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  • Beartooth Announce UK/EU Headline Tour

    Following the announcement of their new album ‘Pure Ecstasy’, Beartooth have now revealed that they will be playing some big shows in support of it across the UK and Europe.


    The tour will make its way around the continent as Summer turns to Autumn, hitting eight countries along the way. And if that wasn’t enough, the band will be joined by Silverstein and Kingdom of Giants.

    So that means a whole load of this:



    Before loads of this:


    And then huge amounts of this:



    Here are all the dates you need to know:

    SEPTEMBER

    17 – FRANKFURT Jahrhunderthalle
    18 – OBERHAUSEN Rudolf Weber Arena
    19 – HAMBURG Sporthalle
    21 – BRUSSELS Ancienne Belgique
    22 – TILBURG 13
    24 – PRAGUE SaSaZu
    25 – BERLIN Uber Eats Music Hall
    26 – MUNICH Zenith
    27 – VIENNA Gasometer
    29 – MILAN Fabrique
    30 – ZURICH Halle 622

    OCTOBER

    01 – PARIS Elysee Montmartre (France)
    03 – LONDON O2 Academy Brixton
    05 – LEEDS O2 Academy Leeds
    06 – GLASGOW Barrowland Ballroom


    ‘Pure Ecstasy’ will be released on August 28 via Fearless Records and serves as the follow-up to 2023’s ‘The Surface’.

    Here is the sensational title track:

    The post Beartooth Announce UK/EU Headline Tour appeared first on Rock Sound.

  • Dayseeker Brings Sold-Out Pale Moonlight Tour to Kansas City

    PAM WHISENHUNT | Go Venue Magazine

    The hottest day of the year had arrived in Kansas City, and shade was hard to come by. But as the sun finally started to set, the crowd outside Grinders KC found its relief in Dayseeker and a stacked bill. The sold-out show on May 16, 2026 brought out a fired-up crowd ready to make the most of a Saturday night.

    Opening the evening was Sace6, the alternative project led by Jonathan Sace and Noah Thomas, whose sound blends moody R&B with pop-punk and metal influences. The duo kept things energized across a tight six-song set of original material, both members bouncing across the stage and working the crowd from the jump. An early attempt at a circle pit fizzled, probably still too hot for that kinda energy, but that didn’t stop a steady stream of crowd surfers from making their way overhead. Before the show, I talked to several fans who were already hyped for Sace6: “They’re great, you’ll love them. They’ll be your new favorite.” I think they were on to something. Sace6 is exactly the kind of band that reminds you not to sleep on the openers.

    Wind Walkers followed, and the Massachusetts-based post-hardcore outfit was my most anticipated set of the evening. Their sound was locked in; energy, presence, crowd engagement all firing on all cylinders. Standout moments came with “The End Aesthetic,” “Eating My Heart Out,” and “Bodybag.” Wind Walkers are headed somewhere. Don’t sleep on them.

    Up next was Northlane, the Sydney metalcore powerhouse, and catching them finally completed a personal checklist of Australian metal acts I’d been working through over the past year, Alpha Wolf, The Amity Affliction, and Parkway Drive among them. Northlane wasted no time proving why they are considered pioneers of modern progressive metalcore in Australia, tearing through an eight-song set with precision and ferocity. Vocalist Marcus Bridge commanded the stage from the first note, while guitarist Jon Deiley turned heads with a pair of glowing eyeglasses that made him impossible to ignore. Midway through the set, local law enforcement could be seen cutting through the crowd and almost simultaneously, the band paused as medics responded to an injury near the pit. Once things were sorted, Northlane picked right back up without missing a beat. As the set wound toward its close, Noah Thomas of Sace6 reappeared dressed in what looked like Bridge’s red jacket, matching his pleated red pants, and joined the band onstage to assist on “Dispossession,” a deep cut from their 2011 debut Discoveries.

    By the time Dayseeker took the stage, the crowd had been waiting all night for this moment, and the merch line stretched to ridiculous lengths right up until the first chord hit. They opened with the title track “Pale Moonlight” following it up with “Shapeshift” and “Dreamstate” to set the tone for the night.

    When they reached “Crawl Back to My Coffin,” the rock chart hit from their latest album, Creature in the Black Night, vocalist Rory Rodriguez paused to thank everyone who works behind the scenes to make shows like this happen. Then, he spoke about his father’s battle with cancer and offered something to anyone in the crowd going through their own version of it: “You’ll be just fine, like I am.” He followed that moment with “Homesick,” and the crowd sang every word back to him. A few songs later, Rodriguez shifted gears entirely: “The time to relax is over.” He directed the floor to “push it” and open up the pit, then “Bloodlust” erupted with Marcus Bridge of Northlane returning to the stage to assist on vocals. The pit opened as instructed.

    “Without Me” turned into one of the biggest sing-alongs of the night, the whole room locked in together. Toward the end of the set, Rodriguez said he just wanted to do a song “just me, just you” but in reality he brought Sace6 back out to join him.

    Before the final stretch, Rodriguez looked back at where the band started in 2012, playing to anywhere from five to eighty people, grinding through years of uncertainty. He told the sold-out crowd that none of this was lost on them. He announced “Sleeptalk” as the last song of the night, but we knew better. Sure enough, Dayseeker returned to the stage. “Kansas City, are you still with us?” Rodriguez asked. The answer came loud and clear, closing out with “Neon Grave” as the crowd sang along louder than they had all night.

    Dayseeker

    [See image gallery at www.govenuemagazine.com]

    Northlane

    [See image gallery at www.govenuemagazine.com]

    Wind Walkers

    [See image gallery at www.govenuemagazine.com]

    Sace6

    [See image gallery at www.govenuemagazine.com] All images © Pam Whisenhunt


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    The post Dayseeker Brings Sold-Out Pale Moonlight Tour to Kansas City appeared first on Go Venue Magazine.

  • Darkthrone – Pre-Historic Metal Review

    Yup, it’s late, and I don’t even feel bad about it. Because, once again, no promo, no stream, no nothing from the lovable assholes that are Nocturno Culto and Fenriz. Who would even write a review at this point? You don’t care. I don’t care. And Darkthrone certainly don’t care. Well… because I sorta care. Just a little.1 Mostly I care because I wanted to see if the band could bounce back after their dreadful 2024 release, It Beckons Deez Nutz…………. Though the band has been chasing “pre-historic” metal since their significant shit at Hate Them and Sardonic Wrath, one can only assume Pre-Historic Metal is meant as a definitive homage to the ways of the olde.2 Which means, half of the staff (and most of you) have already moved on to your hip, new-wave shit—sucking back a Truly and trying to hold your vape like you’re fucking Humphrey Bogart from The Maltese Falcon.3 I guess I’m the only one with balls around here.

    Anyway, this new, ear-splitting opus from Darkthrone does indeed explore even more of the classics, ranging from Maiden gallops to Mercyful Fate guitar play and hair metal groovery—the good stuff. The stuff before Zack Morris and gang ruined fashion, music, and my life.4 With that, even come shifts that are new to the band. Like, having rocking, accessible grooves that you could put on the radio. Just kidding. Idiots. But you’ll be surprised by some of the arrangements and the slickness of the songwriting. The other thing Pre-Historic Metal has over many of the band’s previous releases is… RIFFS. Lots and lots of fucking RIFFS. Do they all work? No. Do they tend to blend? Yes. Do they still kick ass? Also, yes.

    To open the album, “They Found One of My Graves” borrows some inspiration from Kill ‘Em All-era Metallica, delivering some hooking licks that transition only when the urge for Motörhead-meets-Mercyful Fate-isms takes hold. The result is the funnest song on the record, and perhaps one of the grooviest of the band’s career. “Siberian Thaw” is another with that big, fun energy. After the instruments gently fade in, the song alternates between mid-paced chuggery and waist-deep murkery. The best part comes around the middle, when everything falls away and is replaced by eerie effects and a stellar bass lead. I’m not sure I’ve heard such prominent bass work on a Darkthrone album before, but they should do it more often.

    Following “Siberian Thaw,” “Deeply Rooted” takes many of its predecessor’s doomy, damning qualities and pushes harder against Pre-Historic Metal’s outer walls. Adding some melody to the mid-paced groveling, the song creates an ascending character that only climbs higher as it progresses. Like the previous track, “Deeply Rooted” has a definitive moment of stoppage before more Metallica vibes kick in and the band goes flying. Continuing with this ridiculous continuity that has existed since Soulside Journey and only recently carried on, the album closes with the fourth part of “Eon.” Unlike the rest of the album, “Eon 4” is far more Darkthrone in approach. It contains classic tremolos and a black metal edge. When Fenriz’s absurd vocals arrive, they somehow feel far more fitting on this song than on others. But, as with the rest of the album, the moment you think you’ve settled in, everything around you changes. This time, the 1980s hit you like a fucking brick as the band hammers out one of the most headbangable licks on the record. Toss in a horse chase of galloping energy, and you have a winner in “Eon 4.”

    While the instrumental, “So I Marched to the Sunken Empire,” is mostly unnecessary, it does point to a time when it seemed like every metal album had at least one. And even though the title track sounds like tired, overdone Darkthrone, with its ugly chord bends and even uglier Fenriz vocals,5 it still contains a killer lick on the back-end that’ll have you growing out your hair.6 Pre-Historic Metal is exactly as described. It’s a journey back in time, delivered through the eyes of two metal titans that have been doing this shit for forty fucking years.7 And the result is one of the most straightforward the band has produced. Keeping the weirdness to a minimum and letting the riffs shine throughout. With a respectable master that lets all things surface at the right time, Pre-Historic Metal is one of the best Darkthrone records of this era.


    Rating: 3.5/5.0
    DR: 7 | Format Reviewed: ALAC
    Label: Peaveville Records | Bandcamp
    Websites: facebook.com/darkthroneofficial
    Releases Worldwide: May 8th, 2026

    The post Darkthrone – Pre-Historic Metal Review appeared first on Angry Metal Guy.

  • JK FLESH/MONRELLA: SHOUTING THE ODDS – Album Review & Interview

    JK FLESH/MONRELLA: SHOUTING THE ODDS (GIVE/TAKE | Avalanche) DL | LP | CD Out Now – Order HERE Louder Than War talks to Justin Broadrick and Mick Harris about their new album, SHOUTING THE ODDS. A demonstration of what each artist’s arsenal is bursting with as distinctly split release, yet a collaborative concentration of overlapping […]

    The post JK FLESH/MONRELLA: SHOUTING THE ODDS – Album Review & Interview appeared first on Louder Than War.

  • “There’s this idea that metal is the Devil’s music and all that kind of nonsense.” Meet the metal singer-turned vicar who wants Iron Maiden to play her church

    Emily Kolltveit will be known to many UK metalheads as the former frontwoman of Pythia, but her life took a surprising turn
  • Anthrax Announce New Album, ‘Cursum Perficio’ — And the First Single Hits Hard

    Anthrax return with their 12th album, “Cursum Perficio,” and lead single “It’s For the Kids,” a thrash-metal blast that’s equal parts nostalgia, aggression, and fan love.

    The post Anthrax Announce New Album, ‘Cursum Perficio’ — And the First Single Hits Hard appeared first on Audio Ink Radio.

  • Complete List Of Dave Mustaine Bands And Musical Projects

    Dave Mustaine built his career out of anger, technical precision, and an almost relentless drive to prove himself after one of the most famous dismissals in rock history. His aggressive rhythm guitar style, politically charged songwriting, and sharp musical discipline helped define thrash metal during the 1980s and beyond. He was born David Scott Mustaine on September 13, 1961, in La Mesa, California, and grew up in a difficult household shaped by financial instability and family tension. Music became an outlet early in life, especially after discovering hard rock bands such as Led Zeppelin, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest, and Motörhead.

    The post Complete List Of Dave Mustaine Bands And Musical Projects appeared first on ClassicRockHistory.com.

  • Crown Lands: Apocalypse Review

    Bombastic progressive rock/metal Canadian duo Crown Lands follow up their excellent 2023 album Fearless with an equally excellent Apocalypse. This continues the ongoing Fearless/Starlifter concept/storyline with the bio sheet stating that Apocalypse a century before before Starlifter. As well as being Canadian, Crown Lands’ style is essentially late 1970s/early 1980s Rush – and that’s no […]

    The post Crown Lands: Apocalypse Review first appeared on New Wave of British Heavy Metal.
  • Yoth Iria – Gone With The Devil Review

    [Album artwork by Harshanand Singh]

    Release date: May 8, 2026. Label: Metal Blade Records.
    The third album is in some ways a litmus test for a band’s longevity. Three albums is a sufficient sample size—you can generally tell where a band is headed, whether they’ll last, whether they speak to you … or don’t. And Yoth Iria and I have maintained a healthy line of communication over their first two albums: As the Flame Withers and Blazing Inferno, respectfully. Strange, given that Yoth Iria’s Jim Mutilator had already left Rotting Christ by then, but the band’s sound has always felt somewhat like a cousin to the latter’s particularly melodic mid-period form, when Rotting Christ was cheat-coding their way through four favorites of mine in just five years; Sleep of the Angels (1999) – Sanctus Diavolos (2004), for the record.

    Though Yoth Iria’s sophomore effort, Blazing Inferno, felt initially like a more melodic and purposeful version of the debut, As the Flame Withers, it didn’t quite have as much staying power. Dust settled, it felt less urgent. It channeled less of the anxiety and moments of panic inherent in mid-period Rotting Christ. The pace was a little too stunted. Less varied. Granted, Blazing Inferno is still a fantastic record. That it ranked on my year-end list, and quite high, is no coincidence. But with distance it feels like the lesser record.

    Gone with the Devil by Yoth_Iria

    So having now wasted two paragraphs with context, I won’t beat around the bush—Yoth Iria’s Gone with the Devil is a potent amalgamation of the prior two records’ strengths and proof of the band’s continued inspiration moving forward.

    One of Blazing Inferno’s few weak points was its flow. It felt too single tone. There’s nothing wrong with a well-crafted, uber-melodic mid-pace song, of course. But the strongest Hellenic black metal albums are those that balance brooding melodicism and a more sinister intensity. Blazing Inferno parked its chair a little too long in the former, at the expense of the latter. And Gone with the Devil is the slight course correction Yoth Iria needed. Granted, the marker distinguishing Gone with the Devil from Blazing Inferno isn’t as obvious upon first listen. But it is there. And it becomes more apparent with time.

    The shift from Blazing Inferno to Gone with the Devil is not so much mid to fast pace but single to multi-tone. Gone is simply more expressive in the ways that matter. “Woven Spells of a Demon,” for instance, is as mid-paced as anything on Blazing Inferno, but there are layers here that aren’t present on at least some of Blazing. The rhythm and the chorus stick, no doubt. But there’s an underlying intensity in the drums and the vocals that give “Woven” its backbone.

    Gone with the Devil by Yoth_Iria

    At the risk of committing to a needless comparison, what Yoth Iria do for or with Hellenic black metal is not too unlike what Kreator have done with Teutonic thrash on Enemies of God, Phantom Antichrist, and, to a lesser extent, Krushers of the World. The band seizes on a few key elements and through its collective experience projects a more melodic and accessible but still quite deep vision of a well-established genre’s sound. Though it goes down easy, it’s also quite substantive. Simple, in some respects. Rewarding all the same.

    Some of Yoth Iria’s riskier takes—the ones that only vaguely sound like Hellenic black metal—are its strongest. “3 am,” for example, has an almost industrial-like, pounding rhythm. It’s moody. Somber. Maybe even a little poppy. And if you’re looking for something that resembles Medieval Demon or Varathron, you’ll be disappointed. It’s not an outlier, either. “Harut, Government, Fallen” and “Blessed Be Who Enters” are at least spiritually similar.

    Less a seismic shift than a tonal recalibration, Gone with the Devil is Yoth Iria in peak confidence. A cheap (pulp) and romantic reimagining of Hellenic black metal, its best songs stick to the darkest corners of your gut. Almost celebratory in its gloominess. Cathartic.

    Photo by Alex Haritakis

    The post Yoth Iria – Gone With The Devil Review appeared first on Last Rites.

  • Rick Wakeman announces his The Wizard Of Prog – Ultimate Highlights Concert Tour for early 2027

    Rick Wakeman will also release his autobiography, The Wizard Of Prog, in October