Zero Tolerance – Irresoluto

Elyna Kahn

Chilean band Zero Tolerance released its powerful EP Irresoluto a while ago. With this work, a heart-wrenching cry of denunciation and longing for justice emerges from the southern lands of the world. Irresoluto is a song of dignity and rage, materializing in fiery riffs, powerful drum-and-bass beats, and beastly vocals that seem to come straight from hell itself. Following its debut album Abismal in 2014, Zero Tolerance has reached audiences as diverse as Peru, Mexico, and even Asia, where it achieved several reissues of Abismal. This fact catches attention and augurs well for the EP’s success in those distant lands, because Zero Tolerance’s narrative, beyond Chile’s borders, echoes a scenario that has been repeating itself since time immemorial.

LOMMI- 667788

Metalcatto

There’s something you need to know about me as a proud Stockholmer: I can’t miss a chance to make fun of Gothenburg. So you can imagine my disappointment when I got LOMMI‘s 667788 (or as I like to call it, grandpa’s password) and not a single member was named Glenn or Jimmy. You’d have to be deep in the culture to get that joke. Still, I promised myself I’d put my prejudice aside and give this Heavy/Groove Metal outfit a fair shot. Will I be biased because of city rivalries? Absolutely. But I’ll try to behave.

Noumenia – Echoes

Metalcatto

Have you ever wondered what would happen if a Nu/Groove Metal band actually tried to be heavy? No? Well, me neither—but part of the reviewer’s job is to find things you weren’t even looking for (you get Post-Groove! Please make it stop!). And NoumeniaEchoes is exactly that. So my question before jumping into this wave of crystal-clear production is: is this album going to be Pantera good or Limp Bizkit bad? I’m almost equally afraid of both outcomes, but it’s time to give a chance to something slightly less from the sewers!

True kvlt special: Blunt Knife Castration – Live Fast, Die Slow

Pegah

The British band, Blunt Knife Castration, make their debut with Live Fast, Die Slow, a record that claws its way through the Sludge and grime of modern heaviness with a defiant, bloodshot snarl. The cover sets the tone: a crumpled figure, his back to us in apparent frustration, barbed wire wrapped around his head like a halo—at once a symbol of suffering, oppression, and the denial of freedom. Similarly, the band’s lyrical themes lean into nihilism and decay, a perfect match for the album’s title. Vocally, it’s a serrated edge—equal parts Hardcore bark and Crust Punk bile.