Earlier today, Irish black/death metal outfit Coscradh released their sophomore full-length album Carving the Causeway to the Otherworld. It’s the sort of release that if you enjoy deep lore mixed with your ripping black and death metal, this is 100% for you. These guys do not relent. They do not falter. They just deliver crushing fury.
Yet rather than have us tell you why you should check this album out and describe what we think went into each track, we asked the band themselves to peel back the curtain and give us an idea of what they were thinking when working on the album. We’d like to extend a huge thanks to the dudes in Coscradh for taking the time to do this.
So yeah, here’s Coscradh laying everything out on their newly available album Carving the Causeway to the Otherworld. You can get your copy from 20 Buck Spin, Bandcamp, and wherever you get your music.
“Five Fifths Awaken / Carving the Causeway to the Otherworld”
Inspired by an archaeological site visited this year, the ancient Celts, under the command of a druid, created sacred pathways out of heavy oak in the bogs of Ireland around 3,000+ years ago (a recent archaeological discovery). These pathways demonstrate the magnitude of the undertaking, as many tribes, even those at war, were recruited to complete the causeway between Owenagat and the Irish capital at the time, Uisneach. Both were sacred sites, with Owenagat considered the origin of Samhain (Halloween) rituals. The causeway was created as a path to the Otherworld, the Celtic afterlife. After the ritualistic and sacrificial journey was completed, the causeway was allowed to sink into the bog; archaeologists have found many such paths intentionally allowed to submerge (to the Otherworld). Runes and figures were discovered along the pathway facing into the bog, and many bodies have been preserved in the same manner, buried in the peat, symbolizing the journey to the Otherworld. Within the context of the album, this represents the opening of the ritual journey and the beginning of the druid’s passage through the astronomical rites explored in the later songs.
“Adhradh Dé Ghoac” (We Worship the God of Mars)
Goac is the oldest recorded Gaelic name for the planet Mars and appears in monastic writings documenting Celtic culture. The song’s theme is of warrior sacrifice, ancestral connection, and divine fury. The warrior is portrayed as wholly possessed, ready to channel the wrath of Goac against the enemy. Through blood and ritual, the warrior becomes a vessel of Goac’s indomitable power before battle.
“The Calling / Scythe of Saturn”
The Calling (written by The Fall) uses the ancient celtic war horn, the carnyx, to summon Satun. From a druidic pagan perspective, the artwork records the ominous nature of Saturn and its influence on other planets and the world around us, symbolizing connections to past, present, and future events. Saturn is depicted as a colossal cosmic force, the scythe of the universe, capable of inducing amnesia and exerting a form of cosmic domination. During the ritual, the praying druid’s mind is drawn helplessly into this immense celestial power.
“Badhah’s Shadows”
The Janus statue featured on the lyrics pages of the layout represents the Celtic goddess of war, Badh. Boa Island is a small island that serves as an ancient graveyard, overgrown with hawthorn trees (sacred to the Celts), situated in the center of a lake in the north of Ireland. A profoundly spiritual location, which we have visited.
“Opening the Gates to Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra”
Monuments such as Newgrange demonstrate the vast astronomical knowledge of the Druids. The lyrics describe a druid in Celtic pagan times chanting to open the gates to the underworld and invoking the invisible moons of Pluto, Styx, Nix, Kerberos, and Hydra. Though impossible to observe with the naked eye, these moons serve as a symbolism for the extraordinary depth of druidic knowledge and perception of the cosmos.
The post Exclusive: Coscradh Break Down ‘Carving The Causeway To The Otherworld’ Track By Track appeared first on MetalSucks.

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