(Blooddawn Productions / Regain Records)
powerful blend of hard and dark sounds that we offer Swedish Death Wolf on his debut self-titled album. A quartet that has been working with the same lineup pulldown 2000 under different demominaciones and now lash out with this album without being overly bright it is sharp enough variety to appeal to fans of thrash metal from classic, to other hardcore, to those who enjoy the records more doom. The thrashers topics are: "Circle Of Abomination" direct and tormented to Slayer, as well as the strong and dark "Morning Czar shineth" including vocalist howling Maelstrom, an aggressive and insistent "Sword And Flame" and the frenetic "Black Mark" to Tankard and "Dawn Of Flesh" sweeping and direct sticking the hand of murderers riffs to Makka (also known for his work with Marduk). The thicker and heavier fragamentos be found in the mysterious "The Other Hell" in the deep, monotonous "Ironwood" very doom, like the narrator to Black Sabbath "Wolfs Pallid Sister" with great guitar work in shorter and almost martial percussion instrumental "Ramsvart" or in the dismal "Coming Forth By Night" breaking just after its inception sharp leaden and lethargic. Work is completed with a couple of pieces rails simple-wave hardcore punk rock, fast and fun, "Weaving Of Death" and the heartrending hit something and dynamic "Dying Eyes Unto." A curious cocktail of adrenaline, bad temper, ferocity and darkness that is collected through the dozen songs that fail to tire in excess of the variety of its rhythms. Mariano
Palomo
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