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Listening Notes: This is Death Metal Vol. 2

Short, concise, and I don't care. That is all I can pour out in response to these six terrifying death metal entities.

Abated Mass of Flesh - The Dead Will Never Forgive Us (2021)

65%

Abated Mass of Flesh here feels less like brutal death metal and more like brutal death/doom metal, as it sounds slower rather than simply slamming down doors with sadism. The modern chugging and breakdowns are almost non-existent, except in "Dragged Through the Mud."

Highlight: -

Cancer Whore - Born Into Depravity (2013)

80%

I actually think Cancer Whore is more deserving of the brutal death metal label than the band above, lol. Merciless battering accompanies buzzsaw guitars and "cookie monster" vocals, perfectly fitting for the gore theme. Despite being just a debut EP, the composition and production are excellent. This is a solid menace, enough to make me hesitate even giving it a 75 ...

Highlights: All tracks

Conjureth - Foul Formations (2020)

75%

Conjureth's debut noise doesn't show them as amateurs. Foul air roars, spreading an intense and abrasive decay, even if it isn't as tight as Cancer Whore.

Highlights: All tracks

The Crypt - Bestialmente (2008)

75%

People might not know The Crypt (Slovakia), but their black/death metal dynamics seem most alive here; I suspect they are influenced more by progressive elements than blackened ones. Earth-shaking music that is both stunning and fiercely unmerciful.

Highlights: All except "In Dimension Pain"

Primordium - The Sacred Valley of the Kings (2002)

65%

Even though I’ve almost never tried them before, I think Brazil's Primordium is quite relevant to Nile, sharing the ancient Egyptian civilization theme. The production quality is impressively good for its time—crisp but not raw, noisy but the guitar solo in the title track sounds quite slick.

Highlight: -

Through Mists - The Thought That Swallowed All (2026)

65%

While categorized as experimental on Metal Archives, I think Through Mists leans more toward black/death metal since there aren't many odd progressions. The vocal approach is occasionally more emotional—sounding strangled rather than using standard growls or rasps. Stripped down through my earphones, it sounds like the others, but the approach bordering technical/brutal death metal in "Pits of Shame" leaves a specific impression.

Highlight: Pits of Shame

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