Category: news

  • Mondlicht in Manhattan — Xmal Deutschland’s Anja Huwe Opens Her First North American Tour in Forty Years

    Anja Huwe walked onto the stage at Le Poisson Rouge on Bleecker Street in Manhattan looking like she had just stepped out of some glamourous midnight ambush: fluffy black jacket, leather pants, killer heeled boots, and those famous ice-blue eyes staring out over the room with the kind of cool, electric poise that can still make a crowd forget its own name. This was the triumphant kickoff of her first North American tour in forty years…which is the sort of sentence that sounds unreal even when you’re standing there watching it happen, drink in hand, shoulder to shoulder with a room full of devotees.

    Photo: Alice Teeple
    Photo: Alice Teeple

    After a thrilling intro, the band tore into Boomerang, and just like that, all historical reverence got kicked to the curb in favour of the far better business of being gloriously, physically present. Huwe sounded as robust as ever, particularly considering she was fighting off a bad cold, and there was something almost absurdly thrilling about hearing her voice. Huwe proved her legacy was never preserved in amber or propped up by nostalgia; nor gingerly handling old glories like museum pieces, but alive, kicking, and swinging a belt around the stage.

    Photo: Alice Teeple

    Flanked by Mona Mur (and Tom Ashton of The March Violets), the set moved beautifully between material from Codes and the Xmal Deutschland canon, making a convincing case that this wasn’t some heritage lap or victory crawl through old headlines. Songs like Living in the Forest, Pariah, Exit, and Rabenschwarz carried the newer material with a fierce, tensile grace, while Xmal staples like Geheimnis, Allein, Young Man, Augen-blick, Eisengrau, Autumn, Polarlicht, Incubus Succubus, and Qual arrived like dispatches from a parallel era where post-punk could still sound dangerous, theatrical, and weirdly elegant all at once. Eden, the Mod Con cover, slipped in like a sly little detour, and Sleep With One Eye Open had the room leaning forward as if the floor itself had become conductive.

    Photo: Alice Teeple

    Huwe, who stepped away from music after Xmal Deutschland’s distinguished run to focus on visual art and painting, has spoken about being haunted for years by the legend of the band and by endless requests to return, all of which she refused until recently. Maybe that’s part of what made this show feel so exciting and fresh: there was none of that grim ceremonial duty that so often dogs long-awaited returns. She was genuinely delighted to be there, dancing, trading energy with her bandmates, cracking little jokes with the audience before snapping back into business with the easy authority of one who knows exactly how much mischief and majesty a room can take.

    Photo: Alice Teeple

    At one point, she brought out a Polaroid camera and started taking photos of the audience, handing the pictures out to ecstatic fans like party favours from a beautifully strange aunt who had just descended from another dimension. Sacred Bones cohorts were spotted in the crowd, appropriately reverent but also visibly thrilled, because Codes, her first solo album for the label, has helped complete this restoration in a wonderfully organic way.  That record, shaped in collaboration with Mona Mur and sharpened by the return of Manuela Rickers’ guitar presence, carries the same hard emotional line that always made Huwe so powerful. Live, you could hear that continuum clearly: the old material still bristling, the newer songs seamlessly blending in perfectly.

    Photo: Alice Teeple
    Photo: Alice Teeple
    Photo: Alice Teeple
    Photo: Alice Teeple

    By the end of the night, Huwe admitted she was having some vocal trouble, and you could hear the strain around the edges. But then came the encore, Orient, followed by a second run through Mondlicht, and if there was any fragility in the moment, it only made everything hit harder. The audience happily, loudly and gratefully erupted in pogo dancing and a delightful singalong.

    Anja was then generous enough to spend the end of the evening signing treasures and taking selfies with her fans. It was truly heartwarming to behold.

    Photo: Alice Teeple

    Listen to Codes below and order the album here.

    Catch Anja Huwe on tour through the rest of March and early April:

    • March 21, 2026 — Chicago, IL — Epiphany Center for the Arts — Tickets
    • March 22, 2026 — San Francisco, CA — Great American Music Hall — Tickets
    • March 25, 2026 — Los Angeles, CA — 1720 — Tickets
    • March 28, 2026 — Mexico City, MX — Mesones72 — Tickets
    • March 29, 2026 — San José, Costa Rica — Amon Solar — Tickets
    • April 1, 2026 — Costa Rica – Ardan Goth Festival
    • April 3, 2026 — Lima, Peru
    • April 4, 2026 — São Paulo, Brazil

    Follow Anja Huwe:

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    The post Mondlicht in Manhattan — Xmal Deutschland’s Anja Huwe Opens Her First North American Tour in Forty Years appeared first on Post-Punk.com.

  • Release Round Up – March 20th 2026

    Release Round Up – March 20th, 2026

    Every week there is a tidal wave of new music released unto the world. Each Friday we’ll round up some of the best new music available, some we’ve reviewed, some we haven’t, but all worth checking out!

    Theres a lot of new heavy music hitting the airwaves this week, everything from black metal, death metal, gothic metal, Stoner rock, doom, thrash metal and even some of your traditional heavy metal!

    Here’s what we think you should check out today!

    ALBUM OF THE WEEK 

    Thrash metal veterans Exodus unleash ‘Goliath’, their thirteenth studio album, via Napalm Records.

    “easily the most varied Exodus album to date”

    Read out full review here.

    Toronto-based progressive death metal quartet Gutvoid release ‘Liminal Shrines’ via Profound Lore Records.

    “perverted, reshaped and recontextualised for the band’s desires.”

    Read our full review here.

    Porto’s beautiful extreme enigma Gaerea are ste to release latest work ‘Loss’ this week via Century Media Records.

    “Gaerea aren’t just doing the bare minimum to survive. They’re absolutely thriving with “Loss”.”

    Read our full review here.

    Peruvian death merchants Hell Treppaner release ‘The Consecration of Eternal Impurity’ via Awakening Records.

    “It comes in, rips the flesh off your face and leaves with zero abandon.”

    Read our full review here.

    Kate’s Acid release ‘Hellbender’ via High Roller Records this week.

    “a definite callback to the heavy metal of the 1980’s”

    Read our full review here.

    Hungarian speed maniacs Türböwitch  release ‘Under Haunted Skies’ via Time To Kill Records.

    “It’s short, fast and aggressive”

    Read our full review here.

    Abyssius return with their most confrontational and uncompromising work to date, ‘Vermin’

    “the band bolt an anthemic melodeath chainmail to the plate armour of modern metalcore and deathcore subgenres.”

    Read our full review here.

    Back with their first album in fifteen years, Poison The Well release ‘Peace in Place’ via Sharptone Records.

    “exploding into life with aggression and brutality”

    Read our full review here.

    Brazilian extremists Diatribes release ‘Degenerate’ via Brutal Records.

    “Maybe Diatribes and their take on an evergreen if defiantly retro sound will be what the doctor ordered”

    Read our full review here.

    The UK’s heaviest and sickest exponents of shocking brutality are back, Engorgement release ‘They Rot Beneath Our Floor’ via Comatose Music.

    “a heady mix of slam and brutal death, whose blasts and breakdowns will shake you to your core”

    Read our full review here.

    German thrashers Nuclear Warfare unleash ‘All Hail to the Liberator’ via MDD Records.

    “if you’re desperate for a new Sodom or Destruction album then this just might scratch that itch while you’re waiting.”

    Read our full review here.

    And thats just the tip of the iceberg! Other releases today we think you should check out include…

    Rock

    ClockTowers – Genesis (Independent)
    Filth Is Eternal – Impossible World (MNRK Heavy)
    Ignescent – Eternal (Frontiers Music SRL)
    S8nt Elecktic – Off The Edge (Long Branch Records)
    Sick Shooters – Super Sonic Rock Saga (Wap Shoo Wap Records)
    Stainless – Lady of Lust & Steel (High Roller Records)
    Stonus – Space To Dive (Ripple Music)
    Stud Farm Mafia – Did You Have A Good Weekend? (Independent)
    Tyketto – Closer To The Sun (Silver Lining Music)

    Heavy Metal

    Axel Rudi Pell – Ghost Town (Steamhammer / SPV)
    Following The Signs – Evolve [EP] (Independent)
    Lost in Hollywood – Lost in Hollywood (Arising Empire)
    Misty Route – Ethos (Bitume)
    Night Thieves – Metaxis (Independent)
    Nihilanth – Detritus of Ruin [EP] (Independent)
    Venus 5 – March of the Venus 5 (Frontiers Music SRL)

    Black Metal

    Calvana – Sub Janus (Adirondack Black Mass)
    Decipher – Oeahma (Thelema) (Transcending Obscuirty Records)
    Via Doloris – Guerre et Paix (Season of Mist)

    Death Metal / Death-Doom / Grindcore

    Cultist – Spiritual Atrophy (Awakening Records)
    Deimler – Darkness Falls (Awakening Records)
    Dragsholm – The Bloodlines of Bram (Faithless Entertainent)
    Egregore – It Echoes In The Wild (20 Buck Spin)
    Empire of Disease – While Everything Collapses (Xtreem Music)
    Graufar – Via Necropolis (Independent)
    Hautajaisyö – Surun paino (Inverse Records)
    Karmian – Horror Vacui (Rockshots Records)
    Necrogore – Ectoplasmic Rape Phenomena (Awakening Records)
    Papa Necrose – Anthropomorphy Execution (Awakening Records)
    Putred – Blestemul Din Adanc (Awakening Records)
    Rötual – For The Dead (Independent)
    Skull Altar – Diabolical (Independent)

    Doom / Stoner Rock / Sludge / Psych

    Chalice of Suffering – The Raven Cries One Last Time (My Kingdom Music)
    Goatsmoker – E.R.I.S. (Vinyltroll Records)
    Lord of Confusion – The Weight of Life (Morbid And Miserable Records / Larvae Records)
    Magnitudo – M A T E R I A L I S M (Dusktone)
    Mister Earthbound – Ostara [EP] (Independent)
    Norna/Legbiter – Norna/Legbiter [SPLIT EP] (Pelagic Records)
    Radian – Subterfuge (Third House Communications)

    Hardcore / Post-Hardcore

    Manchester Orchestra – Union Chapel, London, England (Loma Vista Recordings)
    mclusky – i sue am getting sick of this bowling alley (Ipecac Recordings)
    Truth Grip – Twist of Fate (Thrash Out Records)

    Power Metal

    Assignment – With The End Comes Silence (Massacre Records)
    Evermore – Mournbraid (Scarlet Records)

    Punk

    Cowboy Hunters – EPeepee [EP] (Independent)
    Gladie – No Need To Be Lonely (Get Better Records)
    Shatten – Gegenwart (Mistunes)
    The Dogs – Back To Fucking (Indie Recordings)

    … and the rest!

    Askemåne – Kollisjon (Independent) [Neo Folk]
    Barren Womb/Hylko – Split Single (Fucking North Pole Records/Captured Records) [Noise Rock]
    Leila Bordreuil + Kali Malone – Music for Intersecting Planes (Ideologic Organ) [Experimental]
    Mystfall – Embers of a Dying World (Scarlet Records) [Symphonic Metal]
    Persecutor – Casualties of Violence (Audible Music) [Thrash Metal]

    For all the latest news, reviews, interviews across the heavy metal spectrum follow THE RAZORS’S EDGE on facebook, twitter and instagram.

    The post Release Round Up – March 20th 2026 appeared first on The Razor's Edge.

  • MotherFather is Pete Lynch’s EP Out Now

    Good Day Noir Family,
    Pete Lynch approaches MotherFather with a clear sense of direction, crafting an EP that balances experimentation and emotional weight without losing focus.

    MotherFather is Pete Lynch’s EP Out Now

    The title track opens the record with a gradual rise, establishing a dense and immersive atmosphere that unfolds patiently rather than rushing toward impact.

    The compositional style brings to mind echoes of Brian Eno and Peter Gabriel, yet Lynch filters those influences through a distinctly personal lens. The result feels deliberate, with each layer introduced at the right moment to build tension.

    “Let’s Celebrate Tonight” shifts the energy with a sharp guitar figure that anchors the track from the outset. In addition, a syncopated groove injects movement, supporting a vocal line that navigates melody with precision. The track highlights Lynch’s willingness to stretch beyond conventional structures while maintaining coherence.

    Yet it is “Through the Fire” that leaves a deeper imprint. The rhythm locks into a hypnotic pulse, while subtle tonal choices introduce a Middle Eastern flavor that expands the track’s emotional range. The interplay between percussive elements and melodic phrasing creates a sense of forward motion that feels almost ritualistic. This is where Lynch’s artistic identity becomes fully apparent.

    Still, “Let the Loving Begin” offers a contrasting moment, opening with a robotic vocal texture that sets a futuristic tone. When the beat drops, the transition feels purposeful and engaging. The vocal production throughout the EP stands out, often treated with megaphone-like effects and reverb that give Lynch’s voice an almost prophetic presence.

    “Eye in the Sky,” originally by The Alan Parsons Project, is reinterpreted with a darker edge. The synth introduction recalls the cinematic tension associated with John Carpenter, adding a subtle sense of unease. Lynch’s vocal delivery remains intense and expressive, reinforcing his strong artistic vision.

    “My Forever” closes the EP on a reflective note. The arrangement emphasizes space, allowing textures to breathe while the vocal line carries emotional weight. Even so, the track retains a hypnotic quality that lingers after the final moments. MotherFather stands as a cohesive and forward-thinking release, blending avant-garde instincts with accessible songwriting.

    MotherFather is Pete Lynch’s EP Out Now!


    Hypnotic!


    MotherFather is Pete Lynch’s EP Out Now

    American singer-songwriter Pete Lynch crafts a distinctive blend of alternative rock, atmospheric electronica, and hip-hop-influenced rhythms, shaping a sound that feels both intimate and wide in scope. His music carries a strong sense of intention, pairing textured production with a deeply personal artistic voice.

    Originally from Maryland and now moving between Denver and Vienna, Austria, Lynch channels his diverse surroundings into emotionally rich compositions. With a focus on mood, identity, and human complexity, he creates immersive sonic spaces that resonate on a personal and cinematic level.

     




    Find Pete Lynch Here:

    Spotify
    Instagram


    Discover New Bands Click Here


    The post MotherFather is Pete Lynch’s EP Out Now appeared first on Edgar Allan Poets – Noir Rock Band.

  • George Thorogood to release “The Baddest Show on Earth: Greatest Hits Live”

    George Thorogood and The Destroyers are set to release a new live collection, The Baddest Show on Earth: Greatest Hits Live, arriving June 12 via Craft Recordings. The album captures performances spanning 1978 through 2024 and highlights the band’s reputation as one of blues rock’s most enduring live acts.

    The release will be available on LP, CD, and digital formats. The vinyl edition features four previously unreleased tracks, while the expanded CD and digital versions include eight unreleased performances. Physical editions also include new liner notes from GRAMMY Award-winning producer and blues musician Scott Billington.

    The collection showcases some of the band’s most recognizable songs, including “Who Do You Love,” “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer,” “Bad to the Bone,” and “Move It on Over.” Among the highlights are previously unreleased performances such as “Ride on Josephine” from 1978 and “One Bourbon, One Scotch, One Beer” recorded in 1980. The album also features a 1982 live version of “Bad to the Bone” recorded in Boston, along with more recent recordings like “Born to Be Bad” from 2024 and blues classics “Howlin’ for My Baby” and “Tail Dragger.”

    “When the lights go down, the downbeat hits and the audience erupts; all bets are off. The Destroyers are at their best when we play for the people, and these are some of our favorite—and rarest—performances from the past five decades. You wanted the baddest, you got it,” said George Thorogood.

    Formed in 1973 by Thorogood and drummer Jeff Simon, the band built its reputation through relentless touring and high-energy performances. Over the decades, they have played more than 8,000 shows, sold over 15 million albums worldwide, and toured alongside artists such as The Rolling Stones, ZZ Top, and Sammy Hagar. Their live shows have remained central to their identity, dating back to their record-setting “50 States in 50 Dates” tour in 1981.

    The current lineup includes Jeff Simon, Bill Blough, Jim Suhler, and Buddy Leach. The band is currently on the road for The Baddest Show on Earth tour, with dates scheduled across North America and Europe throughout 2026.

    The Baddest Show on Earth Tour Dates:

    March 19 – River Cree Casino & Resort (Enoch, Canada)
    March 20 – Grey Eagle Event Centre (South Calgary, Canada)
    March 22 – Conexus Arts Centre (Regina, Canada)
    March 24 – Burton Cummings Theatre (Winnipeg, Canada)
    March 25 – Amsoil Arena (Duluth, MN)
    March 27 – FireKeepers Casino (Battle Creek, MI)
    March 28 – Brown County Music Center (Nashville, IN)
    March 29 – Rialto Square Theatre (Joliet, IL)
    March 31 – The Midland Theatre (Newark, OH)
    April 2 – FirstOntario Concert Hall (Hamilton, Canada)
    April 3 – Casino Rama Resort (Rama, Canada)
    April 4 – Hard Rock Hotel & Casino Ottawa (Ottawa, Canada)

    May 1 – The Capitol Theatre (Port Chester, NY)
    May 2 – The Paramount (Huntington, NY)
    May 3 – Penn’s Peak (Jim Thorpe, PA)
    May 5 – Capital One Hall (Tysons, VA)
    May 6 – The Carolina Opry (Myrtle Beach, SC)
    May 7 – St. Augustine Amphitheatre (St. Augustine, FL)
    May 9 – Wildflower! Arts & Music Festival (Key West, FL)
    May 10 – Seminole Brighton Bay Hotel & Casino (Okeechobee, FL)
    May 12 – Macon City Auditorium (Macon, GA)
    May 13 – Pensacola Saenger Theatre (Pensacola, FL)
    May 15 – Wildflower! Arts & Music Festival (Richardson, TX)
    May 16 – Riverwind Casino (Norman, OK)
    May 17 – The Astro (La Vista, NE)
    May 19 – Vibrant Music Hall (Waukee, IA)
    May 21 – The Colosseum at Caesars Windsor (Windsor, Canada)
    May 22 – Rose Music Center at The Heights (Huber Heights, OH)
    May 23 – Beaver Dam Amphitheater (Beaver Dam, KY)

    June 20 – Holland International Blues Festival (Grolloo, Netherlands)
    June 23 – Uber Eats Music Hall (Berlin, Germany)
    June 26 – Bataclan (Paris, France)
    June 29 – The Civic Hall (Wolverhampton, UK)
    June 30 – Indigo at The O2 (London, UK)

    July 4 – Puistoblues (Järvenpää, Finland)
    July 10 – Lakefront Music Fest 2026 (Prior Lake, MN)

    September 4 – Champlain Valley Fair (Essex Junction, VT)
    September 25 – One805Live! 2026 (Montecito, CA)

    The post George Thorogood to release “The Baddest Show on Earth: Greatest Hits Live” appeared first on Blues Rock Review.

  • “Oy!” A Short Film by Ben Bostian with a Soundtrack by Ellery Twining, Out Now

    Good Day Noir Family,
    Today’s review steps slightly outside the usual format. Ellery Twining has joined forces with filmmaker Ben Bostian to create the soundtrack for a short film, and the result feels less like a background score and more like an emotional compass guiding the entire experience.

    “Oy!” A Short Film by Ben Bostian with a Soundtrack by Ellery Twining, Out Now

    The film itself follows two friends on a snowboarding trip up a quiet mountain.

    There are few words. Instead, glances, movement, and landscape carry the narrative. It’s Twining’s music that transforms those simple gestures into something lasting. The compositions float gently beneath the images, adding dimension without overwhelming the visuals.

    The tone of the score leans toward the experimental. There’s a suspended quality to the melodies, almost mirage-like, as if time has briefly slowed. The snowy scenery, sometimes blurred by mist, gains additional depth through these subtle harmonic textures. The viewer doesn’t just watch the day unfold. They feel it.

    There’s a faint echo of Lynch in the way mood takes precedence over dialogue. The music never dictates emotion directly. It lingers. It invites interpretation. Twining understands restraint, allowing silence and space to carry equal weight alongside the notes.

    The most striking aspect lies in how the score captures memory. These are the kinds of days that seem ordinary at first glance. Two friends, fresh air, snow underfoot. Yet, over time, such moments settle deeper into memory. The music underscores that transformation. It suggests that what feels small in the present can become monumental in retrospect.

    Furthermore, the closing sequence—where the friends pause to watch the sunset—gains quiet significance. A simple sunset becomes symbolic. Twining’s understated arrangement elevates that stillness, sealing the day with reflection rather than spectacle.

    This collaboration proves that music can complete visual storytelling without drawing attention to itself. Twining and Bostian create an experience that feels personal and universal at once.

    Oy!” A Short Film by Ben Bostian with a Soundtrack by Ellery Twining, Out Now!


    Reflective!


    “Oy!” A Short Film by Ben Bostian with a Soundtrack by Ellery Twining, Out Now

    Ben Bostian and Ellery Twining connect through a shared experimental spirit, crossing paths via Savannah College of Art & Design and the music project Delta of Venus. What begins as a personal connection quickly evolves into a creative exchange shaped by coincidence and curiosity.

    Their work centers on “indeterminate music,” building each track through improvisation over the last, capturing mood with minimal intervention.




    Find Ellery Twining Here:

    Bandcamp
    Instagram


    Discover New Bands Click Here


    The post “Oy!” A Short Film by Ben Bostian with a Soundtrack by Ellery Twining, Out Now appeared first on Edgar Allan Poets – Noir Rock Band.

  • Chiodos Teasing Apparent New Studio Sessions

    A montage of studio footage from the band has newly been shared.

    The post Chiodos Teasing Apparent New Studio Sessions appeared first on Theprp.com.

  • Paula Boggs Band – Sumatra

    I suppose it’s only natural that a musician from Seattle would use a region’s coffee as a metaphor for the style of one of their albums. Sumatran coffee is generally considered to be bold and full-bodied, with notes of earthiness, spice and chocolate. That’s actually not too bad of a one-line review for Paula Boggs […]
  • The Veil is Lifted — Greek Gothic Rockers Reflection Black Ignite the Dark With “Burning Obsidian Star”

    Beacon of foul light carry us forth into the great beyond

    The veil is lifted, black light spilling

    Burning obsidian star 

    Athens has always seemed like the sort of city where the old gods might still be loitering behind the clubs, smoking clove cigarettes and waiting for somebody to plug in a guitar loud enough to wake the Kraken.  On Burning Obsidian Star, Greek goth rockers Reflection Black come on like alchemists turning ritual into rhythm, hauling myth, mortality, and a little metal-bred menace.

    Too many bands dabble in the occult like they bought the Cliff’s Notes for The Lesser Key of Solomon. Reflection Black sounds like they have actually spent some time in a dungeon with these ideas, letting them stain the walls and seep into the songs. The whole album carries itself with conviction, but not the kind that turns pompous and topples over under its own robes.

    Reflection Black have influences all over the place: The Sisters of Mercy, The Damned (particularly in their Phantasmagoria era), The Mission, a little of that newer cemetery-club cool, and yes, some steel in the spine from older metal, but they never sound like record collectors playing dress-up. They sound hungry, focused, and a little dangerous in the way all good gothic rock should.

    Dreams Fade to Nothing opens the album with the kind of hook that knows exactly how to plant itself in your head and redecorate. From there, the band move with a cool, deliberate gait, letting the guitars carve sharp lines while the synths mass in the distance like storm fronts over stone ruins. The rhythm section keeps everything taut and driving, never overplaying, never wandering off in search of some grand statement. That discipline gives the songs their force. Nobody is showing off for the mirror; they are too busy building the mood and keeping it alive.

    The Architect in Slumber reaches into Lovecraftian dread without turning into costume drama, which is harder than most groups seem to realize. It has scale, it has pressure, and it has a voice at the center that lands with enough gravity to keep the whole thing from floating off into gothic pageantry. The title track is where the album really bares its teeth.

    Burning Obsidian Star swings harder, drags in blackened edges, and gives the band room to show how comfortably they can move between post-punk tension and heavier instincts without sounding confused about who they are. It is a hymn for people who’d kiss the apocalypse on the mouth and call it communion. These lyrics turn annihilation into ascension, with fire as sacrament and the black star as cruel saviour. Flesh chars, blood boils, mouths fill with ash, and somehow the whole damned thing still glows with ecstatic purpose.

    Alex offers insight into the theme of Wonders of Night: “Nyx…according to Orphic Theogony, is a primordial force from which the universe has spawned. She is considered the mother of several divine beings, but also breeds a number of primordial negative forces like Thanatos, Nemesis and Eris.” In that lineage, the song finds its gravity. It carries the sense of standing before something older than doctrine, older than daylight.

    Burning Obsidian Star is a strong, fully formed album by a band that seem to know exactly where they’re headed, even if the destination happens to be a boat ride with  Charon to the underworld.

    Listen to Burning Obsidian Star below and order the album here.

    Follow Reflection Black:

    The post The Veil is Lifted — Greek Gothic Rockers Reflection Black Ignite the Dark With “Burning Obsidian Star” appeared first on Post-Punk.com.

  • GAMA BOMB & OWLS WOODS GRAVES Added to HELLS BELLS FESTIVAL 2026

    Debut festival edition expands to three stages as new ticket prices take effect

    Szczecin, Poland; 19 March 2026Hells Bells Festival continues its build-up toward 26-27 June 2026 with a dual band announcement and a major logistical expansion. 

    The festival has confirmed Northern Ireland thrashers Gama Bomb and Polish blackened punks Owls Woods Graves, while also revealing that the event will now span three distinct stages at the Plac Gryfitów site.

    Gama Bomb are widely known for their speed, technicality, and fun-filled, high-octane live shows. Fans in Szczecin should prepare for a masterclass in headbanging as the band brings their signature “thrash metal bomb” to the Łasztownia waterfront. The band’s latest release is the EP “Necronomicon Automaton”.

    The bill is further bolstered by Owls Woods Graves, a project conceived by The Fall  & E.V.T. Their unique sound, self-described as “haunted woods hardcore”, blends black metal with raw punk energy and macabre storytelling inspired by witches and the Devil. The band is currently promoting their third album, “Strix”.

    In a significant move for the festival’s scale, organisers have also confirmed that Hells Bells 2026 will now feature three stages. This expansion allows for a more diverse range of sounds and ensures that the performances are more spread out across the schedule, reducing time pressure and providing a better experience for both the artists and the audience.

    Gama Bomb and Owls Woods Graves join an already stacked line-up that includes the likes of Dirkschneider, Grave Digger, Cockney Rejects, UK Subs, Vader, Possessed, Discharge, NunSlaughter, Furia, Dead Congregation, Last Resort, Dezerter, The Materia, Belzebong and Słoń. 

    As previously announced, the festival has entered its next pricing tier. This pool of tickets will be available only until 31 May 2026 (or until sold out): Full Weekend Pass (PLN 409), Friday Ticket (PLN 199), Saturday Ticket (PLN 229). The festival also continues to offer the discounted Youth Pass (ages 13-18) and Family Pass (adult with child under 13).

    Secure your entry nowhttps://hellsbells.pl/

    Hells Bells online 
    FBhttps://www.facebook.com/hellsbellsfestival

    FB Eventhttps://fb.me/e/7cujCjrCo

    IGhttps://www.instagram.com/hellsbellsfestival

    TikTokhttps://www.tiktok.com/@hellsbellsfestival

    Official teaserhttps://youtu.be/TybhrrUbNF4?si=s5V9NNRZ4t1JV499

    Source: 3nation