Paganizer – As Mankind Rots (2026) – Review

Paganizer - As Mankind Rots - Album Cover

I think it was his very own record Entrance to the Otherwhere that introduced this crew to Rogga Johansson and his ways. And since then, the man with the most prolific artistic loins known to the modern metal world has never left this zine. And how could he? Wherever we turn in Northern-leaning Death Metal, suddenly, his bearded mug appears from the props.

And boy, the man boasts a roster of active bands that always makes my head spin. How on earth he keeps track of all those different ideas living in his head at the same time is a … [...] Click to raid more!

Turbo’s Tribunal – Mills of Tribunal (2026) – Review

Turbo's Tribunal - Mills of Tribunal - Album Cover

Heavy Metal. Pseudo-satanic musings galore, high on soaring vocals. A change from rock ‘n’ roll, forged in the flames of arcane evil that will melt said rock, forge it into alloy, and reach new heights of brutality. That was about the tenor once the Heavy Metal movement took on steam – back in the ’80s.

Fast forward to these troubled days. Iron Maiden is still going strong, whereas other players’ days of glory have ceased to exist or are seriously waning. And still you find ‘new’ adepts of these old metal arts that will try to install themselves in a … [...] Click to raid more!

Obscurity – Ascheregen (2026) – Review

Obscurity - Ascheregen - Album Cover

Trollzorn Records are always good for a metal surprise or two. In 2025, they steadily fed us German underground fare and landed two hits onto our roster, Bergthron and Thorondir. That’s not a bad crop to reap on a webzine like ours with limited firepower and crew members beset with bad taste and terrible decision-making urges.

So, it looks like the RMR crew will get moar German roar as 2026 finally takes off to tastier shores. And this time it is meaty Death Metal with blood dripping still from its recently dissected innards. Raw and furious, that’s kinda what … [...] Click to raid more!

Saxon – Innocence is No Excuse (1985) – Review

Saxon - Innocence is no Excuse - Album Cover

Saxon‘s ’84 piece Crusader was a true disaster, a vinyl turntable torture device full of cringe and posturing. Well, it was that one, and the other unspeakable piece preceding it. Both were rightly shunned by the metal crowd back then.

Whatever took Saxon to end up in glam country will forever be beyond me. Was it the allure of the forbidden fruit that the rise of the Sunset Boulevard frenzy promised? Perhaps. Or expensive hairdressers at the top of their game?1 Or, could it be that they got the itch for some easy greenbacks to earn? Being stinking … [...] Click to raid more!