Wednesday, 1 April 2026

SONIC SELECTIONS (((o))): The Records That Defined March (2026)


 

Welcome to Sonic Selections (((o))): March Edition — my monthly recap of the records that shaped my listening throughout March, defined the mood of the weeks gone by, and carved out their own space in the noise. This curated list is drawn from my listening habits, based on the key releases that became my ultimate earworm.

 Across this rotation, I clocked 2,100 plays, up from 1,562 in February. I pulled from 99 new artists (up from 87), 111 new albums (up from 88), and 493 new tracks (up from 347). Altogether, that amounted to six days and nine hours of total listening time — a full day more than February. Average plays per day rose 22% to 68, with a weekly peak of 150 plays on March 29th, a 29% jump.

 March was, even by my listening habits, a massive month for new music. What follows is the collection of albums that held my attention the most — the ones that shaped my sonic landscape and defined the emotional and aesthetic contours of the month. (Note: albums are rated based on individual track streams alone.)


1) Rob Zombie – “The Great Satan” (107)

For me, the return of classic Zombie and his best record since “Hellbilly Deluxe 2”, and whilst I accept not everyone is a fan, (fuck the haters) “The Great Satan” is a super addictive chrome‑plated inferno of industrial sleaze, Zombie drags you through a carnival of rust, gasoline, and bad intentions. Every riff stomps like a steel‑capped boot to the ribs, every synth flickers like a dying neon sign, and his voice — that gravel‑throated snarl — feels like a sermon delivered from the wrong side of the grave. It’s grotesque, swaggering, and gloriously unhinged.


2) Pipe Bomb – “Hell Hole” (102)

“Hell Hole” is a self‑recorded, self‑released burst of volatility, a release whose foundation is built from concise, zero bullshit tracks that snap with jagged riffs and sudden rhythmic collapse. The raw production gives the guitars a savage metal edge and the vocals, a  raw live immediacy, keeping everything sharp, punchy and abrasive. Despite the chaos within, there’s also a surprising structural clarity and addictive quality to the record, each song (at times) shifting direction but keeping the listeners interest piqued at all times and without falling into the genre trappings of unlistenable  harsh excess. “Hell Hole” a compact, hostile record that channels the essence of hardcore’s aggression into something sharp, intentional, and relentlessly compelling.


3) Chamber – “This Is Goodbye..”(98)

Admittedly, mathcore can be hit or miss, but the new record from Chamber delivers the right amount of chaos without descending into an unlistenable mess. “This Is Goodbye..” continues their weaponised, incendiary hardcore — a pressure cooker of jagged rhythms, panic‑attack pacing, and riffs that feel like they’re collapsing in on themselves, yet somehow remains wholly accessible and addictive.  Yes, every track can disorientate, with lurching guitars, drums detonating beneath you, and vocals clawing their way into your psyche. And yet, beneath all that violence is a frightening level of control. After revisiting their full discography, “This Is Goodbye..” is unequivocally their most focused, volatile, and emotionally engaging work to date.


4) Neurosis – “Un Undying Love for a Dying World”(98)

Neurosis return a decade after "Fires Within Fires" with a new lineup and, arguably, another genre‑shaping opus. Reshaped and retooled around the talents of Aaron Turner, the record carries that sense of obvious upheaval, yet none of the band’s core DNA is lost. "An Undying Love for a Burning World" keeps their slow, tectonic pacing but adds new layers — drones, synths, and keys widening the space around some of their most monolithic riffs. Themes of isolation, ecological collapse, and psychological strain run through the album, giving their first release in an age a heavy, lived‑in weight. It’s a monumental return, the sound of a band rebuilding from the ground up. The title mirrors a world collapsing around us, and it’s hard not to feel an undying pull toward a record with this kind of emotional gravity.


5) Varials – “Where The Light Leaves”(97)

This is the sound of a soul cracking under its own weight. Varials weaponise despair, turning breakdowns into blunt‑force trauma and vocals into open wounds. The record feels like being trapped in a collapsing room — walls closing in, air thinning, every moment a fight to stay conscious. It’s metalcore stripped of pretense and left bleeding on the floor.


6) Lamb of God – “Into Oblivion”(79)

Lamb of God sound sharp and assured, leaning into the mechanics that have always driven their best work. The riffs snap with purpose, the rhythms stay locked, and the pacing never drifts from its forward pull. It’s not a reinvention, but a tightening of the screws. A confident, momentum‑driven statement from a band that knows its footing.


7) Moloch – “Bend.Break.Kneel.Crawl”(79)

Moloch’s new record moves with the slow certainty of something collapsing under its own weight, every track grinding forward with deadened resolve. There’s no lift or shift in momentum, just pressure tightening until it becomes the whole experience. The album feels like being pinned beneath the same thought until it loses shape. Bleak, disciplined, and completely unwilling to offer relief.


8) Great Falls – “Conscription”(78)

First of all, I fucking love Great Falls — so when news dropped of a new release in the form of Conscription, my excitement spiked immediately. These purveyors of abrasion are among the best in the business. It’s not a traditional record so much as a collection of splits, EPs, and singles, yet as expected the tracks grind, gallop, and disorientate. Conscription is a short, punishing lesson in suffocating density, with riffs that psychologically erode your aural synapses.


9) Bound in Fear – “A Mind Too Sick To Heal” (73)

Bound in Fear deliver a series of controlled, violent impacts, each track built around blunt repetition and suffocating weight. The band strip everything down to pure force, letting the heaviness speak without theatrics or buildup. It’s hostile in a way that feels intentional rather than chaotic. A record designed to bruise more than impress.


10) Crouch – “Breaking The Catatonic State” (71)

Crouch’s debut full‑length marks a decisive shift from their earlier sludge roots, embracing angular rhythms, sharp pivots, and a more confrontational vocal presence. The trio’s background in WiegedoodOathbreaker, and Ventilateur shows in the precision of the playing and the confidence of the arrangements. The production is stark and unembellished, letting every jagged shift and sudden rupture land with full force. It’s a volatile, inventive record that captures a band in the middle of a deliberate transformation



🩸 Top 10 Artists (minutes played): 
 
1). Neurosis (725)
2). GROWTH (424)
3). Chained To The Bottom of the Ocean (404)
4). Chamber (345)
5). Lamb of God (309)
6). Crouch (300)
7). Cryptic Shift (297)
8). Phasma (205)
9). Dwellnought (268)
10). Rob Zombie (267)
 
⚔️ Top Tracks (most played)

 
1). Portrayal of Guilt – “Human Terror” (20)
2). Portrayal of Guilt – “Ecstasy” (18)
3). Chained To The Bottom of the Ocean – “Execution” (16)
4). Chained To The Bottom of the Ocean – “An Abundancy of Mercy” (15)
5). Neurosis – “Blind” (15)
6). Chained To The Bottom of the Ocean – “An Adornment of Light” (14)
7). Chained To The Bottom of the Ocean – “Upheaval” (14)
8). Neurosis – “First Red Rays” (13)
9). Neurosis – “Seething and Scattered” (12)
10). Neurosis – “Mirror Deep” (12)



⚔️🩸 Sonic Selections (((o))): March Edition (50 biggest tracks of the month)