From the sun-soaked streets of Brisbane, emo rock outfit Bad Neighbour have spent the last few years carving out a rough-around-the-edges, heart-on-sleeve sound that’s unmistakably their own. Now, they’re ready to share news of their sophomore album, Burns From The X-rays, which is set for release Friday 5 June via Ninth Life Records. Ahead of […]Category: news
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BAD NEIGHBOUR Drop ‘Rush Apart’ From Upcoming Album
From the sun-soaked streets of Brisbane, emo rock outfit Bad Neighbour have spent the last few years carving out a rough-around-the-edges, heart-on-sleeve sound that’s unmistakably their own. Now, they’re ready to share news of their sophomore album, Burns From The X-rays, which is set for release Friday 5 June via Ninth Life Records. Ahead of […] -
No Shortcuts: OBSCURA Are Recording Everything. Australia, Behave Accordingly!
Interview by Ali Williams Trying to kick off an interview while your tech does that fun little “betrayal at the worst possible moment” routine is a very modern way to start talking to the frontman of Obscura. Thankfully, Steffen Kummerer was unbothered, cheerful, and immediately in touring mode, calling in from Munich while the band’s […] -
Vinyl Haul At Veneno

I knew it was going to be a great shop cause it had Scorpions’ In Trance in the window The big story round these parts is that I’ve got the vinyl bug back – big time. In February I noticed on Facebook that a new record shop, Veneno Music Store (Spanish for “poison” or “venom”) had opened in Dunfermline. I hadn’t been buying a lot of used vinyl lately so I wasn’t too excited about it. But Dunfermline is a quick drive from where I live and it’s a place I like going to anyway so I decided to visit for a wee nosey. I’ve now been back three times in the last month. Check out what I’ve been buying in the pictures below, it’s like he’s been using my Discogs wish-list to stock his shelves or something.
I’m really chuffed to finally have such a great record shop in my neck of the woods. The chap that runs it is very friendly and he’s getting in great stuff every week. It’s not all rock and metal, there’s quite a range of genres. All the things I’ve bought were conservatively graded, reasonably priced and have played like a dream. If you’re in the area please make sure to pop in. And tell them that HMO sent you.
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CRYPTWORM: Infectious Pathological Waste
Via Me Saco Un Ojo Records / Extremely RottenOut 27 March, 2026 Words by: Liam Hedges Returning with their third full-length album are the UK’s infected brutality-dealers Cryptworm. Infectious Pathological Waste serves as the perfect follow-up to the 2022 debut album Spewing Mephitic Putridity and 2023 release Oozing Radioactive Vomition. This album review really started […] -
Bladee – “Love Is A State” & “Eyelash”
Last month, Bladee shared the great track “Magic Misery,” and now he’s back with more. The Swedish rapper unleashed “Love Is A State” and “Eyelash” today, and he sounds better than ever, self-actualized, almost transcendent. After going full evil on 2024’s Cold Visions, he’s switching gears. “Love Is A State” and “Eyelash” are romantic, or…
The post Bladee – “Love Is A State” & “Eyelash” appeared first on Stereogum.
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Upcoming Metal Releases: 3/22/26 – 3/28/26
Here are the new releases for March 22nd to 28th. Releases reflect proposed North American scheduling, if available.
Upcoming Metal Releases: 3/22/26 – 3/28/26
Hellripper — Coronach | Century Media Records | Black Metal + Speed Metal | Scotland (Aberdeen)
In some ways, Coronach is Hellripper’s most Bathory-coded album (as if the whole blackened thrash conceit isn’t already paying royalties to Quorthon). It approaches the epic scale and mythology that Blood Fire Death toyed with through the lens of Hellripper’s native country and with a heavy NWOBHM flair.
–Colin Dempsey
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Varmia — Lauks | M-Theory Audio | Black Metal | Poland (Olsztyn)
Following their stellar 2023 album Nie nas widzę, Varmia return with polished pagan black metal. Although Lauks was recorded in castle ruins and features, among other instruments, a goat horn and a krivula, it doesn’t rely on atavism and sounds rather modern. Compared to Nie nas widzę, it feels like Varmia have finally caught up with this century.
–Colin Dempsey
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Bekor Qilish — Consecrated Abysses of Dread | I, Voidhanger Records | Avant-garde Metal + Death Metal + Black Metal | Italy (Milan)
A few years ago, I wrote that Bekor Qilish’s last album, The Flesh of a New God, “deconstructed their knotty compositions into legible fragments, so that instead of scratching your head wondering what it all means, you’re left in awe of how effortlessly Bekor Qilish congeal everything.” Their new record, Consecrated Abysses of Dread, continues that trend, and that’s the simplest way to describe it, else I sift through granular details about jazz, objective truth, the will to live, the cosmos, and Mick Barr (who guest features).
–Colin Dempsey
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Myrath — Wilderness of Mirrors | earMusic | Folk Metal + Power Metal + Progressive Metal | Tunisia
Myrath has long been extremely adept at building uplifting songs with infectious chorus melodies while maintaining the intensity that power prog metal has at its best. Wilderness of Mirrors continues that tradition, with songs such as “The Funeral” and “Breathing Near the Roar” fusing Middle Eastern folk influences and progressive power metal. Altogether, it’s a powerful and emotional album.
–Kevin Zecchel
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Iron Savior — Awesome Anthems of the Galaxy | Perception | Power Metal | Germany
Iron Savior is a founding piece of the German power scene, but have largely been overshadowed by peers like Blind Guardian and Helloween, despite putting out some of their best material in the last decade. That said, this album of ’80s pop covers is not that. Power metal does covers of pop music better than most styles of metal, but it’s still not essential listening unless you really want to hear German men covering Cutting Crew and Blondie.
–Kevin Zecchel
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Enisum — Autumn Embrace | Avantgarde Music | Atmospheric Black Metal + Doom Metal | Italy
Enisum are veterans of atmospheric black metal, having been around for 20 years and releasing, now, eight albums. Autumn Embrace is a contemplative listen, taking a lonely walk through isolated landscapes with strong tremolo-picked riffs and sparse vocals that occasionally cut through the music. They share sonic similarities with the Cascadian black metal scene, invoking the darkness of the deep forests in autumn’s grasp.
–Kevin Zecchel
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Cruel Force — Haneda | Shadow Kingdom Records | Thrash Metal + Speed Metal | Germany (Manheim)
With their 2023 reformation, Cruel Force divided fans with what could be described as a more streamlined sound, with the grim black thrash that characterized their early recordings honed and polished to reveal the razor-sharp steel beneath. Dawn of the Axe was thus a departure from the material that preceded it, but as a straightforward speed/thrash album, it was still great fun.
Cruel Force definitely doubles down on the denim and leather on their latest album Haneda; however, the band has more than a few tricks up their sleeve. Lead single “Whips A Swinging” takes us on a breakneck chariot ride chock full of stampeding percussion and rapid-fire riffs. But just past the halfway mark, the track slams on the brakes and allows a travelling group of exotic dancers to pass before resuming the chase. “Crystal Skull” is another highlight, taking the form of a dynamic, mid-paced instrumental whose bouncing rhythms and phrygian melodies fade away into an epic guitar solo that seems to emanate from a long-forgotten chamber within the temple. These little flourishes make all the difference, ensuring that Haneda stays fresh even after multiple listens.
–Alex Chan
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Këkht Aräkh — Morning Star | Sacred Bones Records | Black Metal + Ambient | Germany (Berlin)
Black metal auteur Këkht Aräkh is set to drop Morning Star, the long awaited follow-up to 2021’s Pale Swordsman. To the uninitiated, Këkht Aräkh is the singular vision of Ukrainian-born musician Dmitry Marchenko, aka Crying Orc. Since 2018, Crying Orc has steadfastly guided Këkht Aräkh’s evolution from his initial mission to combine Transilvanian Hunger-era Darkthrone with the vast icy cold electronic soundscapes of Internazionale and Croatian Amor into something more intimate and original. Pale Swordsman saw the elegant neoclassical flourishes and delicate ambient passages become more intricately interwoven into the quick jagged salvos of second wave black metal worship. The buzz surrounding Morning Star has revolved partially around the collaborators Crying Orc invited into Këkht Aräkh’s heretofore solitary orbit. Ambient producer VS-55 and the Swedish MC Bladee are two such guests. The impact increased levels of collaboration may have on Këkht Aräkh is fascinating for fans to consider.
Expanded collaboration seems to work best on “Genon Sorgen,” where VS-55 helps Crying Orc fashion a deeply sorrowful Ukrainian folk lament, replete with accordion and acoustics. It’s one of the album’s strongest moments, while Bladee’s appearance on “Eternal Martyr” barely registers. The overt black metal songs like “Wanderer,” “Lament,” “Castle,” “Angst,” and “Three Winters Away” are all somber desperate blasts of well-executed midpaced ravishing grimness, but even these are shot through with dour clean vocals, gothy whispers and a jangly droning acoustic guitar line, often high in the mix, that haunts the entire album like a Greek chorus. The more neoclassical folk, ambient and post-punk influenced tracks (“Raven King,” “Trollsang,” and others) fill out the back end of the record. Morning Star is indeed an extremely ambitious project. Whether all of these disparate influences and ingredients coalesce seamlessly will depend on the listener
–Dennis Seese
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Aggressive Perfector — Come Creeping Fiends | Dying Victims Productions | Speed Metal + Black Metal | United Kingdom (Manchester)
Madchester power trio Aggressive Perfector are back with Come Creeping Fiends, the sequel to 2019’s Havoc at the Midnight Hour. These British maniacs have brewed up a right poisonous batch of ancient, everlasting metal in the vein of Venom, Di’ Anno-era Maiden, Raven, and pre-Hell Awaits Slayer. Nothing new under the sun, but it has a primordial energy and aura only true believers can manifest. Whiplash-inducing denim and leather-clad rippers “Fiend in You,” “Strange Companion,” and “Denied by the Reaper” drip with the naked authenticity of lifers conjuring a communal reanimation of that magical moment you first popped in Show No Mercy or Welcome to Hell. Though adept at skillfully channelling their influences, make no mistake, Aggressive Perfector are equally skilled at crafting bruising, jaggedly catchy slabs of 100% pure British steel like “Harlot’s Spell” and “Obscene Cult.” If an unholy mix of revved up NWOBHM and black rock’n’roll (ala their fellow travellers Midnight) is something you need right now. Look no further. Aggressive Perfector has your back.
–Dennis Seese
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Album Review: Neurosis – An Undying Love for a Burning World
Ten years. A decade of silence fractured by fracture itself — not by the world outside, not by trends and streaming algorithms, but by something far more intimate and far more devastating. Neurosis did not simply go on hiatus; they were cracked open at the foundation. Nobody knew what, if anything, would come next. And … Continue reading Album Review: Neurosis – An Undying Love for a Burning World -
DEAFHEAVAN Announce Biggest Australian Tour To Date
American black-metal trailblazers Deafheaven announce their biggest Australian tour to date. Presented by Destroy All Lines, the tour will see them headline some of the country’s most prominent venues across Perth, Adelaide, Melbourne, Sydney, Newcastle and Brisbane, joined by special guests Nothing and SPY. Deafheaven return to Australia at their most expansive and unrelenting. Don’t […] -
Kelly Osbourne Calls Off Engagement To Slipknot’s Sid Wilson Amid Personal Struggles
Why Did Kelly Osbourne End Her Engagement With Sid Wilson?
Reports indicate the split comes after ongoing relationship challenges and the emotional toll of losing her father, Ozzy Osbourne.
TL;DR:
Kelly Osbourne has reportedly ended her engagement to Slipknot’s Sid Wilson after years together, citing both personal struggles following Ozzy Osbourne’s death and ongoing relationship issues. Despite the split, she remains focused on sobriety and raising their child.
This Story Is Bigger Than Just A Breakup
After having watched Kelly Osbourne grow up in the public eye, if there’s one thing that’s been consistent, it’s how quickly people turn her life into commentary.
This isn’t just another celebrity split.
It’s happening at a time when she’s dealing with one of the biggest personal losses imaginable—and that context matters more than anything.
Where Things Stand Right Now
According to reports from Daily Mail, Kelly Osbourne has called off her engagement to Slipknot DJ Sid Wilson after several years together.
The two weren’t just a recent couple either.
They had known each other for nearly 30 years, built a relationship that lasted close to five, and share a three-year-old child together. This wasn’t something casual—it was deeply rooted in history.
And from the outside, it looked solid.
But as is usually the case, things weren’t quite what they seemed.
Loaded Radio Recommends – Seven Months After the Silence: Ranking the 13 Ozzy Osbourne Solo Songs That Built a Throne

The Reality Behind The Split
It Wasn’t A Sudden Decision
Sources indicate the relationship had been facing challenges for some time.
This wasn’t a single moment or event—it was something that had been building behind the scenes. Like a lot of long-term relationships, they tried to make it work, especially with a child involved.
But eventually, they reached a point where continuing wasn’t the right move.
The Timing Makes It Even Heavier
This all comes in the aftermath of Ozzy Osbourne’s passing—a loss that understandably changes everything.
Grief doesn’t just affect one part of your life. It bleeds into everything.
And trying to hold together a relationship while dealing with something that heavy isn’t something most people can even imagine, let alone manage under constant public scrutiny.
The Conversation Around Kelly Has Been Ugly
The Focus On Her Appearance Misses The Point
Over the past few months, a lot of the discussion around Kelly hasn’t been about her situation—it’s been about how she looks.
Framed as “concern,” but let’s be honest—it’s the same kind of commentary she’s dealt with for years.
And it ignores the reality of what she’s going through.
This Isn’t New—And That’s The Problem
Anyone who remembers the early 2000s knows how brutal the media was toward her.
So seeing the same patterns repeat now, at a time like this, says more about the culture around celebrity than it does about her.
There’s a difference between concern and projection—and people blur that line way too easily.
What Happens Next
She’s Focusing On What Matters
Despite everything, reports indicate Kelly remains sober and is now focusing on herself and her role as a mother.
That’s not a small thing.
That’s rebuilding.
And it’s probably the most important part of this entire story.
The Relationship Still Meant Something
Even though things didn’t work out, this wasn’t a short-lived situation.
There’s history here. A shared life. A child.
That doesn’t just disappear because a relationship ends.
It just changes form.
Why This Moment Matters
There’s always a temptation to reduce stories like this to headlines.
Breakup. Engagement off. Move on.
But this one carries more weight than that.
It’s about grief, pressure, history, and trying to move forward while the world watches and comments on things it doesn’t understand.
And maybe the better question right now isn’t what happened in the relationship.
It’s why people feel the need to turn someone else’s personal struggle into public analysis in the first place.
Check This Out – The Ultimate Ranking: The Top 13 Jake E. Lee Era Ozzy Osbourne Songs

FAQ
Why Did Kelly Osbourne And Sid Wilson Break Up?
Reports suggest ongoing relationship challenges combined with the emotional impact of Ozzy Osbourne’s death contributed to the split.
How Long Were Kelly Osbourne And Sid Wilson Together?
They had known each other for nearly 30 years and were in a relationship for close to five years.
Do They Have Children Together?
Yes, they share a three-year-old child.
Is Kelly Osbourne Still Sober?
According to reports, she remains sober and is focusing on her health and family.
Band Bio: Slipknot
Slipknot is an American heavy metal band formed in Des Moines, Iowa in 1995. Known for their aggressive sound, masked image, and high-energy performances, they have become one of the most influential metal bands of the modern era.
The post Kelly Osbourne Calls Off Engagement To Slipknot’s Sid Wilson Amid Personal Struggles appeared first on Loaded Radio.
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Classic Cover: “God of Thunder” – The Troops of Doom (original by KISS)
To celebrate six years of tearing things up, The Troops of Doom have decided to immortalise their take on the Kiss classic “God of Thunder”. It’s not just a standard cover, though; they’ve brought along a few legendary mates to help out, including Chuck Billy of Testament and Martin Furia from Destruction. Stream it now … Continue reading Classic Cover: “God of Thunder” – The Troops of Doom (original by KISS)