burn them to dust
Poisonous words that filled our ears
Burn them to dust
Letters that raped our soul and mind
Burn them to dust
The hostage of the humankind
Burn them to dust -
In the fire of justice it shall burn
Cauterize the gaping wound
Fill it up with free eagerness
From the ashes well start to createRotten stench of thousand years
Burn them to dust
Poisonous words that filled our ears
Burn them to dust
Letters that raped our soul and mind
Burn them to dust
The hostage of the humankind
Burn them to dust -
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