supported by 13 fans who also own “The Slaving Eyes (Instrumental)”
This one really goes deep. Tremendously heavy and bleak, yet crushingly groovy as well. You can easily see these guys destroying any venue they'd hit live with this. The heavy hitting slow to mid-tempo tunes are sort of tranceinducing. It's very easy to listen to it multiple times in a row or even get lost in it totally. mourner
supported by 12 fans who also own “The Slaving Eyes (Instrumental)”
Pour moi , ce qu'il se fait de mieux en post BM toutes scènes confondues.
Ne tirons pas un trait sur leur discographie passée, on sait qu'ils viennent plus du post hxc , neo crust que du BM pur , mais cette évolution , où tout cela fusionne en un magma en ébullition , de rage , de puissance, de détresse et de .... bref j'arrête là , vous l'aurez compris, ce disque est l'apogée de leur disco et dans le top 3 de 2019! Cyril GPMCS Besson
supported by 11 fans who also own “The Slaving Eyes (Instrumental)”
It plunges me into an abyss of sound that's both harrowingly dark and profound, a sonic deepness that swallows light and breathes out an engulfing, cathartic darkness. lecassette8
On their incredible new album, Swiss group Abraham deliver a relentless assault of punishing noise rock, eight tracks of primal fury. Bandcamp New & Notable Feb 26, 2022
The UK four-piece summon the ghosts of metal past to create an unsparing album that's unmistakably contemporary. Bandcamp Album of the Day Jun 30, 2022
"Curse These Metal Hands" parlays the UK bands' chemistry into a record which—for all its tinnitus-inducing ferocity and elegiac arrangements—practically drips with transcendent joy. Bandcamp Album of the Day Aug 19, 2019