The more thrash moments raise the level of the CD: akin to Anthrax at certain points or even Pantera as in "Join In Me In The Desert."

 What really didn’t sit well with me is the female vocals: they retained the voice from their gothic beginnings, although at times it becomes almost raspy.

Amantyde's 2011 album Madchen blends gothic metal vocals with thrash and alternative riffs. The album runs 34 minutes across nine tracks, mixing slower and more intense moments. While the thrash style portions are praised, the contrasting gothic female vocals divided the reviewer. The album is noted as simple, well-made, and featuring a solid cover of the Cranberries' "Zombie." Explore Amantyde's Madchen for a unique blend of gothic vocals and thrash metal energy today!

 There is more the desire to put together various images to show off, thus obtaining as a result this hybrid between amateurish and attempted professional.

 The group maintained the catenaccio closing in defense, to bring out this cassette which in 2014 would like to be the umpteenth new recording... but here we’re definitely not there.

The review critically examines Frentrum's 2014 demo, highlighting a strong reliance on clichés and nostalgia-driven aesthetics without real personality or originality. Despite well-maintained vocals and some production effort, the music is largely uninspired and derivative, especially influenced by early Burzum works. The cassette format and retro visuals feel more like trend-following than authentic expression. Overall, it’s a demo that attempts to recreate a classic style but falls short in musical and artistic impact. Explore Frentrum's demo to hear nostalgic black metal roots, but dive in with tempered expectations about originality and production.

Similar users
stellameringa

DeRank: 0,05

2000

DeRank: 1,60

daniele.donini.31

DeAge 3763

TheBluesBreakep

DeRank: 0,00