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Drowning Sea God Records is on Substack!
Hello one and all,
We’ve moved our editorial operations to Substack.
If you enjoyed our interviews with Michael Woodman , UKofA and house band of doom Meridian Sun, you’re in for a treat. The inaugural piece is a meaty feature about Insect Ark, one of our favourites from 2024.
Read the feature, bookmark the site or, even better, subscribe:
https://drowningseagod.substack.com
The website you’re on right now will stay. You’ll still get all your news about our releases through the site.
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ButcherBird sign to Drowning Sea God Records

Drowning Sea God Records is delighted to announce its freshest signing, hardcore punk/metal/mathcore band ButcherBird.
The London four-piece trades in proggy savagery spiked with big emotions.
They’ve premiered a debut video, Trajan’s Massive Column, with scene stalwarts IDIOTEQ.com, where the band also talk about the track and how they formed, among other things.
From the interview:
‘The premiere single Trajan’s Massive Column tackles the toxicity of hypermasculine posturing. The title started as a joke, but “it actually felt appropriate given how really dumb a lot of hypermasculine rhetoric is. Essentially, if you need to tell everyone how big your column is, you’re probably overcompensating a little.”’
Next up is the release of ButcherBird’s debut EP, Drought/Deluge, on 30 May 2025. The EP contains six tracks with the band’s inventive take on an established genre on full display. Complex rhythms and fluid songwriting are peppered with vocals to rival the best of them, as well as alien effects from pedals that guitarist Rob builds himself.
Pre-orders are available now from Bandcamp. Follow the band on Facebook or Instagram to stay up to date.
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Favourite metal albums of 2024

Photo of Insect Ark live by Yani Beel
This year was another with prodigious amounts of outstanding music. Read on to learn about four gems that have been spinning on repeat in Drowning Sea God Records’ administrative quarters (in no particular order).
Insect Ark – Raw Blood Singing
Insect Ark’s fourth full-length came with renewal – a new drummer in Khanate’s Tim Wyskida, a new label, and most noticeably, band lead Dana Schechter adding her voice to the usual left-field instrumentation (bass, synth, lap steel guitar, drums).
The result is an album of gorgeous idiosyncrasy, somewhere on ‘the outer realms of avant-Metal, psych-Doom, and experimental Goth’, as the press release puts it.
Schechter’s vocals do a lot of the heavy lifting here – expressive, grown-up and unlike anybody else’s.
Wyskida, the other half of the duo, adds major songwriting contributions and a musical idiom entirely his own, staying miles away from cliché or contrivance and complementing the songs in unpredictable ways.
It would have been easy for the band to slide into smarmy trend-mag bait, but Insect Ark rarely lose their sense of song. Rounded out by a stereoscopic Colin Marston mix, ‘Raw Blood Singing’ is rare balm to the ears.
Dreamless Veil – Every Limb of the Flood
Side projects are a label’s PR dream, trading on fans’ familiarity with the main bands. But all too often, they fall flat of the heightened expectation, lacking the focus and dedication that makes the main outfits great. Dreamless Veil buck the norm and may even rival the day jobs.
Consisting of members of Artificial Brain (guitar, bass), Inter Arma (vocals) and Psycroptic (drums), the band sounds like an alien proponent of second-wave black metal, with punchy, hyper-technical drums, sophisticated riffing and cavernous vocals. That blend shouldn’t be a surprise if you consider the band members’ main trades, but there’s an incontrovertible sense of something new and brilliant at play here.
‘Every Limb of the Flood’ boasts a flair for dramatic tension that lasts from start to finish. Standout track ‘A Generation of Eyes’ easily takes the ‘riff of the year’ award from about halfway through the song, but it’s all amazing.
Full of Hell – Coagulated Bliss
It’s always with a lot of anticipation that I look forward to a new Full of Hell release proper, as much as I cherish the collaborative albums. The first full-length in their sole name since 2021’s ‘Garden of Burning Apparitions’, ‘Coagulated Bliss’ shows Full of Hell taking a significant turn with catchy riffs, a new producer and full technicolour artwork. All of those amount to what can only be described as a career-best album.
I’d written about Full of Hell’s impenetrability before, which was cause for fascination. On ‘Coagulated Bliss’, however, the chaos gives way to a clarity very much unlike the earlier output, both in songwriting and production. It’s still extreme and fascinating alright, but perhaps with several touches of Sonic Youth’s memorably louche riffing added to the band’s sound. And it’s a proper album, too, with expert sequencing of blasts and breathers.
Full of Hell’s thirst for innovation in all aspects of a release is more evident than ever on this album. They’re one of the most exciting bands alive right now.
夢遊病者 (Sleepwalker) – Delirium Pathomutageno Adductum
A late addition to my virtual turntable, Sleepwalker’s ‘Delirium Pathomutageno Adductum’ was an instant head-scratcher. ‘What on earth is this?’, I still hear myself ask. The only recognisable element comes from Øyvind Hægeland’s guest vocals (he of Spiral Architect), as they peer out of a fog of mid-paced ‘not quite’ black metal on album opener ‘Tongue Arc Orion’. If the Mars Volta played black metal, they’d maybe sound like Sleepwalker, but there’s so much more going on: choirs, French horn, guitar heroics, screams, murkiness, barely audible double kicks, masterful songwriting.
If the best music is the sort that makes you wrestle with words, Sleepwalker have left me linguistically exhausted, yet mentally exhilarated. It’s no accident that ‘Delirium Pathomutageno Adductum’ ended up taking the top spot in Stereogum’s end-of-year metal list. It might as well take mine.
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Melodic death metal group Scale of Attrition to release debut EP through Drowning Sea God Records
Drowning Sea God Records is proud to announce that London melodic death metallers Scale of Attrition have joined the label roster.
The band includes members of Meridian Sun, much lauded for what Doom Charts called ‘one of the great debuts of 2023’, and Decades in the Shadows, whom Metal Hammer Germany praised for ‘so much concentrated talent and compositional skills’ on their 2022 debut EP.
Scale of Attrition takes songwriting cues from genre greats In Flames and At the Gates and infuses those with the groove and thrash riffing of Lamb of God and Testament.
The five-piece will release their debut EP, titled ‘Broken Bonds’, on 8 November 2024.
The EP comes with cover art by Thomas Lacey (COWER, The Ghost of a Thousand). The artwork is based on Gustave Doré’s The Eagle from Dante’s The Divine Comedy – a perfect accompaniment to the band’s death metal roots and modern ambition.
Order the EP from Bandcamp:
Follow Scale of Attrition on Facebook.
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Meridian Sun reveal how debut stunner The Curse came together

New Drowning Sea God Records signing Meridian Sun have made something of an impact in the metal underground with The Curse, a progressive doom/psych full-length made up of three songs. The label spoke to the band about the album’s genesis.
Drowning Sea God Records: Tell me about your songwriting process.
Meridian Sun: The songs developed over a long time – years, really. The Curse in particular as a song took a couple of years to be completed as it’s more or less an album-worth of material in itself.
The starting point for everything is riffs. Sometimes [guitarists] Martin or Rich would bring a fully formed riff idea or section; other times a section might develop from a seed of an idea over months and end up vastly different from how it started out.
Believe it or not, there were quite a few ideas that were cut as well!
DSGR: How do the other instruments come in?
MS: We would often joke that the initial guitar ideas would have ‘too many notes’ or ‘too much widdle’, having been first worked out for hours before bringing to the practice room. It’s at that point that the band would focus on getting the groove right with the rhythm section and focus on the orchestration and dynamics.
Use of effects pedals also plays a part in the practice room alongside using a nice, driven valve amp to get the sounds and tone to finish off the arrangements.
Vocals always tend to be the last piece of the puzzle and sometimes lead to some more tweaks, mostly section lengths and structure. Riffs often get simplified further into the songwriting process to allow more space for vocals.
We brought all the ideas together over many hours together in a rehearsal room before the pandemic.

DSGR: Where do you get inspiration from?
MS: As a band, we have diverse tastes in music spanning all kinds of metal, rock and other random genres.
Martin used to play in a prog math rock band and has a background in jazz but also didn’t stop listening to Meshuggah exclusively for 3 months straight. [Bassist and lead vocalist] Chris once had a rule that he would not listen to anything recorded after 1974. Rich is a big fan of stoner and progressive metal, especially Tool. Chaz has played drums in hardcore and emo bands, sings classical music and listens to a wide range of genres.
Bands we were all really into at the time included Elder, Pallbearer, Inter Arma, Opeth and Isis. But there are so many influences to draw on. It all comes together when we try to play something interesting that we all like. But as we are all super-nerds, the songs just kept getting longer – we always had another idea that sounded cool and just felt right at the time!
DSGR: How did the band come about?
MS: Three of us were good friends from university. We had played together for a few years, and Chris played in a different band with Martin for a while. He was the perfect fit to join on lead vocals and bass.
We officially became Meridian Sun in 2018 and released the track The Curse as a standalone single/EP.

DSGR: You chose someone unknown in the metal world to record and mix your album. Can you say a little more about why you chose Jamie [Elliott Field]?
MS: Jamie had long been a friend of the band and had worked with Martin on a few projects before this one. He has a sensitive ear and always puts in the extra work to get the absolute best out of the music.
The recording process was really cool as the songs got elevated even further. Jamie was great at suggesting different ways of playing some of the sections and has insane attention to detail, even when we are still up at 2am trying to record the perfect little bit of feedback so the transitions could flow nicely. The production ended up with these subtle layers to it that we absolutely loved.
He’s also super pro at recording vocals – we were really happy with the performances in the end.

DSGR: You’ve been hoovering up the accolades for The Curse. How do you feel about it and what’s next for the band?
MS: The reaction to The Curse has been incredible and we’re so appreciative of all the love we’ve been getting. It feels great to have something we’ve put so much time and graft into getting some recognition.
A huge thanks to everyone that’s streamed, bought, shared or reviewed our music, especially Metal Storm, who also nominated The Curse for debut of the year and stoner metal album of the year.
A big thanks too to Spyridon at Drowning Sea God Records for the amazing work he’s done getting the release out there.
DSGR: What’s next for Meridian Sun?
MS: We’re starting on some new music, but because we’re spread out around the UK a little more, our writing dynamic has changed a bit, so we’re adjusting.
Hopefully some new material will rear its head soon. There are riffs in the pipeline and the reaction to The Curse has inspired us to finish the new material.
Find out more about Meridian Sun’s critically acclaimed debut album The Curse.
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Itself Timeless talk UK Tech-Fest and songwriting with Metal Noise

Following their triumphant set at the final UK Tech-Fest this summer, post-metal collective Itself Timeless had a chat with Metal Noise.
The enigmatic crew lend an insight into their inner workings for the first time.
Of their songwriting, Itself Timeless said “the music has been the result of ideas that appear as pretty complete sonic landscapes, which we then try to recreate with our instruments.”
Having worked with producer Russ Russell (Napalm Death, Dimmu Borgir, At the Gates) on their debut EP ‘α’, the band said it “was our first experience with an established producer, and we loved it – he is a lovable, extremely hardworking person, and although we had very limited time in the studio, his experience definitely helped the process.”
The exclusive interview runs over two posts. Read them through the links below:
Itself Timeless talk Tech-Fest, art and influence!
Itself Timeless talk writing and recording ‘α’!
See highlights of their set:
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Meridian Sun sign to Drowning Sea God Records

We’re beyond thrilled to announce that progressive doom outfit Meridian Sun have signed to Drowning Sea God Records.
You can listen to the 21-minute long title track off their full-length debut The Curse now.
Consisting of three epic songs, the band’s debut album shows off their stellar songwriting, 70s-style rock vocals, intricate twin guitars, and drums as if by a slow-motion Keith Moon.
Producer Jamie Field (Tall Ships, Tubelord) gave Meridian Sun an earthy mix, while mastering duties were handled by Magnus Lindberg of post metal icons Cult of Luna.
“We’re really excited to release our first full-length through Drowning Sea God Records”, the band comments. “These songs mean a lot to us and we’re super proud of these recordings. Looking forward to have them reach more ears. Keep it heavy!”
Photo © Simon Kallas
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UKofA: “I just have ideas all the time”

Behind enigmatic, chameleonic outfit UKofA is none other than John Cormack (Hawk Eyes, Godzilla Black, etc.). We had a chat about his new left-field rock album ‘All This For a Little Peace’ and how he manages to keep the creative tap on.
Drowning Sea God Records: You’ve gone full rock after two solo albums that were more electronica-based. What was behind this return?
UKofA: This album was actually made before the last one I released [‘Punishment Park’]. I haven’t really had a plan with any of these solo releases.
Punishment Park was a mix of different things that came over a number of years. The same is the case with this new one. A lot of it came out of playing with Hawk Eyes. It was taking a long time to make the last album with them. In the meantime, I was still in writing mode for that style of music – heavy, distorted guitars left and right. I got to the point where I wanted to prove to myself that I could record a whole album on my own, Dave Grohl-style.
I do remember thinking: Sometimes, you think that your influences are too obvious, but with this one, I was just going to do whatever came out of me and lean into the stuff I really like and grew up with, which was rock and metal, Radiohead, Tears for Fears and that layered 80s production, but all in a rock domain, which mainly came from the live drums.
DSGR: How did you produce the album?
UKofA: It’s a while since I wrote those songs. I did all the demos for that album five years ago, which is crazy.
The drums were done at The Nave in Leeds, which is an old church and is co-owned by the guy who plays keys in the Kaiser Chiefs. He was there sometimes, very briefly.
I just rolled over some of the stuff I played on the demos. At that point, I didn’t have the capacity to re-amp the guitars like I do now, so I recorded the guitar performances directly; same with the synths, which were also played and recorded through an amp. There’s a lot to be said for that approach which makes you commit to a sound. I’ve got a small studio space down by the M25. I’d go down there and say ‘I’m going to do these songs today’ which meant I was more focussed and had less time to mess around. I did the vocals in my garden shed and that was it!
The album was mastered by Dave Draper. He was recommended to me by Andy Hawkins, who recorded Hawk Eyes and engineered the drums on my album. It turned out I knew Dave because Hawk Eyes had done a tour with his band called Hey You Guys! about ten years ago.
My friend Suki does vocals on one song, ‘Strength and Power’, which she did in Berlin. The vocals that are on the track are actually demos that she recorded into her phone, because it became apparent that she wasn’t going to be able to come here, and I couldn’t go there. She does have someone there who can help her sometimes, but I wanted to get it finished, which is ironic, as it’s taken me so long to get it out. So, because she’s such a good singer, I said: ‘Just do it on your phone’. She double-tracked it and then I just edited and comped it and did a lot of EQing. When someone’s that good a vocalist, it just sounds good and you can easily make it bed in. It has a little bit of a hushed vibe to it. Most people won’t realise that it’s recorded that way unless I tell them. She’s amazing. I hope to do more with her in the future.
DSGR: You once talked about approaching writing like project management.
UKofA: I wish I did approach it like that! Where I’ve done bits of project management at work, I can increasingly see how you could apply the approach to songwriting. It’s all about finishing. Everyone has that problem, setting yourself time, hard deadlines and getting things done.
I spent a lot of time with the sonics on this album. It’s the most professional-sounding record I’ve done. I did spend a lot of time trying stuff out, stripping things back. But when it came to it, particularly the vocals, I was like, right, I need to just finish this now and put it to bed. It was still quite a while, though. I recorded all the drums in April-May 2018 and finished the album in December 2019. I wasn’t working on it full-tilt; during that period, we bought a house and moved and I had to put my little studio together.
There are advantages to being a completely independent artist. It’s great that I have my own little studio space. I can come in here and tinker on stuff. But if you or someone else is paying for the studio, you have to make that time as productive as possible. There’s a lot to be said for that. Things might not come out the way you like, but for an audience, it is what it is, so it just goes out into the world. Then you move on to the next thing. I’d love to have the experience of working with a producer and not having the luxury to take as long as I want. Working on my own with no deadline makes it far too easy to procrastinate, especially with the mixing.
DSGR: You’ve released lots of albums with different bands. How do you keep the creative tap on?
UKofA: I don’t know, haha. I’ve never really had a problem musically, because there’s so much stuff to get inspiration from. There are some musicians that have their specific furrow that they plough. And if it’s not coming out, it’s not coming out. But for me, there’s a whole world of things I like and wonder if I could do something that sounds like that. Obviously, the hope is that if you put it through your own artistic prism, it ends up sounding like you.
I just have ideas all the time but I have to be relaxed. I have been in situations where I have to come up with stuff on the spot and I don’t really like doing that. I’ve never really enjoyed jamming. I have done some free improv and that can be fun, because it doesn’t really matter what you do!
I don’t miss band practice where you try to write in a room, where it’s a kind of democratic process. That was something I learned with previous bands. When I started with Godzilla Black, there were just two of us and we were trying to come up with the craziest ideas we could and then build songs out of that. It was really rewarding and productive, but it took a very long time, because we were starting from seconds’ worth of ideas and trying to make it into something that worked. By the end of Godzilla Black, I thought ‘OK, I can write songs now’, and I’m still on that trajectory, although there’s a part of me that thinks it would be cool to go back to that initial Godzilla Black approach. We spent a lot of time at our rehearsal space, sometimes sleeping there. We’d come up with random stuff and record it all!
DSGR: Is it the camaraderie or the process that you miss?
UKofA: For a long time, it was just the two of us. We were both drummers and interested in the same sorts of things. What I really liked about early Godzilla Black is that we were never planning to play live, so when we were making the record, we were layering stuff up and it was all about the sonics of it. It was never about the performance in the sense of having to go on stage and reproduce it, whereas now, I feel much more like I want to play live or I want it to be heard live.
I do miss working with other people, but they have to be the right people. That’s so difficult to find. And even if you do find the right people, there are so many other things that need to line up, like availability and what people want to get out of a situation. It’s a lot easier to manage when it’s just me!
‘All This For A Little Peace’ is out on 5 May 2023 through Pony Down Records. Get it from the UKofA Bandcamp.
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Itself Timeless release music video for ‘4’

Post-metallers Itself Timeless have released their debut music video, having yet again eschewed genre clichés in favour of something unusual.
The accompanying track, simply titled ‘4’, comes off the band’s EP ‘α’, out now on Drowning Sea God Records.
Check out the video below and share it far and wide if you like.
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Itself Timeless join Drowning Sea God Records

We’re proud to announce that Itself Timeless have joined Drowning Sea God Records.
Find out more about and listen to their stunning debut EP ‘α’ now.
The EP features three beautifully produced, masterfully written tracks. Itself Timeless are big on dynamics, layered songwriting and emotionally charged vocals. Their music will please discerning metal fans worldwide.
Check out the live video for opening track ‘2’ below.
Warning: The video contains flashing lights, which may not be suitable for people with photosensitive epilepsy.
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Drowning Sea God Records is on Substack!
Hello one and all,
We’ve moved our editorial operations to Substack.
If you enjoyed our interviews with Michael Woodman , UKofA and house band of doom Meridian Sun, you’re in for a treat. The inaugural piece is a meaty feature about Insect Ark, one of our favourites from 2024.
Read the feature, bookmark the site or, even better, subscribe:
https://drowningseagod.substack.com
The website you’re on right now will stay. You’ll still get all your news about our releases through the site.
