Blog
-
TULUS stream new DARKNESS SHALL RISE album at Black Metal Promotion
Today, Norwegian black metallers Tulus stream the entirety of their highly anticipated eighth album, Morbid Desires, at the Black Metal Promotion Youtube channel. Set for international release on March 27th via Darkness Shall Rise Productions, hear Tulus‘ Morbid Desires in its entirety exclusively HERE. Tulus‘ self-titled single marks a personal and direct connection between the band and the track itself. The song “Tulus” is meant to […] -
Escape The Fate & The Word Alive Booked For June Australian Tour
A week’s worth of shows have been lined up.
The post Escape The Fate & The Word Alive Booked For June Australian Tour appeared first on Theprp.com.
-
DARK MILLENNIUM Announce New Album “COME” Official Video “Amber” Out Now
German avantgarde death metal pioneers DARK MILLENNIUM return with their new studio album “COME”, set to be released on May 22nd, 2026 via Massacre Records. The album will be available as Digipak CD, limited vinyl LP and digital formats, marking a new chapter in the band’s long-standing and distinctive artistic journey. To celebrate the announcement, DARK MILLENNIUM unveil the first single and official […] -
“Scottish vampire priests? That fits us perfectly!”: Inside the metal thrashing mad world of Hellripper
The Hunderprest they called him, The Dog Priest, The Vampire Of Melrose Abbey. In the 12th century, he was a clergyman housed in the monastery, between Hadrian’s Wall and Edinburgh. Not a particularly Godly man of God, enjoying vice and disobedience, with a particular preference for unsanctioned shagging and hunting with dogs over scripture.
“In his lifetime he was a chaplain that lived a life of sin, not a very nice person overall,” explains James McBain. “When he died, legend says he was buried in the graveyard of Melrose Abbey.”
Folklore historian John Lang described the Priest’s death as “no more holy than his selfish, sensual life had been”. Indeed, by all accounts he refused to stay in his grave.
“When night fell, he would harass and haunt the villagers and former mistress to satisfy his bloodthirst,” notes James.
Eventually, a troupe of monks were dispatched to Hunderprest’s grave, whereupon they saw him rise and try to attack them. After beating the ghoul back with a staff, at dawn they exhumed his corpse, which they found to be in surprisingly good nick, with newly-drawn blood around the mouth. They burned the body and discarded the ashes to the wind, but right up until the 19th century, sightings and disturbances around the abbey have been put down to its resident vampire.
“It’s a classic piece of Scottish folkore,” grins James. “It’s pretty metal. And it fits Hellripper perfectly.”
This kind of thing is baked into Hellripper’s brilliant new album, Coronach, titled after a type of Scottish funeral song. “There’s poetry, horror stories, folklore, true events like Burke and Hare and the Body Snatchers of 19th century Scotland,” he continues. “There was a lot to explore within the theme of Scotland in general. Using Scotland as the backdrop allows me to kind of conjure a different atmosphere.”
As it happens, the friendly frontman and his band have spent the past decade or so carving their name into the list of Scottish notables. Even without Coronach’s references, across their previous four albums there’s been an indelibly Scottish quality to Hellripper and their wild-eyed thrashings. “It kind of gives the band its own identity, especially in the thrash, speed metal scene. There’s not many band singing about Scotland!”
It’s done them alright so far, and found James playing songs that started as a bedroom project (and sort of remain so, on the studio side) on stages from their nominal home of Aberdeen to Texas. Coronach comes at a point where Hellripper’s fortunes are such that their next two years are basically already in the diary, hitting almost every continent, and James has been able to call it his livelihood for a while now. Even having to find a temporary bassist for their upcoming Goatkraft And Granite Tour after Andy Milburn buggered his leg in a bizarre ice-skating accident can’t slow them down, in any sense.
“I think it was literally his first time skating. He was coming off and broke his knee,” winces James. “He’s fine, but he’s out for two months. He’s getting bored, he’s been doing word-searches and sudoku.”
Today, Kerrang! joins the frontman at his HQ up in the Highlands, “Not quite in the middle of nowhere, but three or four hours away from the nearest music scene, or where the airport is.” Away from the madness of shows, this suits James just fine, being by his own admission “kind of a loner” by nature.
“I like working by myself,” he shrugs. “I get better results.”
He even recorded the album by himself, bar the drums. This goes back to the start of Hellripper, beginning as a project he eventually shelved for a couple of years. “I wanted to record music on my own, inspired by a lot of these one-man bands like Midnight, Bathory, Toxic Holocaust.”
It’s a great work, as speedy and cartoonishly violent as one would want or expect, but with an icier element, something more haunting. There’s also “prog bits”, and flashes of Converge or The Dillinger Escape Plan.
“I’ve been describing it as a ‘colder’ sounding album,” he says. “I don’t know if it means anything to anyone except what I’ve got in my head. Maybe it comes from the atmosphere I’ve added with synths and piano and violin. It’s more diverse, there’s a lot of different things going on.
“Whatever we try and whatever influences I put in, it all ends up sounding like Hellripper, though.”
It was as a teenager in Aberdeen growing up listening to indie – “Arctic Monkeys, Franz Ferdinand, all that,” he says, wearing a Red Hot Chili Peppers shirt – that James discovered thrash via Megadeth’s Peace Sells… But Who’s Buying? and Metallica’s …And Justice For All. He’d always been drawn to guitars, and started seeking out music properly as a kid after singing The Beatles’ Love Me Do at school, leading him on to “Queen, The Eagles, AC/DC, Sabbath, classic rock stuff.” But this changed something.
“When I heard thrash, something just clicked. Immediately I was like, ‘Ah, I’m now a metalhead. The aggression, the energy, the style of riffs all stuck with me, or made things click. It was the thing that made me go deeper into being an actual metalhead. I’d heard bands like Iron Maiden and Black Sabbath, but this was my kind of music. I was like, ‘This is what I’m supposed to listen to. I’ve been looking for this for my entire life.’”
Too young to get into gigs yet, James instead focused on the guitar he’d been neglecting, spending weeks perfecting ’Tallica’s For Whom The Bell Tolls. Quickly, it replaced a previous affection. “Before that I played football, like, five or six days a week, and that kind of ended after I got into metal.”
In the secondhand shops of The Granite City, James would nab albums for a couple of quid, furthering his obsession finding metal online. When he turned old enough, he took full advantage of the remote town’s surprisingly fertile music scene, going to three or four gigs a week, “metal, punk, doom, everything.” Still, when he had the idea of doing a thrash act of his own, going it alone was the only way.
“A lot of my friends didn’t want to play this kind of music, or weren’t interested in this particular style. We’d be getting together to jam and do Metallica or Velvet Revolver covers, but it wasn’t like this. I wanted to do this because it’s my favourite style of music. I wanted a band like this of my own.”
An EP was written, then shelved, then re-appraised when “I’d actually learned how to write songs and record properly”. After a while, people around town started asking when he was gonna play live with it, meaning assembling a line-up for live duties. Quickly a reputation spread, but the modus operandi between the isolation of creativity and the “balls to the wall rock’n’roll” of Hellripper’s frantic live shows also made itself known to James.
“I almost see it as two different bands,” he says. “I never take the studio side or the live side into consideration for each different thing. I want to write the best music possible. I’m very deliberate with what I do. I like experimenting using different instruments, creating textures, atmospheres. And then when we play live, you know, it’s just all-out rock’n’roll.”
This usually involves James standing on the barrier and smashing a can of beer on his head. You’re also likely to find more goats – masks, shirts, signs bearing the legend ‘All Hail The Goat’ – in the pit than anywhere else.
“Goats are cool, aren’t they?” he says, proudly. “The goat thing is funny. It’s kind of become a mascot, totally accidentally. I don’t think for the first two years of the band there was like any mention of goats. And then there was like the song Bastard Of Hades, with the ‘I am the goat’ line.
“At the same time, I wanted to do some merch that was a kind of parody Motörhead, the ‘Hellripper Scotland’ thing. It was meant to be just 50 shirts, but it got so popular that it’s now our logo and it’s on everything. There’s worse things to be associated with, though. Goats rule!”
Yes, as do vampiric clergymen, haunted highlands and tales of stealing corpses. And, indeed, thrashing like a maniac. For this quiet, friendly man, that’s actually what’s best in life. As he stares at two years going around the world, like his discovery of thrash, something just clicks about it all.
“I’m lucky that writing music is what I enjoy, so I do it as a hobby. I don’t really require rest, or a break from it, because it’s just what I do anyway.”
Vampire, goat or thrasher – clearly, there’s no rest for the wicked…
Read this next:
Posted on March 26th 2026, 4:45p.m.
-
Weezer Announce Massive US Headline Tour ‘The Gathering’
Weezer have revealed that they are heading out on the road for a huge celebratory tour, with plenty of surprises along the way.

The tour will be called ‘Weezer: The Gathering’, and will make its way across the US in the Autumn.
And for those who can’t wait, ‘Weezer: The Gathering – Initiation Week’ will be taking place in Los Angeles. With everything from a huge quiz to a pickleback tournament to a pinball competition, it is all happening. You can RSVP here, which is essential to be considered.Oh, if that wasn’t enough, the band will be releasing a brand new song called ‘Shine Again’ on April 01, from their as-of-yet-untitled new album.
Phew.
Anyway, here are all the dates you need to know, with support from The Shins and Silversun Pickups.
SEPTEMBER
08 – SACRAMENTO Golden 1 Center
09 – SAN FRANCISCO Chase Center
11 – PORTLAND Moda Center
12 -VANCOUVER Rogers Arena
13 – SEATTLE Climate Pledge Arena
15 – WEST VALLEY CITY Maverik Center
16 – DENVER Ball Arena
20 – SAINT PAUL Grand Casino Arena
22 – CHICAGO United Center
23 – DETROIT Little Caesars Arena
25 – TORONTO Scotiabank Arena
26 – LAVAL Place Bell
27 – BOSTON TD Garden
29 – PHILADELPHIA Xfinity Mobile Arena
30 – BROOKLYN Barclays Center
OCTOBER02 – WASHINGTON Capital One Arena
03 – CHARLOTTE Spectrum Center
04 – RALEIGH Lenovo Center
06 – COLUMBUS Nationwide Arena
07 – MILWAUKEE Fiserv Forum
09 – NASHVILLE Bridgestone Arena
10 – ATLANTA State Farm Arena
11 – ORLANDO Kia Center
13 – SUNRISE Amerant Bank Arena
14 – TAMPA Benchmark International Arena
16 – HOUSTON Toyota Center
17 – DALLAS American Airlines Center
18 – AUSTIN Moody Center ATX
20 – PHOENIX Mortgage Matchup Center
21 – SAN DIEGO Viejas Arena
23 – LAS VEGAS T-Mobile Arena
24 – LOS ANGELES Crypto.com Arena
The post Weezer Announce Massive US Headline Tour ‘The Gathering’ appeared first on Rock Sound.
-
Till Lindemann Launches NSFW “Es Brennt…” Music Video, Taps Slaughter To Prevail & Paradise Lost Members For Remixes
Till Lindemann, vocalist of German industrial metal legends Rammstein, has issued his new solo single “Es Brennt…” (aka “It Burns…”). While the digital single is now streaming below along with an official NSFW music video for it filled with live footage and various backstage shenanigans, Lindemann has pulled out all the stops for the physical…
The post Till Lindemann Launches NSFW “Es Brennt…” Music Video, Taps Slaughter To Prevail & Paradise Lost Members For Remixes appeared first on Theprp.com.
-
Rare DM Announces New Album Attention: Hear “Compliment”
Electroclash will never die. We seem to be entering a new golden age of glamorous people in severe makeup reciting deadpan lyrics over bloopy drum-machine beats. Ideally, an entirely new generation will get to use tracks like those as soundtracks to their worst decisions. Erin Hoagg, the Baltimore-born and New York-based artist who records as…
The post Rare DM Announces New Album <em>Attention</em>: Hear “Compliment” appeared first on Stereogum.
-
Album Review: Antrisch – Expedition III: Renitenzpfad
Album Review: Antrisch – Expedition III: Renitenzpfad
Reviewed by Oli Gonzalez
Making their UK debut at Fortress Festival this June, many on the island may not be familiar with Germany’s Antrisch. Though a simple trip to YouTube will demonstrate why they’re earning a reputation on mainland Europe as one of the fastest rising in the black metal world, largely due to their flamboyant and captivating theatrical performances. These shows are often full album play throughs, albums that exist not as random conglomerates of songs but rather representing a carefully written and crafted concept. Every song is as important as the last in bringing the narrative to life, with stage props and attire to match. Take the second album for instance, “Expedition II: Die Passage”. Chronicling the ultimately failed expedition of Sir John Franklin to the final section of the North West passage, in which all members of the crew perished in the cold once they became trapped in the ice, and some even resorting to cannibalism in an ultimately futile attempt to avoid starvation! How metal is that?! More importantly, this gives insight into the creative mindsets of Antrisch and the level of detail they pour into their song writing.
So, what’s their upcoming album “Expedition III: Renitenzpfad” all about? Well, to be truthful, I went into the album (hereafter simply “Expedition III”) blind and not knowing the lyrical themes, and as such, I’ll temporarily hold back on these details. Instead, let’s talk about the music.
This definitely isn’t one designed to dip in and out, song by song. Sure, there’s some highs and more interesting parts though. Instead, “Expedition III” is one which demands to be consumed in it’s entirety from start to finish, back to front, in order to become fully immersed in what truly is a work of art! At times, it’s everything you’d expect from an atmospheric black metal album; leaning on the tried and tested formula of slower ambient segments to build tension and intrigue, before unleashing hell with wall after wall of crushing atmosphere that threatens to consume everything in it’s path! Antrisch do this time and time again, and are so good at it. Though this feels fresh and original when compared to others in the genre.
See, Otto (Bass) and Noel (drums) do a phenomenal job at holding down the thunderous rhythm section but not with the typical and almost cliché blast beats. Instead, they offer rhythmic patterns that are ferocious as they are groovy and hypnotic! This provides the perfect platform for Robert and Alexander’s dual guitar assault. Opulent and aesthetic whilst sharp and deadly in equal portions, they remain the melodic focal point for the majority of the album, making casual fans and seasoned musicians purr in equal amounts of admiration.
The canonical song-verse song structure is tossed aside and no segment is ever repeated. This is necessary for the intricate song writing they’re trying to achieve, allowing the album’s momentum to continuously ebb and flow with constant fresh stimulus keeping you engaged.
In the mid-point of the album, we’re introduced to the warm and soothing sounds of flamenco style acoustic guitars. As such, you’d be forgiven if you thought you were listening to a ‘Sounds of Andalusia’ style compilation album. Which leads us nicely onto the theme of this album and the rational for this inclusion. Here, Antrisch tell the narrative of conquistador Lope de Aguirre. Born into a wealthy aristocratic family but ventured to South America in search of fame and fortune, and adventure. He orchestrated a rebellion against the crown would ultimately fail and his lust for blood would become his downfall as he was surrounded by Spanish soldiers at his
final stand before being executed. Sounds like a pretty cool story right? Well, with the band being German this means the narrative is spoken in their native tongue which I sadly do not speak and cannot follow. This is very much a me problem though and it would be interesting to hear a German speaking person’s take on this.
With this being said, language barriers are no barriers to feeling the intensity and emotion behind the final song which serves as a thrilling crescendo such are the huge climaxes and the biblical levels of cathartic release this provides! The music is frantic and chaotic which raises your heart rate, before eventually tossing you into the blackened and desolate abyss reeling and processing what just transpired.
Perhaps understanding the story of Lope de Aguirre helps to understand the musical narrative being portrayed here, or at least provides a reference point for interpretation. Which could be used to summarise the experience of Antrisch – because it is an experience. It requires a bit more effort than other black metal bands and perhaps a bit more investment. This won’t appease the fast food society who want instant gratification and pleasure on demand. Antrisch don’t offer that. Instead they offer a rich and rewarding immersive experience into the deepest darkest chasms of the human psyche, venturing where others have never ventured before.
The post Album Review: Antrisch – Expedition III: Renitenzpfad appeared first on The Razor's Edge.
-
SYLOSIS – reveal ‘All Glory, No Valour’ live video ahead of North American tour dates
“‘The New Flesh’ is the pinnacle of their story so far, and an impressive raising of the stakes for anyone brave enough to follow in their wake.” Blabbermouth “Sylosis is one of the best modern metal bands in the scene right now… It’d certainly be best to catch one of their shows before the rest of the metal […] -
AZIOLA CRY Stays Proggy On New Single “Denial Patterns”

Aziola Cry have unveiled a new video for “Denial Patterns”, filmed during the band’s captivating performance at ProgStock.
The post AZIOLA CRY Stays Proggy On New Single "Denial Patterns" appeared first on Metal Injection.