viernes, 17 de mayo de 2024

Denouncement Pyre - Hells Infantry [ep] (2006) CASS [2009]

 

 An unholy union is forged between Decaylust (guitars/vocals) & J. Eradicator (drums) which gives birth to a new Blackdeath entity, named Eradicator. Early rehearsals take place as a 2-piece until later in the year when Chris Volcano joins on drums, allowing J. Eradicator to return to guitars. As momentum builds the band moves forward under the name Denouncement Pyre.

The Storm To End All Wars demo is recorded in April. Self-released on CD in May (100 copies) and later by Goatowarex on tape (300 copies). Later in the year Blaspherion joins on bass to complete the line-up and the first live performance takes place in Melbourne. Meanwhile the demo spreads rampantly through the underground, attracting the attention of several labels, zines and maniacs alike.

A second demo titled Barbaric Vengeance is released in the form of a live tape recorded during a performance in February. In April a 7" EP titled Under The Aegis Of Damnation is recorded. Several more live performances throughout the year including Bloodlust Festival in Sydney.

Under The Aegis Of Damnation is released by Apocalyptor Records in May. Being the last release in the Apocalyptor catalogue, the band moves forth and joins forces with Forgotten Wisdom Productions for the release of a mini-album. Recording takes place in April resulting in the release of Hells Infantry MCD in August. The line-up returns to a 3-piece consisting of Decaylust, Eradicator and Volcano.

Early in the year Funeralbitch is summoned on bass to complete the line-up for live shows. Volcano departs in March after a performance at Evil Invaders fest II in Melbourne. By mid-year J. Eradicator also departs to pursue other avenues. A new deal is forged with Forgotten Wisdom Productions for a vinyl release of Hells Infantry. The tracks are remastered and appear in the form of a split LP titled Chaos Rising.

 

 

 

 


 -Tracklist:

 Side A
1. Intro: Genocide Exaltation     00:32
2. The March of Hells Infantry     04:54
3. Slaughterous Sons     04:46
4. Dark Winds of Torment     04:24
5. Ancient Remnants     05:41
6. Engender the Lawless God     05:00

Side B
1. Intro: Genocide Exaltation     00:32
2. The March of Hells Infantry     04:54
3. Slaughterous Sons     04:46
4. Dark Winds of Torment     04:24
5. Ancient Remnants     05:41
6. Engender the Lawless God     05:00


25:17

 

-Lineup:

J. Eradicator : Guitars
Chris Volcano : Drums
Decaylust : Guitars, Bass, Vocals.

 

 

 


 

 Label: Unholy Blasphemies Productions. UBP-006

Recorded in barbaric hell February-March 2006.

 First 100 copies come with a embroidered circle patch. Hand numbered.

 Limited edition to 222 copies.

 

 

 


 

 


 

 


 


 


lunes, 6 de mayo de 2024

饾暬饾枖饾枠饾枡饾枈饾枟饾枠

 

 

  

2006:  Cryptopsy + Grave + Dew-Scented + Aborted + Vesania + Hurtlocker

 

 

 

 

 2006:  Infernal Hate + Demented + Kathaarsys + My Cannibal Bride

 



2006:  Insidious Decrepancy + Decrepidemic + Vittrah



 

 2006:  Ophiolatry + Sacramental Blood + Unreal Overflows + Kathaarsys

 

 

 

 2006:  Vader + God Dethroned + Severe Torture

 

 

 

 2007:  Destruction + Dark Embrace + Dantalion

 

 

domingo, 5 de mayo de 2024

Clive Barker's - Hellraiser #2 (1990)

 

 Clive Barker (born 5 October 1952) is an English novelist who came to prominence in the mid-1980s with a series of short stories, the Books of Blood, which established him as a leading horror writer. He has since written many novels and other works. His fiction has been adapted into films, notably the Hellraiser series, the first installment of which he also wrote and directed, and the Candyman series. He was also an executive producer of the film Gods and Monsters, which won an Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay.

Barker's paintings and illustrations have been shown in galleries in the United States, and have appeared in his books. He has also created characters and series for comic books, and some of his more popular horror stories have been featured in ongoing comics series.

 

 


 

 First published back in 1990, the second issue of Epic Comics’ original ‘Hellraiser’ offshoot series contained another five short stories designed to expand upon Clive Barker’s Hellraiser mythos..  Although Barker didn’t write any of the stories contained within the original Epic Comics ‘Hellraiser’ series, he did however act as a consultant for each issue.

The Vault – 15 Pages
Mark McLaurin (Writer) – Jorge Zaffino (Artwork) – Julie Michel (Colour) – Phil Felix (Letterer)
In the depth of South America, prison governor Arturo Velez had been running the tightly controlled La Enfermidad.  A prison devoid of hope.  A prison where Velez’s rule was the law.  His rule having been secured when he restructured all levels of the prison; from the top down, from the bottom up, and from the middle out.  But now he had a blot on his record.  A prisoner had somehow defied his rule and escaped his cell, leaving just a small intricately designed box in his wake.  Now Velez will stop at nothing to solve the puzzle and once again preserve order across all levels of La Enfermidad…

Writer Mark McLaurin opens this second ‘Hellraiser’ graphic novel with a deeply sinister offering that lubricates the wheels of the Hellraiser mythos without actually showing any of the horror contained within.  Indeed, the entire comic is delivered purely through dialogue and narrative, without any real glimpses of the horror that lurks within the box.  It works, but because of the subtleness on top of it being the opening story, it nevertheless feels somewhat deflated by the end.

Diver’s Hands
- 15 Pages
James Robert Smith (Writer) – Mike Hoffman (Artwork)
The Carreboro Hansen’s Disease Center was the only place like it in Louisiana.  It was where Vincent was due to live out the last years of his life.   His condition so severe now that he no longer had any feeling in the cold stumps on his hands.  His Bacillus so advanced that the man looked withered and corpselike.  But Mary felt a connection.  She wanted to help Vincent.  To learn more of the man behind the frail dying form.  To understand why he clutched that same puzzlebox each and every day of his slowly ebbing life…

There’s something deeply unsettling about seeing the fragility of the human body as it edges closer and closer to eventual collapse.  It’s the inevitability of it all.  The lack of any control.  Let’s face it, it’s the perfect setting for a horror.  And fair do’s to writer James Robert Smith, he’s captured the clinical coldness of a home for such terminal illness perfectly.  The first tendrils of a chilling horror start to infiltrate the reader as the story sets off; slowly but surely building up with an escalating tension as more and more of Vincent’s backstory and connection with the lament configuration is divulged.  Unfortunately the arrival of the Cenobites is one hell of a disappointment – with the demons from hell looking far too cartoonish to evoke anything close to terror.  A real shame.

Writer’s Lament - 4 Pages
Dwayne McDuffie (Writer) – Kevin O’Neill (Artwork) – James Novak (Letterer)
Max Wayne had wasted most of his adult life toiling as a freelance writer.  His only accomplishment of any lasting value came the day he laboriously solved one particularly difficult, and oddly seductive, story problem.  The problem, once solved, revealed itself as a Lament Configuration.  A doorway to Hell.  Max now lives in Hell, toiling as a freelance writer, creating order from chaos.  It’s an eternal assignment which had, until now, produced little of merit.  But recently Max had unexpectedly delivered something that transcended his usual medium.  Max Wayne had become the father to a miracle.  He just hoped his editor would feel the same…

With tongue firmly wedged in his cheek, writer Dwayne McDuffie takes a satirical axe to the role of a writer’s editor, with barely disguised symbolism his weaponry in this comical snipe.  The whole ‘Hellraiser’ mythos takes a back seat here, instead merely giving McDuffie the necessary platform for him to launch his attack.  For its shortness it works.  However, you can’t help but feel that it doesn’t really fit in all that well with the other stories.

The Threshold - 8 Pages
Mark Kneece (Writer) - Scott Hampton (Writer & Artwork) – Phil Felix (Letterer)
Leo Marks had created a machine capable of replicating human sensations.  It was a machine that enabled its users to experience strong sensations, all via the controls of its operator.  After realising his creation he’d left his life’s work in the hands of the Amtech company, before vanishing into thin air.  Of course the machine needed a little fine tuning before it was ready for the mass market.  That’s where their guinea pigs came in.  Amtech had paid the homeless, desperate and addicted to trial the machine on.  It was a good job they did too, considering how their first test subject turned out…

Oh yes this is a good ‘un.  First and foremost the story is wonderfully original.  It’s clever and ingeniously interwoven with the whole ‘Hellraiser’ mythos.  As the various pieces of the plot are set down, the cold-hearted nastiness behind it gradually becomes apparent.  Of course, this is just the precursor for the Hell that’s to come.  It’s so perfectly in tune with the complexities of Barker’s original mythos.  The accompanying artwork is also utterly superb.  An excellent addition to the series.

The Pleasures Of Deception – 17 Pages
Philip Nutman (Writer) – Bill Koeb (Artwork) – Gasper Saladino (Letterer)
Feldwebel Davis’ work had become stagnant.  It was dark.  Very dark.  Reminiscent of Francis Bacon’s haunting visions.  But the market had changed.  Marcella knew she’d struggle to sell works of art like this now.  She blamed Davis’ drinking.  It was dragging him and his work down.  He needed a new angle.  Some new inspiration.  Something to put him beyond the oils and canvas.  Something to put him past the flesh…

If you thought some of the previous stories were dark then trust me, you aint seen nothing yet!  For the final story in this second ‘Hellraiser’ graphic novel, writer Philip Nutman offers up the bleakest, most depressive and utterly darkest of stories to appear in the graphic novels thus far.  The atmosphere from the very first frame is oppressive and gloomy to the point of smothering the reader in a blanket of misery.  Furthermore the story doesn’t let up one bit from this quagmire of depression.  In fact, it somehow manages to spiral further and further down into an abyss of misery – entering the realms reserved only for demons and the corruption of flesh.  The narrative and dialogue is sporadic and more suggestive than it is descriptive.  The artwork is equally as symbolic and gut-churningly bleak.  In fact, reading this final story is quite frankly like peering through a dirt encrusted window into Hell itself.

The comic runs for a total of 64 pages
.

 

 


 

 







 


 

 

Clive Barker's - Hellraiser #02 (spanish)

 

s谩bado, 4 de mayo de 2024

Primigenium - ...As Eternal As The Night... [demo] (1994) CD [2013]

 

Primigenium was one of the first black metal bands in Spain.

Primigenium was forfed in 1992 by Smaug and Alhaz.

 

 

 

 



 

 Tracklist

01. Feeling at One with the Night (4:20)
02. The Cold, the Emptiness (4:21)
03. As Eternal as the Night (4:46)
04. Art of War (outro) (2:17)

 

Lineup:

Obed : Guitars, Drums, Vocals
Alhaz : Guitars
Nebulath : Bass
Roberto Garchitorena : Bass (track 3).

 

 



 Label: Deviant Records.

 Limited to 500 copies.

 Tracks 1 & 2 recorded in 1994, and track 3 recorded March 1995, at Greendrum Studio, Madrid, Spain.