Author: Orcus

  • Awesome Anthems of the Galaxy

    By: Iron Savior

    Date: March 27, 2026

    Format used: Digital

    Rating: 2/5

    Iron Savior has not been on my radar until very recently. Their science fiction concept albums and intense vein of Power Metal helps set them apart from the more watery europower that is so common throughout the continent. It makes sense, Iron Savior is from the old guard of European Power Metal, back when the sound still packed a decent bodyshot with minimal wind-up. But this cover album, even to an outsider, will seem a little out of place coming from a Metal band. And that may be true, but Iron Savior began as a cover band in a high school talent contest, and most every release featured at least one cover. It is not the covers that are out of place here, it is rather the presence of a slurry of europop with otherwise little originality with which Iron Savior can put their stamp on it that drags this album down.

    Lets start with the positive, because this album isn’t all bad, the production is phenomenal. Piet Sielck prides himself as a producer, and we definitely see those talents here. And while the lyrics to the songs themselves are basically the catchy, if a little shallow pop you would expect, Piet does deliver them with conviction and passion. If it were not for the delivery Orcus’s whiskered snout may pick up the distinct stench of greed and deceit. And take it from Orcus the Vile, you would need an act of sorcery to determine if this album is selling-out, and unfortunately it is not worth the material cost to do so (besides, where would I find a piece of quartz with a preserved optic nerve within it on such short notice?).

    What you do not need sorcery to read is the omens here. And there are a few even to the untrained eye. Consider – there official discography of Iron Savior lists their most recent single as just one song – but with all four singles released, their most recent single is actually labelled as an EP. And that is the giveaway. Only the more aware bands bother calling their combined, streaming optimized singles EPs because they recognize 4 tracks is technically an EP and not a single. And even fewer bands have the sense to actually release their last single as an official EP to distract from the fact that they are playing the algorithm on spotify like some common garage rapper.

    Does Orcus sound elitist? Well I should not be sounding elitist. An elitist would refuse to behead his enemies without a two-body katana from the Edo period. Orcus the Vile only uses halberds looted from the bodies of European palace guards – he is not elitist, he merely has standards. Playing the algorithm, for example, is a standard the trendies hold themselves too. But the imaginary releases is but the first omen.

    The bigger problem here is the cassette on the cover. Though it does make sense in a clever sort of way in that it is a mix that flies through space in Iron Savior’s little realm – are these tracks really the prime mix on a fictional earth where Metal is the force of nature? Does pop rule the airwaves in this Metal fantasy world? These are the questions we have to address if its taken with any seriousness fictionally, if not, it feels like Iron Savior is trying to reach new audiences with their banner of europop, and maybe even land a production deal with the artists that were so conveniently added in the metadata on spotify. However, giving the artists credit is the right thing to do, and Orcus does not want to be overly cynical.


    Orcus is not overly familiar with the source work but there is a more than ninety percent chance that this release is too Metal for the pop crowd, and it is too poppy for all but the most devoted of Iron Savior’s fanbase. I hope to be doing a retrospective for Iron Savior’s early albums at some point as they are what inspired Orcus the Vile to go into space, with – mixed – results (lets just say the silicon valley engineers who “volunteered” to work at a deregulated compound ceased microdosing). Overall, since this album is as nonthreatening and accessible as they get I would heartily recommend it to the uninitiated. The music is a good compilation that showcases the musical talents of Iron Savior’s creative talent. For everybody else – stay tuned, we will revisit the Atlantean Warmachine soon enough.

  • The Crawl

    By: Temple of Void

    Date: March 6, 2026

    Format used: digital

    Rating: 3/5

    With an ominous atmosphere and creeping dread, The Crawl is perhaps the most appropriate title for this album. With one small exception though. Another worthy title would have been The Climb, because ToV sure do like their Phrygian mode. And if there is one thing on this release that can be called formulaic, it’s this Phrygian ladder in the solos that keeps popping up.

    Orcus the Vile himself is not a fan of the sound, When last such an oriental lick repeated this much in under the span of an hour, I was paraded around the court of a sultan as a freak from the armies of Christendom. And Orcus the Vile is not an animal – the snout and tusks are genetic!

    Personal gripes aside, the atmosphere definitely has a good feel. As hinted to in the start of this review, there definitely is a feeling of dread permeating the album. Expect there to be heavy riffs and echoing snarls as on many previous Temple of Void releases. There is more emphasis on death metal this time around, and I think it is a stretch to describe this as a Doom album musically, Slowing down music and adding fuzz does not Doom Metal make, the same as if Orcus fries chicken dry over a fire he does not suddenly have beef jerky – no matter what his acolytes say (Orcus the Vile has a high brow, not a sloping brow)!

    Returning to the music, there is a decently heavy wall of sound, which augments the dark lyrical subject matter. The lyrics are once again bleak, and come in two categories: fantasy like “the crawl” or “poison mountain”, and personal struggles like “godless cynic”. There is a good spread of themes and influences in the lyrics and music respectively, and the album, even if formulaic at times – competently does what it sets out to do. I would recommend the Crawl as a better album to get into than Summoning the Slayer, but Orcus the Vile encourages listening to their debut first.

  • Retrospective: Sacred Metal

    By: Doomsword

    Original year of release: 1997

    Version: Post-Mortem Apocalypse 12 inch vinyl 33.5rpm

    Rating: 3.5/5

    Ah yes Doomsword, one of the standard bearers of a certain vein of Doom Metal that crosses over into traditional heavy metal so potently that Manowar’s definition of True Metal seems outmoded. Other bands like Grand Magus that arguably also play this bottom-heavy vein of Heavy Metal do not cross over as effectively into Doom Metal as our Italian friends Doomsword. Although on this demo, they stay staunchly the ranks of Bathory and Manowar’s legions of followers, which was uncommon in an era where Rhapsody was all the rage. Sure, there are some moments of Doom and ominous interludes that show glimpses of where this band will go in the future, but most of this is a fairly standard banner for the adherents of True Metal to flock around.

    I’m sure many who hung out amongst the Metal legions will be familiar with the obsessive history buffs who listen to Metal purely for the lyrics addressing the hyper focus they have. Sabaton’s mainstream fanboys come to mind, but there are many other bands with that sort of devotee. It may come as a surprise that Orcus the Vile initially approached Doomsword for a similar reason – but it is not because he is a history buff. Nay, Orcus enjoys the youth of today giving events from his early years the proper attention they deserve, and he finds their song Gergovia to be especially morbid. But we know they have lyrical brilliance, and they do transform the Doom they use as a foundation for their sound, so now we must address the elephant in the room. Why does this demo have only 3.5 stars?

    Let us establish firstly, this is not the record label’s fault. Though the vinyl itself was a snug fit in the machine with bits of plastic left over, the vinyl was actually converted from a demo of a cassette that was produced on a four track analog recorder. Now for you younger scions of humanity, let me explain something, in case you don’t know how cassettes work. After a while the tape begins to wear out. The sound becomes thin and feeble. The sound quality diminishes. And with only 150 copies of the original Sacred Metal demo in circulation, this leaves us with a can of worms transferring it to vinyl. I fully understand why they used vinyl, and it is a very nice collectible, but Orcus the Vile buys physical media to listen to. And at that point, a CD might be better, because the quality unfortunately sounds a lot like what you expect a demo to sound like except a little weak. Although the rawness does have a certain charm that makes the NWOBHM tendencies on the second half of the album sound all the more endearing.

    As mentioned in the intro, the album fits squarely in the ground of Manowar, Cirith Ungol, and even moments of Bathory’s Viking Metal era. We do see some moments of innovation, with a bleak and desolate atmosphere, and moments of overt doom in the intro and interlude. This atmosphere and the doom sensibilities will be the direction the band fundamentally take later, and it shows. That being said, sacred Metal has yet to find its own sound in the way the self-titled debut did later in 1999.

    Considering what we see in the booklet, Sacred Metal used to be all Medieval music for a different project, but Deathmaster and Guardian Angel rearranged it quickly to meet a production deadline. I’d say with those constraints, it came out pretty well. The biggest triumph on this demo though, the one thing that showcases the grandeur of later Doomsword music well, is the lyrics.

    Let it be known that Orcus the Vile is not opposed to holy wars, he ordered his legions on several (and they would have been successful too if our expeditionary force didn’t end up in Narnia instead due to a portal malfunction), so when he says unto the reader that he enjoys these lyrics – know Orcus does not jest. Yes, these lyrics deal with the penitence of two bards who go off to fight a holy war and meet their doom. The organization of the story is a little bit sloppy, with the timeline jumping between songs, but this isn’t Iron Savior, its young lads trying to play the music they like. And here is the ultimate virtue of this album.

    Doomsword made this album to play the kind of music they want to hear, which was the kind that was not all that popular. They played the music with conviction and passion, and their love for the old guard of Metal shows in the unstable electric storm they harnessed in a bottle. It would not be harnessed and fielded. as lightning yet, but the potential is there in the bottle. And that is what this demo is. Potential in a bottle. And even if Orcus has ears everywhere, he would prefer electricity to sparks. But sometimes sparks hit the spot.

  • Welcome to my domain

    From the dolmen which holds his former site, Orcus the Vile has risen. And he will venture out to engage in diversion from an eternity tied to the very stone of the hills.

    Come join me here periodically for reviews of music, games, and other things, and if you like what you read consider sharing and supporting the site (when my risen underlings explain to me how to do finance that is).