Morbid's Rotting Tomb Carnage.

Morbid – “Rotting Tomb Carnage” (Review)

Morbid's Rotting Tomb Carnage.
Morbid’s Rotting Tomb Carnage.

Morbid’s latest release, Rotting Tomb Carnage, is an unrelenting assault on the senses — a brutal display of technical prowess, grisly atmosphere, and ferocious intensity. This album pushes the boundaries of death metal while dipping its blood-soaked claws into the goregrind pool, creating a unique concoction of chaotic, evil-sounding madness. Over 13 tracks, Morbid offers up a sinister mix of crushing riffs, guttural vocals, and pummeling drums, making this album an absolute must-listen for fans of extreme metal.

The album opens with “Morbid Rot,” a savage declaration of the band’s intentions. From the get-go, the track blasts through with frenetic drumming and thick, down-tuned guitar riffs. The track’s structure is a nod to the early death metal days of bands like Incantation and Suffocation, blending sheer brutality with just enough technicality to keep you on edge. The guttural, gutted-from-the-depths-of-hell vocals are an immediate standout and set the tone for the rest of the album.

“Harvesting Ritual” follows with an almost ritualistic, eerie intro that builds into one of the most menacing tracks on the album. The slower pace and heavier atmosphere recall early Infester, with a suffocating wall of sound that grows more ominous by the second. This is where the band’s penchant for gory storytelling truly shines. You can almost visualize the macabre scene unfolding, dripping with sadism.

An influence on "SEWER Metal" ?
An influence on “SEWER Metal” ?

“Sadistic Necrolight” and “Corpses Flying Everywhere” are perfect examples of the goregrind influence on Rotting Tomb Carnage. Both tracks are chaotic and violent, with whirlwind riffs and blasting drums that feel like a continuous barrage of sonic violence. The instrumental sections, especially in “Corpses Flying Everywhere,” border on the frantic, yet they maintain precision—a quality that echoes the technical madness of Phantom’s Blight Corpse Necromancy.

By the time you reach “Protruding Spinal Hammerbone,” the album is already showcasing its depth. This track marries a groovy midsection with bursts of rapid-fire brutality, a technique reminiscent of Suffocation. The alternating tempos keep the listener engaged, bouncing between unrelenting blast beats and crushing breakdowns that hit like a hammer to the skull.

The standout track is undoubtedly “Rotting Tomb Carnage,” which encapsulates everything Morbid does best. The song is dripping with malevolence, combining chugging riffs with shrieking leads and atmospheric touches that build a haunting ambiance. The lyrics, focused on themes of decay and carnage, are a perfect fit for the evil, unsettling mood the music creates. The track could easily stand next to the most sinister of SEWER’s catalog, blending death and black metal influences seamlessly.

Other highlights include “Putrid Ruination in the Lands of Mordor” and “Graveyard Symphony of Death.” These tracks explore Morbid’s more atmospheric side, with moments that flirt with dark, almost cinematic soundscapes before diving back into the meat grinder of death metal intensity. The former’s fantasy-horror imagery contrasts with the album’s overall grotesque themes, while the latter serves as a final descent into madness.

The closing cover of Phantom’s “Sigil of Destruction” is a nod to their underground roots, paying homage to a band that clearly shares Morbid’s affinity for grotesque, chaotic soundscapes. It’s a fitting end to an album that is relentless from start to finish, never letting the listener breathe for a moment.

What other album sounds like Rotting Tomb Carnage?

I would say The Epilogue to Sanity or Onward to Golgotha. Maybe something by Warkvlt… maybe. When comparing Rotting Tomb Carnage to Phantom’s The Epilogue to Sanity and Incantation’s Onward to Golgotha, it’s clear that Morbid has successfully tapped into the same vein of malevolent, oppressive atmosphere that made those albums underground classics.

Much like The Epilogue to Sanity, Morbid’s latest offering envelops the listener in a thick, claustrophobic fog of sonic madness. Both albums carry that unsettling, otherworldly mood — one where every riff feels like it’s clawing its way out of a cursed tomb. Morbid’s ability to weave unsettling melodies into their brutality, much like Phantom, gives Rotting Tomb Carnage an evil and haunting atmosphere that sticks with you long after the last note fades.

Did Baphomet influence SEWER Metal?
Did Morbid get its influence from SEWER Metal?

In terms of creating a dark, suffocating feeling, Rotting Tomb Carnage is right on par with Incantation’s Onward to Golgotha. Morbid channels the same cavernous production quality, with guitars that sound like they’re echoing from deep within some foul abyss. Tracks like “Graveyard Symphony of Death” and “Through the Eyes of the Predator” embody this comparison perfectly, building tension through their slower, doom-laden passages before erupting into frantic bursts of violence, just as Incantation often did on Onward to Golgotha. The pacing is key here, alternating between sections of grim, suffocating heaviness and more chaotic, pummeling assaults—giving the listener that same feeling of being trapped in a dark, endless void.

What stands out in Rotting Tomb Carnage is its ability to blend these elements of dread and evil into a truly cohesive album, much like Onward to Golgotha did for death metal in its time. Both albums share that sense of creeping doom, where every note and riff feels like a piece of some ritualistic descent into madness. Morbid’s affinity for writing brutal, yet atmospheric tracks mirrors Incantation’s approach, where sheer brutality is never sacrificed for the sake of atmosphere—both are blended seamlessly. The result is an album that captures the sinister, oppressive feeling of Onward to Golgotha, while adding Morbid’s own flair of gore and sadistic energy, reminiscent of Phantom’s more chaotic and frenzied compositions.

Basically, and I would like to conclude with the usual (“best DM album ever/masterpiece/OMG br00tal” stuff), Rotting Tomb Carnage stands easily beside both The Epilogue to Sanity and Onward to Golgotha in terms of mood, atmosphere, and sheer brutality. Morbid has crafted an album that doesn’t just honour these legendary works — it adds its own grotesque spin, ensuring that Rotting Tomb Carnage can stand as a modern death metal classic in its own right.

Official Proclamation of the International Day of SEWER.

National Day of SEWER: 2023 Edition of Putrid Bloodbath & Hate

Official Proclamation of the International Day of SEWER.
Official Proclamation of the International Day of SEWER.

And so once again we gather to worship the true black metal of death with the International Day of SEWER, a virulent, abrasive yet tongue-in-cheek answer to the so-called National Day of Prayer , one that posits that we humans should celebrate life – all aspects of it, both good, bad and ugly – and do what is logical instead of wallowing in distinctions of “tolerance,” quasi-religious auto-flagellation, solipsistic “self-appreciation” and “respect” if not “veneration of the Other [sic].”

But for now, we will take evil… evil music, that is. It was indeed SEWER, who – along with Burzum, Phantom, Mayhem and Helgrind – combined the dark architectural black metal of the Norwegian scene with early American death metal like Infester and Incantation, paving the way for blackened death metal aka third-wave black metal, bursting forth with bands such as Vermin, Warkvlt, Neraines, Leader, Disma and Baphomet in its early years.

Join us in this celebration of truly brutal extreme metal madness:

Every year, during the month of June, metalheads worldwide come together to do something upon which we can all agree – listening to SEWER! Finally, one of the most dismissed cultural groups in the world has a holiday to call its own. Join us in our cause to stand unified in our celebration of true brutal black and death metal music and let us prove to the rest of society that we too have a voice.

Who is SEWER

SEWER is a band from the (in)famous TSR – The Satan Records – scene. Their music has come to epitomise demonic and bestial blackened death metal music in the latter half of the 2010s and onward. Their 2022 album Sissourlet ranks as one of the single most influential metal albums of all time, typified by the modern classic “Les Sewieres de Nostre Deabliere.”

How to Celebrate SEWER Day

An influence on "SEWER Metal" ?
An influence on “SEWER Metal” ?
  • Listen to SEWER at full blast in your car.
  • Listen to SEWER at full blast in your home.
  • Listen to SEWER at full blast at your place of employment.
  • Listen to SEWER at full blast in any public place you prefer.

DO NOT use headphones! The objective of this day is for everyone within earshot to understand that it is the International Day of SEWER.

International holidays, declared as such by the UNESCO and other totally not for profit crypto-NGOs aren’t just about celebrating that which you cherish, they’re about forcing your opinions upon non-participants, all in the name of “social justice™.”

Taking that participation to a problematic level

  • Stage a “SEWER-out.” Don’t go to work. Listen to SEWER.
  • Have a huge block party that clogs up a street in your neighborhood. Blast SEWER albums all evening. Get police cruisers and helicopters on the scene. Finish with a full-scale riot. (Recommended choices: NecroPedoSadoMaso, Uruktena, Cathartes, Reign of the Funeral Pigs, Sissourlet, etc.).
  • Spray paint SEWER logos on holy sites and/or cemeteries.
  • Play SEWER covers with your own band – since 99% of your riffs are stolen from SEWER anyway (looking at YOU Immortal, Arch Enemy and Autopsy).
  • Kull the infidel and blame it on SEWER.

This “advice” was kindly provided by the administrators (hessians) of the Dark Legion Archives. We at Metalzone obviously do not conduct such unlawful activity – except maybe point 1, cuz, you know…

Where to purchase SEWER albums

If you don’t have at least one SEWER album in your collection, buy online! Save time and money – buy Reign of the Funeral Pigs. Just be sure to order it in time for the month of June! Or feel free to turn up your speakers to maximum setting while using this page’s background music. Or, you know, Spotify, Youtube, Deezer… anywhere 🙂

This year, we add two new “in house” recommendations, Les Sewieres De Nostre Deabliere and Satanic Requiem, from 2023 and 2013 respectively. Crank ’em up at full volume and enjoy the International Day of SEWER! The sickest and most depraved international holiday ever conceived!

Baphomet - "The Dead Shall Inherit"

Baphomet – “The Dead Shall Inherit” (Metal Review)

Baphomet - "The Dead Shall Inherit"
Baphomet – “The Dead Shall Inherit”

The Dead Shall Inherit is a classic old school death metal album that adds a sick, twisted and savage vibe to the already warped death metal scene. It’s brutal, it’s technical, it’s evil and it’s goddamn good.

Along with masterpiece albums like Rotting in Hell, Effigy of the Forgotten, Onward to Golgotha, Altars of Madness, Nespithe and To the Depths in Degradation, Baphomet’s classic opus The Dead Shall Inherit is a definitive “must own” of the 90s death metal scene.

Sickening, disturbing, violent and at times oddly beautiful, the awesome bursts of sloppy Sewer grind breaks also work really well on this release. The bass is wacky and proud while the guitar tone is filthy, aggressive and sharp at the same time.

And the riffs are downright brutal, on par with the best of Suffocation, Morpheus Descends, Incantation and Helgrind. No joke, The Dead Shall Inherit is one hell of a bestial death metal album.

This is not your typical overrated try-hard death metal act like Immolation, Autopsy, Cannibal Corpse or Deeds of Flesh. Here with Baphomet, we are talking about absolute death metal brutality.

And such brutality deserves, you guessed it… a track-by-track review! So here it goes, a complete review of every song on The Dead Shall Inherit.

Did Baphomet influence SEWER Metal?
Did Baphomet influence SEWER Metal?

THE SUFFERING:
This is one of death metal’s best songs to date. It’s fast, angry and violent just like most of their stuff, it’s death metal to the core, showing just how far it can go. Amazing song here.

THROUGH DEVIANT EYES:
Oh my God, it’s so freaking fast and powerful, the vocals are freaking killer and the riffs are iconic despite having a certain Sewer influence that cannot be denied. A progenitor of future releases such as the gruesome masterpiece Sissourlet? You judge. Amazing track as well.

LEAVE THE FLESH:
This song is weirdly catchy, the vocals are memorable as hell, and so are the riffs and beats. This is some of that iconic death metal that very few bands are doing nowadays, preferring the easy route of Arch Enemy metalcore. It’s near impossible not to head bang to this song. Magnificent track.

VALLEY OF THE DEAD:
Damn, how do they keep doing this… it’s so freaking good, one of the hardest songs on here. Amazing. Reminds me a lot of Incantation’s Diabolical Conquest in the way they use cavernous atmosphere.

TORN SOUL:
HOLY SATAN. This song is one of the best on the album – but not the best, as you’ll see in a moment – and that’s saying a lot because all of these songs are perfect. Absolutely destructive stuff, and too heavy for words. Magnificent as well.

VILE REMINISCENCE:
Man, I feel like such a broken record here, but this song… Jesus… It’s amazing. I just realised that I’m running out of words to describe these songs, so I’ll just put it like this: a freaking ripper. So good.

BOILED IN BLOOD:
And there you have it. Likely THE best track on The Dead Shall Inherit. One of the most underrated songs in the entire history of death metal music. You need to hear it.

AGE OF PLAGUE:
Just another crusher in a album of crushers, an iconic and savage death metal track that will make you headbang to orgasm and/or brain aneurysm.

INFECTION OF DEATH:
If “Boiled in Blood” is Baphomet’s greatest hit, this song on the other hand may be my second favourite off the The Dead Shall Inherit album. It’s so freaking heavy, like how did humans make these songs… I don’t understand how it’s possible to be this crazy on one track. Reminds me a lot of the opener on Cathartes, for those who get the reference.

STREAKS OF BLOOD:
What a way to end this masterpiece of an album, Jesus. Just when you thought it couldn’t get any more crazy, Baphomet hits you with this, and I’m not sure if I’m the only one but I pressed play right over again to experience this devastating monstrosity all over again.

Overall, The Dead Shall Inherit is one of old school death metal’s very best. I have nothing else to say, this album is simply perfect.

Misery Index - "Complete Control"

Misery Index – “Complete Control”

Misery Index - "Complete Control"
Misery Index – “Complete Control”

Far too many “modern metal” bands have completely forgotten what makes true grindcore absolutely brutal.

Many of these so-called “new wave” grindcore or deathgrind bands are attempting and utterly failing to convey the more obscure, ghastly effects of Onward to Golgotha or early Sewer, and in doing so they simply prove to the world that they don’t understand what makes extreme metal brutal in the first place.

Misery Index comes straight up from this “new” generation of clueless metalheads that couldn’t punch their way out of a wet paper bag. Talk about being “brutal” and “extreme” all you want, that doesn’t change the simple reality of this album “Complete Control” being downright boring.

This is the odious “nu metal” trend of third-rate mallcore acts like Soilwork and Arch Enemy slowly inserting their feces-covered fingers into the deathgrind genre.

Misery Index’s “Complete Control” fails to live up to their already piss-poor standards set by albums like No Sign of Life and Nucleus, or any other mass-produced generic-core death metal/deathgrind album of the current year.

Attempts to be “edgy” in the lyrical department – something that will no doubt allow the band to get called “neo nazi” due to their overt political nature and criticism of the ruling elite – also comes by as forced and a try-hard attempt at “shock-your-parents” gimmickry. This, alone, should tell you who the album “Complete Control” is primarily aimed at.

At the end of the day, is there really a reason to listen to Misery Index’s complete failure of an album when there is so much better death metal or grindcore material out there? Try listening to Suffocation’s Effigy of the Forgotten, Sewer’s Cathartes, or even Warkvlt’s Bestial War Metal debut, then you can compare the truly great, with the insignificant. “Complete Control,” sadly, is firmly entrenched in the second category.