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  • Triumpher – Piercing the Heart of the World Review

    Picture it. Asheville, North Carolina, 2024. A devastating hurricane had just ripped through my region, wiping out entire sections of our richest cultural centers and critical economic staples, not to mention forever impacting the lives and homes of hundreds of thousands of residents (myself included). But, as the absorbent and resilient sponge I know myself to be—and with the help of hordes of kind and loving friends and family—I persisted. Not even a full month after disaster struck, I resumed my writership by covering Greek heavy metal quintet Triumpher’s sophomore epic Spirit Invictus. An eternity spans between then and now, but like myself, Triumpher persists, Piercing the Heart of the World in 2026.

    Those who heed Triumpher’s call as I do will be happy to know that the MegatonManowarsword righteousness these Greeks wield like Olympians remains as stalwart as ever. In fact, Piercing the Heart of the World marks the high-water mark of the Triumpher troupe’s songwriting skill and performative prowess. Mars Triumph puts down a vocal showcase of a singular passion, his wild and animalistic delivery reminiscent of Riot City’s early work. That invigorating spirit finds loyal and unflinching support from stellar guitar leads, galloping riffs, and scorching tremolo waves courtesy of guitarists Christopher Tsakiropoulos and Mario Ñ Peters. Meanwhile, Stelios Zoumis rumbles like a thunderous storm, throwing hefty bass bolts through every measure to anchor every one of Piercing’s 45 minutes in righteous metal. Driving the march toward inevitable WICTORY, Agis Tzoukopoulos tumbles, pounds, and stomps his way through every technique known to metalkind in the pursuit of maximum awesomeness, and finds it with alarming regularity here.

    Piercing the Heart of the World proves that Triumpher achieved the next stage of evolution in their still-young career. With the massive one-two punch of “Black Blood” and “Destroyer,” Piercing launches with a ferocity that would intimidate the finest specimen of any apex predator family. The former song recalls the vampiric darkness that inked Storming the Walls, which is a welcome introduction, but fails in the most exhilarating way to prepare me for the sword-raising spirit of the latter. That, in turn, fails to prepare me for the epic beauty that is “The Mountain Throne.” The first of two Song o’ the Year contenders, this sub-seven-minute odyssey traverses a calming plucking melody to dive right into blackened speed and a thrashy gallop, all while Mars croons and wails atop a storm of double bass runs and blasts. Yet, the whole is smoother than chrome and sharper than scalpels, resulting in an utterly astounding listening experience. However, even it feels understated when faced with the late-album highlight “Erinyes.” Punky and thrashy in a way I never thought traditional heavy metal could be, but still possessed of that chest-thumping, fist-pumping flame that lights hearts and souls ablaze, “Erinyes” is an unqualified success of excess, exuberance, and excitement.

    In the past, Triumpher’s greatest weakness was always that the highlights far outstripped the supporting cast. Not so with Piercing. Even the slow and metered “Ithaca (Return of the Eternal King),” ballad interlude “Vault of the Immortals,” and two-act closer “Naus Apidalia” find ways to make memories and stand with distinction in Triumpher’s catalog. In all cases, those memories are founded in storytelling, either by establishing new characters (as is the case with “Ithaca”), shifting the tone (“Vault”), or by resolving arcs and tying up loose ends (“Naus Apidalia”). This strategy, in turn, makes more traditional heavy metal crowd pleasers like “The Flaming Sword”—which boasts a sleeper chorus that will get stuck in your head—feel more impactful than they might’ve otherwise.

    With this in mind, I found very little to complain about. If it weren’t for his sheer charisma, I would say that Mars’ vocal performance teases the “Too Much” button far more often than I prefer. Were it not for the presence of endless barnstormer solos and affecting melodies, I would bemoan the protracted runtime of the closer. The meaty bass presence foils my bubbling rant against the more aggressive compression and increased loudness of this master. The caveats persist, leaving behind a wake of hobbled criticisms that would conspire to chip away at Triumpher’s final score. The damage they perpetrated amounts to mere flesh wounds in the end. Put simply, Piercing the Heart of the World is Triumpher’s greatest triumph yet, and you’d do well to hear it!

    Rating: Great!
    DR: 6 | Format Reviewed: 320 kb/s mp3
    Label: No Remorse Records
    Websites: triumpher.bandcamp.com | facebook.com/Triumpher.official
    Releases Worldwide: March 6th, 2026


    Steel Druhm

    I was unaware of Greek mega-trve metal warriors Triumpher until Kenstrosity tackled their Storming the Walls debut back in 2023. I was immediately intrigued by the Manowar-meets-Megaton Sword-meets-Primordial sound they brought to the battlefield, and though there were some trials, tribulations, and rough spots to their presentation, the core of something bigger was there. Things improved on 2024s Spirit Invictus, as the Triumpher sound became more potent and consistently enthralling, and they seemed poised to usurp the throne of trve metal through sheer might and mayhem. Fast-forward to 2026, and their third crusade is set to kick off with Piercing the Heart of the World. I came into this hoping and expecting to be shocked and awed by sword, shield, and steroidal masculinity. Could Triumpher be the Manowar for this new age? That’s a mighty big loincloth to fill, but hope hung thickly in the air.

    My anticipation of excessive glory overload was slaked by ginormous opener “Black Blood,” and woe to those who don’t bend the knee. It’s a volatile mash-up of Manowar, Primordial, and Doomsword, with a structure that starts out larger-than-life and tries to stack vainglorious and titanic moments upon one another like a grand memorial to the Elder Gods. Vocalist Mars Triumph channels Manowar’s legendary Eric Adams while also referencing Primordial’s A.A. Nemtheanga. This makes the song a total barn burner and exactly what I was hoping for. They follow this up with the uber-beefy, badass “Destroyer,” which reeks of Manowar’s The Triumph of Steel era. Grandiose choral segments and black metal influences elbow their way in, but this is a trve metal chariot ride through the Nine Worlds. Keeping the sword between the ribs, “The Mountain Throne” finds Triumpher pushing every lever to MAX GLORY as the false and weak flee for the safety of their fortifications. This one brings a lot of the same energy as the recent Fer De Lance, and there are touches of Lost Horizon, too. Mars stretches his vocals to the very edge of madness, and the chorus is as mighty as a barrel full of Wotans. Those who make it through this will be gifted a lifetime supply of wisdom, power, and back hair.

    What could stop such a mighty and righteous host after such a rousing start? A soft and flabby middle, that’s what. “Ithaca (Return of the Eternal King)” is a slow-burning epical ballad that keeps building toward a massive release of rage and wiolence, but the release never arrives, and you’re kept on the edge of something for nearly 7 minutes with no somethings in sight. This results in the condition known as Blue Baldur. “Ithaca” is immediately followed by the 2-minute interlude “Vaults of Immortals,” which is equally restrained and subdued, making for 9 minutes stuck in emo-fied low-gear. This blunts the album’s momentum, taking you out of battle rage and into resource management. Steel cares not for resource herding when they are enemies left to be smottened! While things pick up with “The Flaming Sword,” and especially the trve-meets-semi-black-thrash of “Erinyes,” it feels like the album never fully regains its war footing, and 9-minute plus closer “Naus Apidalia” is merely good, not great, and suffers from some very Virgin Steele-esque compositional sinkholes and ego bloat. At a reasonable 44:44, Piercing the Heart of the World feels much longer than that, and though the first 16 or so minutes are massive, the rest of the album can’t sustain the prolonged siege.

    I’m impressed with Mars Triumph’s performance. He’s gotten more proficient from album to album, and he has a crazy broad range. Anyone who can approximate Eric Adams is talented, and his black and death vocals are good as well. That said, he can and does overdo things at times, pushing his tonsils beyond human control. I can’t even suggest he dial things back, since that is not what Triumpher is all about. You just take the good with the weird and ride on. The guitar work from Christopher Tsakiropoulos and Mario Ñ Peters brings the thunder to the tundra, borrowing from a raft of trve and heavy influences while injecting enough blackened edges to make things extra deadly and dangerous. As the riffs roar and soar, Agis Tzoukopoulos delivers Scott Columbus-approved war drumming that embiggens the sword and spirit. This is a talented horde, and it’s the songwriting missteps that ultimately derail their relentless advance.

    Triumpher have all the tools to forge a world-beating heavy metal monsterpiece, but Piercing the Heart of the World fails to penetrate my armor and score a critical hit. I heartily enjoy the opening trilogy, and there’s solid stuff later on, but this isn’t an album that captivates me from start to finish, despite my fervent wishes that it did. Piercing loses some of the ground won by Spirit Invictus, but I haven’t lost heart. The warrior spirit will endure and rise again if Crom wills it. Onward to great deeds!


    Rating: 3.0/5.0

    The post Triumpher – Piercing the Heart of the World Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

  • AN NCS EP PREMIERE (AND A REVIEW): MORTOPSY — “PUTREFACTIVE STATES OF THE HUMAN FORM”

    (written by Islander) Almost exactly five years ago we published an extensive interview by our Comrade Aleks of Québec musician Yves Allaire, aka evillair. The focus was on his band Nordicwinter, although the interview ranged beyond that as well. As the interview exposed, Allaire has been making metal music in a variety of different traditions […]

    The post AN NCS EP PREMIERE (AND A REVIEW): MORTOPSY — “PUTREFACTIVE STATES OF THE HUMAN FORM” appeared first on NO CLEAN SINGING.

  • Killswitch Engage Book 16-Date U.S. Summer Tour With Machine Head

    Killswitch Engage have announced a summer 2026 u.S. tour with Machine Head, Iron Reagan and Havok. Continue reading…
  • GQ‘s New American Football Profile Has Everything: Alcoholism, Divorce, Resentment, And A Cake Baked For Fugazi

    This spring American Football will release their fourth album, once again self-titled and referred to semi-officially as LP4. It’s the legendary emo/post-rock band’s first album in seven years, and it has occasioned a profile in GQ written by Grayson Haver Currin, the current king of the format. The story is long and rich with detail, and some of those details are troubling.

    The post <em>GQ</em>‘s New American Football Profile Has Everything: Alcoholism, Divorce, Resentment, And A Cake Baked For Fugazi appeared first on Stereogum.

  • Nervosa Release New Single “Ghost Notes”

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    Brazil’s all-female thrash metal band Nervosa is back with “Ghost Notes”, their latest single off of Slave Machine. Set for release on April 3 via Napalm Records, this is the second taste of new tunes from that forthcoming album.

    Dropped along with an accompanying music video Dimitris Preve, the track hits like a truck. It’s fast and heavy, with incredibly forceful rhythms to drive the whole thing forward. And while it’s got flashes of death and black metal infused in its core, Nervosa fans should still feel right at home listening to this one.

    With the single’s release earlier today, Nervosa explained what they were going for when writing “Ghost Notes”.

    “Strong and heavy riffs with a lot of groove showing deep feelings in a very poetic way, this song is definitely special in many ways.”

    Slave Machine will drop on April 3 via Napalm Records, but you can preorder your copy today.

    Slave Machine tracklisting:

    1. Impending Doom
    2. Slave Machine
    3. Ghost Notes
    4. Beast Of Burden
    5. You Are Not A Hero
    6. Hate
    7. The New Empire
    8. 30 Seconds
    9. Crawling For Your Pride
    10. Learn Or Repeat
    11. The Call
    12. Speak In Fire
    Nervosa’s New Album ‘Slave Machine’ Announced, Title Track Streaming Now

    The post Nervosa Release New Single “Ghost Notes” appeared first on MetalSucks.

  • NERVOSA Releases Fierce New Single “Ghost Notes” From Their Upcoming Album “Slave Machine”

    Metal heroines Nervosa unleash a new single from their upcoming album, Slave Machine, out on April 3 via Napalm Records.

    “Ghost Notes” lets loose a storm of heavy, yet easily recognizable riffs, driven by impelling drums and the ever-so-furious vocals of Prika Amaral. Culminating in a powerful guitar solo, “Ghost Notes” shows yet another side of the versatile Brazilian thrash band.

    Once again working with producer Martin Furia of German legends Destruction for their upcoming release, the women bridge the gap between old-school power and critical modernity.

    Nervosa comments about “Ghost Notes”: “Strong and heavy riffs with a lot of groove showing deep feelings in a very poetic way, this song is definitely special in many ways”.

    Nervosa unleash another round of fury on their new album, Slave Machine. Their sixth album shows the Brazilian modern thrash metal band releasing their inner beasts at staggering speed and with formidable emphasis. Having performed at the biggest metal festivals worldwide, from Wacken to Hellfest, and making a lasting impression on fans and critics alike, Nervosa aims to consolidate their standing as genre frontrunners. With founding guitarist Prika Amaral established as their new singer with their previous record, Jailbreak (2023), they tear through the scene with the force of a sledgehammer.

    Nervosa erupts as a metal volcano with their latest record. Never settling, always exploring, one staggering riff after another, Slave Machine is a crushing statement—it comes, sees, and conquers.

    Nervosa comments about the album: “Slave Machine is the most brutal and melodic album of Nervosa, and we are proud to take this step further, keeping our roots.”

    12 new songs show the five-piece exploring their crushing style in an enhanced way. Opener “Impending Doom” builds up menacingly, using thunderous riffs and jagged drums to establish the women’s dominance in the scene. The title track, “Slave Machine,” instantly turns up the speed and adds a surprising alternative bridge to the already catchy chorus, showing a slightly different side of the metal powerhouses. The follower “Ghost Notes” unleashes a storm of heavy, yet easily recognizable riffs, driven by impelling drums and the ever-so furious vocals of Prika Amaral, crowned by an astounding guitar solo.

    Through “Beast Of Burden,” Nervosa show their harshest side, while “You Are Not A Hero” offers a grand chorus, gifting Slave Machine a true anthem. “Hate” unfolds with raw brutality, and “The New Empire” looks for destruction with melodic precision. “30 Seconds” rises up to new heights, while “Crawl For Your Pride” combines Nervosa‘s trademark social criticism with gut-punching songwriting. Throughout “Learn Or Repeat” and “The Call,” the band once again sprinkles in some pieces of modern groove with old-school vibes before Slave Machine rears up one final time on the threateningly sinister “Speak In Fire.”

    Slave Machine can be pre-order here. It will be available in the following formats:

    • 2LP Gatefold Splatter Cristallo/Black + Black, incl. 12″ Black Vinyl + 12″ Booklet – strictly limited to 300 copies worldwide
    • 1LP Gatefold Marbled Black Smoke – strictly limited to 100 copies (North America exclusive)
    • 1LP Gatefold BLACK
    • MC – strictly limited to 100 copies worldwide
    • 1CD Digipak + Shirt Bundle
    • 1CD Digipak
    • Digital Album

    The post NERVOSA Releases Fierce New Single “Ghost Notes” From Their Upcoming Album “Slave Machine” appeared first on Sonic Perspectives.

  • Killswitch Engage announce U.S. tour with Machine Head

    Killswitch Engage have announced a summer U.S. headline tour.

    The metalcore titans will be joined on their June run by the mighty Machine Head, Iron Reagan and Havok, with frontman Jesse Leach enthusing that, I’m extremely excited to get back out on the road supporting our newest album This Consequence!

    We are hitting major cities and bringing along with us an absolutely killer line-up with the legendary Robb Flynn and Machine Head, thrash masters Iron Reagan, and rounded out by the mighty Havok. This is a stacked and powerful crew of bands that will electrify and dominate wherever we roll up to… so let’s go!”

    Tickets go on general sale this Friday, March 6 from 10am local time.

    Catch them live at the following:

    Killswitch Engage U.S. tour with Machine Head, Iron Reagan and Havok

    June

    3 Detroit, MI — The Fillmore
    5 Minneapolis, MN — The Fillmore
    6 Milwaukee, WI — Milwaukee Metal Fest
    7 South Bend, IN — Four Winds Field
    9 Raleigh, NC — The Ritz
    11 Brooklyn, NY — Brooklyn Paramount
    12 Boston, MA — Roadrunner
    13 Bethlehem, PA — Wind Creek Event Center
    14 Washington, DC — DC Warped Tour
    16 Orlando, FL — Hard Rock Live
    17 Atlanta, GA — Tabernacle
    19 Dallas, TX — South Side Ballroom
    20 Houston, TX — Bayou Music Center
    21 San Antonio, TX — Boeing Center at Tech Port
    23 Albuquerque, NM — Revel Entertainment Center
    24 Tempe, AZ — The Marquee
    25 Los Angeles, CA — Hollywood Palladium
    27 San Francisco, CA — Warfield

    Posted on March 3rd 2026, 3:44p.m.

  • TOUCHÉ AMORÉ Celebrate 10 Years of Stage Four With Deluxe Reissue & Anniversary Tour

    Promotional photo of the post-hardcore band Touche Amore, not taken during a live performance.

    Iconic album returns April 10 via Epitaph with unreleased demos, remixes, and a stripped-down new single featuring Wisp.

    The post TOUCHÉ AMORÉ Celebrate 10 Years of Stage Four With Deluxe Reissue & Anniversary Tour appeared first on Metal Injection.

  • Bloodbound Debuts “The Nine Crusades” Lyric Video Featuring Brittney Slayes Of Unleash The Archers

    Having ridden into their latest battle with their eleventh epic full-length "Field Of Swords," Swedish power metal warriors Bloodbound have released another video single from the album. "The Nine Crusades" is another historically themed anthem, retelling the titular events in typical Bloodbound style: a sweeping blend of melodic and heavy power met… Read More/Discuss on Metal Underground.com