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Selling CD - Extreme Metal and Dark music
https://www.discogs.com/release/629368-Marduk-Dark-Endless
MINT COPY
MINT COPY
https://www.discogs.com/release/4118981-Pretty-Maids-Red-Hot-And-Heavy
Mint copy, japanese double cd:
https://www.discogs.com/release/11480717-Savatage-Japan-Live-94-Ghost-In-The-Ruins
Near Mint copy of this edition:
https://www.discogs.com/release/3505235-Mortal-Sin-Face-Of-Despair
EDGE OF CASE & INSERTS CUT (an unfortunate habit they had back then to mark cds as promos or nice-price in stores)
MINT COPY OF
https://www.discogs.com/release/167886-Pitch-Shifter-Infotainment
Australian experimental metal band Bolt Gun return with their 3rd full length album The Tower. Since their first release in 2014, Bolt Gun have continued to push the boundaries of heavy music, adopting a semi-improvised style that combines elements of black metal, post-metal, noise and dark ambient.
The Tower is inspired by the literary works of Brian Evenson, Franz Kafka and Shirley Jackson and explores themes of isolation, extinction, absurdity and nihilism. Written throughout 2020 to 2022, the album expands on Bolt Gun’s interest in the dynamic possibilities of using ambient music within extreme metal.
The expansive tracks pull listeners into tornadoes of drone, noise and saxophone which then explode into more post-metal/black metal sounds. The music on The Tower is heavily influenced by 2nd wave black metal, experimental heavy bands such as Locrian and Swans in addition to the work of Colin Stetson and Bohren & der Club of Gore.
Artwork by Tomasz Winiarski.
Based out of the frigid capital of the colonial state known as Canada, Dismal Aura surfaced with their self-released debut, Praeagia Tristia in 2021. The trio blend second-wave black metal with crust punk and grind elements, an offering as bleak and chilling as it is melodic and impassioned.
Composed of members with diverse cultural backgrounds and lived experiences, Dismal Aura explores socio-political topics such as colonialism, state-terror, and environmental destruction.
Produced by Topon Das (Fuck the Facts, Gorguts) and Mike Bond (Crusades, Loviatar), the band’s sophomore album was recorded in deep winter forest of Wolf Lake Studios.
Inspired by the essay Necropolitics by Achille Mbembe, Imperium Mortalia spans eight compositions that reckon with the grim relationship between the individual and the state, the exploitative nature of power, and the reduction of human life to commodity.