albums of the year

Top Ten Heavy Albums of 2022

I must be bored.

I’ve been on holidays from work since the 20th of December and that feels like a whole child ago. I have been eating, sleeping, and repeating ever since.

I feel that my writing bones get dustier and weaker if I don’t flex them more often than not - so here I am, returning to a place I once truly loved; writing about music.

My favourites in the heavy genre - two completely subjective concepts - have kept me company on many a cold (or sweltering) night this year. Some have transcended genre and some have brushed the face of the sublime. One or two could be so dumb you will think twice about talking to me again.

Here’s the list, chum(p):

10. The Halo Effect - Days of the Lost

It’s the inevitable and celebrated collab between Mikael Stanne (Dark Tranquillity) and pretty much every In Flames member that was worth a damn. It’s quite literally not allowed to be shit.


9. I Prevail - True Power

If you have to choose one band that does Linkin Park pop-metal this year, make it I Prevail (sorry, Architects.) I mean, Brian Burkheiser croons that he’s “closer to the edge” in a bracing wall of processed sounds on There’s Fear In Letting Go. Throw fists, fuck shit up, guaranteed more hooks and fewer slurs than anything Fred Durst or Jon Davis dropped.


8. Blind Guardian - The God Machine

Blind Guardian’s constant wry Bavarian winking to the nerds of the world continues on their twelfth album? What the fuck? Surely there’s more than that? Nope, just looked it up, there isn’t. Anyone who hasn’t felt the chainmail embrace of Blind Guardian’s particular brand of steel since Imaginations from the Other Side will yearn for that caress of mithril once more. Getting all the orchestral nonsense out of the way, they shake the land like their ersatz Evangelion Unit 04 stalking the front cover. Queen-y, nerdy, ballsy, folksy, and Hansi in beast mode. Top, top notch power metal.


7. Gaerea - Mirage

With Nergal huffing his own farts and seeing Not-God more often than not, these Portuguese black metal merchants snatch the bloodied sceptre of symphonic black metal from him - though “symphonic” implies a staid, professional distance between audience and performer. Gaerea spread their gilded robes like wings and take on a theatricality, like an Orphean chorus rising up from Acheron and dispensing Eightfold wisdom.


6. Ghost - Impera

Oh no! Not Ghost! They’re shiiiiiit!!!!!

Whether you “get it”, are oblivious to it, or strictly listen under pain of Double Secret Irony, Ghost might be the Grand Funk Railroad we need for these times. The world’s biggest liars are asking you to trust them implicitly even as we shiver through winter and hand over our first born sons for slabs of beer. Doesn’t mean we can’t have a bit of fun. Arising out of the slick songwriting chops of Kent, occult-flavoured songs with the soul of Joakim Berg coursing through them peals an almighty funeral bell; a sign we should all come running.


5. Oceans of Slumber - Starlight and Ash

I was a fool. I thought the apex of soul in metal tapped out at Dug Pinnick (King’s X) or perhaps Anneke van Giersbergen (VUUR, ex-The Gathering.) I was wrong. DEAD WRONG. Can you have gospel spiritual metal? Sure you can. Cammie Gilbert-Beverly’s voice can float on clouds or trawl through bogs of bluesy darkness, striking you right in those dreaded feels. Just like The Gathering or Gazpacho, Oceans don’t need to pummel you with riffage more than charm you with it - and that they do in spades.


4. Cave In - Heavy Pendulum

The roiling netherworld depicted in the artwork isn’t far off the mark - this stuff may has well have come from another planet. It throws you before a Mastodon Blood Mountain altar before easing off the pedal(s) having you settle among the sunflowers in a Alice In Chains meets The Stone Roses jam. That’s one song after the other, mind you. (Floating Skulls and Heavy Pendulum.) If you spin this to a heavy music fan and they don’t find something they like, they are lying.


3. Aeternam - Heir of the Rising Sun

Byzantine metal? What’s next, Carolingian metal? Oh, yes, right. Quebec’s Aeternam conjure the impossible on Heir of the Rising Sun, their follow-up to the almighty Orphaned Land killer Al-Qassam. Though Middle Eastern metal can tumble straight into “Open Sesame” and kebab shop parody if handled by lesser composers, Aeternam whisks one away from modernity into the dust and steel of the Byzantine era, guitars raging thick against dervishes of oud and bouzouki. The Fall of Constantinople is the greatest Byzantine epic never committed to film.


2. Wilderun - Epigone

Metal for the world weary, Epigone is WIlderun’s latest triumph. They fuse Devin Townsend’s sombre introspection with assaults of symphony and guitar that darts and weaves between crushing death metal and awe-inspiring prog heroism. Wilderun’s imagination will astound, move, and leave you breathless more often than not.


Honourable Mentions

Amorphis - Halo

Their finest outing since Skyforger, a strong melodic death effort from these Kalevala-obsessed Finns.

White Lung - Premonition

I’m sad that it’s over, but happy it happened at all? For a final (ha!) outing, these Wall-of-Sound punk rockers couldn’t have done any better. I dunno, but this shit rips

Moon Tooth - Phototroph

Cutting down on the heaviness gives rise to noodly bits of guitar goodness, and I’m here for it

Woods of Desolation - The Falling Tide

Aussie black metal recluse does good, bestowing us a post-punk tinged masterwork for the ravenous antipodes.

Revocation - Netherheaven

Bloodthirsty death metal that guts the competition - not that they really had any. But let’s say they did. They would win.

In Aphelion - Moribund

Black n’ roll that emphasises the black - you’ll even get corpsepainted life-long stick-in-the-muds to nod along. Then they’ll have a few drinks and kiss one another. Ironically.

Devin Townsend - Lightwork

A sprawling two-disc platter that captures his inner turmoil and peace in equal measure. If this is the soundtrack to the afterlife, I wouldn’t be mad about it

He Is Legend - Endless Hallway

A worthy successor to White Bat, full of chutzpah and hooks.

Hath - All That Was Promised

If war is deception, death metal is war. Crushingly heavy with a bit of that elusive pathos buried deep within.

Elder - Innate Passage

Psychedelic prog need not be all fuzz and shag carpets. It can be thoughtful as well.

Seventh Wonder - The Testament

Dreamboat Tommy couldn’t not appear here.


1. Disillusion - Ayam

Such is the human condition, the world of art is one of diminishing returns. A fifteen-year-old longhair will think that Piece of Mind is the pinnacle of musical endeavour until they’re exposed to greater and bolder work. That’s not to say we discount youthful enthusiasm - but we shouldn’t be chasing it, either. These Germans have willed into being an album like nature forces weather together; serene blue skies and tempestuous hurricanes that come from everywhere and yet, nowhere. Through the first listen, one can tell there’s a brilliance inside this piece; though repeat listens reveal its true beauty and limitless power. Before long, you’re mesmerised by it. It remains stubborn on the platter - new records be damned. Metal in all its permutations scarcely feels this evocative, this touching, or this human.

The Top 10 of Metal (and Mosh!) 2015

I'm drawn back to this empty screen each year to secrete my opinion on what I enjoyed this year. I've been doing it since at least 2009, back when I thought writing about music conferred some kind of numinous insight into music. I listen to a lot of bullshit and I'm cynical as hell. Sometimes, I leap out of my chair and whip my (no) hair back and forth in ecstacy. Some of those discs did that to me this year. Here's a numbered list of them.

1. Gazpacho - Molok

These guys are out of this world. Prog rock that's actually progressive and actually rock. It runs from ancient esoterics to futurist wanderings. This is such a trip. At the end there's this code that might blow the world up. For a second there, I tensed up and clenched my eyes tight...

2. Ghost - Meliora

It's pop music painted black. If metal had something close to Pet Sounds, this might be it.

3. Melechesh - Enki

Invoking ancient evil never sounded so badass.

4. Four Year Strong - Four Year Strong

Pop-punk? Fuck off, Tom. This can't be good. Actually no, fuck you. It's brilliant.

5. Hellions - Indian Summer

Saviours of Australian heavy music. Get into them before they burn out in a haze of cocaine dust.

6. Baroness - Purple

Sublime and surreal sounds from Savannah, again. John Baizley is a true artist in every sense.

7. Steven Wilson - Hand.Cannot.Erase

The concept reads like a Hugo winner and sounds like a stoner's dream.

8. Trials - This Ruined World

Thrash done with brains and heart. Riffs born with destinies deeper than "must imitate Metallica" are winners.

9. Soilwork - The Ride Majestic

I never thought Soilwork would make one of these lists again. Boy, I was wrong. Hard.

10. Pyramaze - Disciples of the Sun

lol Power metal. I thought these guys were just a cheap, clean version of Mercenary. Nope. Crisp production and brain-worming hooks do justice to the genre. Finally.

The Honourable Mentions

Gold Award - Black Breath - Slaves Beyond Death
Silver Award - Sigh - Graveward
Bronze Award - Gloryhammer - Space 1992: Rise of the Chaos Wizards

14. The Black Dahlia Murder - Abysmal
15. Deafheaven - New Bermuda
16. My Dying Bride - Feel The Misery
17. Killing Joke - Pylon
18. Cancer Bats - Searching for Zero
19. Earth Caller - Degenerate
20. Born Lion - Final Words

 

Check Hysteria's albums of the year, here!

The Hysteria Xmas Eve FRENZY #28

Hysteria Xmas Eve FRENZY actually made it to your Apple/Robot Store in time for Xmas...eve. Slipknot's dead skin mask scares every pearl-clutching mom ever on the cover; Angels & Airwaves, Storm the Sky and a very fetching young Fronz from Attila grace the in-betweens. Hands Like Houses serve spiked (vege) dogs balls in our kitchen. Oh: 25 Albums of the Year get a grillin' PLUS their artists interviewed alongside? No sweat m8. I even nabbed another chat with my heterosexual life-partner Spencer Chamberlain from Sleepwave. We are but only apart for another month and a half, my sweet...

ERM, GO ON 'N GET IT VENN

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