Posts Tagged ‘synthwave’

Cowabunga! BONGINATOR are back with a vengeance! The New England death metal posse is steaming full weed ahead with their sophomore full-length Retrodeath, which will be out on October 24, 2025. As an obvious sign of insanity, with ’80s synthwave added to death metal brutality, the video single Pizza Time featuring their vocalist buddy Vinny Castellano (BELUSHI SPEED BALL) is now being unleashed onto an unsuspecting metal world that will never be the same!

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BONGINATOR comment: “Cowabunga, bitch!”, audio torture tortoise Erik Thorstenn states matter of fact. “This is our righteous new banger best enjoyed with Bonginator’s favorite meal, pizza! Remember – chicks love dudes who eat out! On this one, our metalocity is off the charts! This is a bodacious rager for doing bong rips and stage diving. Just don’t tell Master Splinter about the primo kush that we got, yeah? Anyway, go stream this one, and if someone doesn’t dig it… what the shell?”

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France’s industrial metal duo SCARSET REBELLION is proud to reveal a new single, called ‘Orgasm Dissolution.’ Now available on the main digital streaming platforms, ‘Orgasm Dissolution’ is included in the band’s upcoming album Flesh Against The Void, set to be released on May 16th.

‘Orgasm Dissolution’ is a high-velocity assault of death metal fused with industrial chaos. Fueled by crushing, precision-driven riffs, relentless drumming, and raw, defiant vocals, the track captures the fury of a world collapsing under its own weight. This is the sound of revolution – a battle cry for those who refuse to be broken by corruption and lies. It’s about tearing down illusions, breaking chains, and finding strength in the wreckage.

Composed of 7 tracks for over 38 minutes of duration, Flesh Against The Void is a violent clash of death/thrash metal, industrial brutality, and synth-driven unease. SCARSET REBELLION sculpts an oppressive yet hypnotic sound – where metal grinds against metal, where analog screams in a digital world.

Imagine the mechanical aggression of Godflesh, the sharp grooves of Prong, and the dystopian intensity of Fear Factory, infused with the eerie pulse of synthwave.

Somewhere between the fury of extreme metal and the haunting echoes of electronic atmospheres. This is ”Flesh Against The Void” – a soundtrack for collapsing systems, digital ghosts, and the tension between past and future. Through crushing riffs, industrial beats, and ominous synth layers, the album immerses listeners in a retrofuturistic nightmare – a violent yet introspective journey.

Recorded & mixed by Evil Scar in Bayonne, Flesh Against The Void is both an assault and an introspection – a soundtrack for the end times, forged in metal and machine.

For those who refuse to be silenced. For those who scream with the machine.

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Dependent Records – 2nd June 2023

Christopher Nosnibor

Now in their twenty-seventh year, Girls Under Glass return after an extended break – of some seventeen years – with a new album that wasn’t wholly planned. As the bio notes, explain, when they started composing some new tracks for an EP to round off a planned boxset of their complete works, ‘The fire reignited and songs kept coming… [they] understood that their batteries had recharged to bursting point after a 17-year break and the projected EP turned into a full-length.

The trouble with being forerunners and progenitors is that time catches up. What was innovative at one time becomes assimilated, absorbed: ‘influential’ becomes commonplace, however much you keep moving. And while Backdraft shows that Girls Under Glass have progressed, it also shows how external elements have, too – even within the spheres of post-punk and goth, which on the face of things, haven’t evolved all that much. Emerging bands are still emulating The Cure and The Sisters of mercy circa 1985, and oftentimes if feels as if these are genres locked in time – but then, the same is also true of punk, and contemporary grunge acts.

At least Girls Under Glass can lay justified claim to being there at the time and laying the foundation stones for the sound that endures over thirty years on, and they’re fully accepting that this new outing draws on the sound and sensations of their previously active years in the 80s and 90s. ‘Night Kiss’ brings all the synth-goth vibes where early New Order and third-wave goth acts like Suspiria meet, but there’s much to chew on across the ten songs on Backdraft. ‘Tainted’ – which features Mortiis on guest vocals – has a more industrial feel – but that’s industrial in the way that Rosetta Stone drew on Nine Inch Nails for Tyranny of Inaction than Ministry. It’s got grit and magnetic bubbling synths and some hard grooves, but the aggression is fairly restrained.

Single cut ‘We Feel Alright’ has a vintage vibe and sits in the bracket of ‘uplifting goth’ – it may not bee recognised as a thing, but it sure is, and propelled by a pumping disco beat, it’s one of those songs that brims with an energy that makes you want to raise your arms and your face to the sky as you’re carried away on the driving rhythm and expansive synths and guitars.

The six-minute ‘No Hope No Fear’ blissfully ventures into Disintegration-era Cure stylings, with a bold, cinematic approach, while ‘Everything Will Die’ is a quintessential slab of Numanesque electrogoth It’s uptempo, even poppy, but it’s dark, and if the Hi-NRG pumping of ‘Endless Nights’ is a shade cliché, but they redeem the dip with the sparse six-minute ‘Heart on Fire’ with its sepulchral synths, before erupting into an epic climax that’s like a shoegaze / synthwave take of Fields of the Nephilim.

Ultimately, Backdraft is a solid album: its roots are deeply retro, and it’s not one hundred percent hit, but it’s a solid addition to the catalogue of a band whose longevity speaks for itself.

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