Vola - 'Witness'

This started off high, really high. It was even pushing a top ten placing earlier on in the year. But it simply did not hold up to numerous listens. Each time I went through it I found myself a little less enamoured, which is not a good sign. It’s a bit too sugary, a bit too poppy and just doesn’t have the presence to allow multiple plays.

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Monolord - 'Your Time to Shine'

Melodic doom from Sweden. This is by far their heaviest album to date. It is darker and more forlorn than they have been before and those infamous monolithic riffs are denser and slower. Very much an acquired taste, if you like doom you will like this, if you don’t you won’t.

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Times of Grace - 'Songs of Loss and Separation'

First album in ten years for the side project from Killswitch Engage duo Adam Dutkiewicz and Jesse Leach. Sounds nothing like Killswitch Engage. Is almost Post Metal in its use of introspective passages and wistful instrumentals. There are moments where it is amazing and others where it over stretches itself massively. The net result is a score draw meaning its rather meagre placing.

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Evile - 'Hell Unleashed'

This is rebirth number five for the Huddersfield thrashers. Matt Drake has withdrawn from music altogether and his brother Ol Drake, having returned to the fold in 2018, has stepped up to the mic and taken on front person duties. This is a frantic and unrelenting thrash album, very much in the vein of their debut record “Enter The Grave”. An invigorating listen that doesn’t quite have the songs to take it any higher in our list.

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<Code> - 'Flyblown Prince'

Depending on which way you swing this is either unlistenable tosh or the most amazing and mind alerting music imaginable. This is very introspective Avan-Garde Black Metal, monotonous and creeping. Certainly thought provoking and evocative, I’m not actually sure whether I enjoyed it or not.

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Architects - 'For Those Who wish to Exist'

Right, this is where I lose load of friends, and a flurry of unfollows ushers forth. The simple fact is that it is not as good or as emotionally raw as their previous two records. “All Our Gods Have Abandoned” was a veritable treaty in processing grief and “Holy Hell” was a dark peerless record that reached into the very souls of the band and had them facing their own weaknesses and inadequacies. This, well, this is not bad, but in its adoption of more commercial and immediate tendencies, it has lost some of that bleak underbelly that made the last two albums so compelling. Not awful by any means, but it is also not as striking or unique as the previous two records and in such I found it (shock horror) less interesting.

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Massacre - 'Resurgence'

The sixth resurrection of the classic Floridian Death Metal act. This version and iteration of the band features two original members (which is actually far better than previous incarnations). It is pretty standard Death Metal. Not bad at all but not taking the genre forward in any way, shape or form.

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Beartooth - 'Below'

Former Hardcore punks have achieved their long-gestated transformation into a slick arena bothering heavy Rock machine. Actually for all my cynicism about hardcore bands abandoning their roots, this is actually very good indeed.

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