For hours it burned and then it dried. A layer of itself faded with the harsh winds - a layer of its sanity. It woke up with the chills, when one of the planet's moon surfaced before the main star above. With a return to its sweet darkness, it found nearby hole where it regenerated for the next few hours...
Flashes of its past kept appearing since the incident, completely confused by the crushing atmosphere on the surface of this 'new' home. It decided to freed himself for a while and quit for the next solar system. Its departure was hard - a feeling of shame and guilt empowered the Hexeth, leaving its mind where it all started. It was time to loathe...
supported by 25 fans who also own “Hexeth / Void Tendril Split”
PSA: if there was an album you heard a couple years ago and thought it was ok, listen to it again and you might love it.
That's what happened to me with this album. I cannot fathom why it didn't stick with me back then. Same thing happened with Decoherence's Unitarity for that matter. Matten
supported by 24 fans who also own “Hexeth / Void Tendril Split”
What a BEAST of an album. When it comes to blending black metal and mathcore, these guys and Hoplites are the clear leaders of the pack. This album is sheer annihilation of everything in it's path. Pure chaos and destruction. And it is beautiful. Ryan
Two death metal legends unite for a once-in-a-lifetime LP; rife with classic appeal and flavor, it's a manifesto that works in any era. Bandcamp New & Notable Jul 11, 2017
supported by 24 fans who also own “Hexeth / Void Tendril Split”
Swirling guitars, furious drums, vocals that at the same time howl from infinite distance and are right up in your head; everything put into dissonant form with the help of unconventional songwriting. This album is my personal key to the icelanding black metal madness that I've ignored for way too long! Lukas Kaufmann