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WinterstormCathyron

★☆☆☆ This is expertly done… I suppose. I mean, it’s got everything I’d expect from Bavarian power metal: galloping riffs, synth pads at all times, and anthemic and awkward vocals that are a bit too conspicuous in the mix. It’s all a little tired for me. But if you like this sort of thing, well, check this album out.

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RaubtierPansargryning

★☆☆☆ You kinda have to give a band props that sings in Swedish and starts off an album with a song titled “Dieselrök.” That said, this particular brand of industrial melodeath is just too noisey and awkward to really get into. The whole thing feels familiar, but clumsily so. Imagine going to a black market music store, and finding a Rammstein CD… only, it actually says Ramnstine.

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EmmureEternal Enemies

★☆☆☆ When the band is firing on all cylinders, they deliver a loud, discordant, and undeniable kick in the teeth. Sadly, the band only seems to fire on all cylinders when vocalist Frankie Palmeri is out of the room. Worse, he keeps showing up, sounding like Fred Durst post-Significant Other, when the fame got to his head, and he was reduced to self-parody.

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MassacreBack From Beyond

★☆☆☆ Give the people what they want, that’s what I always say. And that’s exactly what Massacre has done with their latest album. This is Grade A 100% Floridian death metal, straight out of Death’s “Scream Bloody Gore” or Malevolent Creation’s “Stillborn.” And the fact that I namedropped two lesser albums from important bands in the genre is your clue: if you’re going to deliver prototypical fare, at least have the decency to break some new ground.

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ApostolumWinds Of Disillusion

★☆☆☆ I give these guys some props for earnest ambition, taking a decidedly proggy approach to otherwise traditional black metal. But the end result is far from harmonious, and is never more sloppy than the awkward moments of spoken word in a very thick Italian accent (which reminds me a bit of the priest from the baptism scene in The Godfather).