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This is 'Liberation through Amplification.'
Saturday, 11 April 2026
THE NEW FLESH INDEX 🩸 Artists That Defined My Week #14 Friday, March 27th to Thursday, April 2nd, 2026
Welcome to The New
Flesh Index #14 — a chronicle of the music that shaped my last seven days
of listening, the records that cut through the noise between March 27th and
April 2nd, 2026, and left their mark. This is a guided walk through the artists/albums
that hooked me, the ones I actually lived with this week rather than skimmed
past, the ones that settled in with weight and intent. Across this week my
listening pushed on even higher. Earbuds at work, headphones on during the dog
walks or on my run, pressing play while making dinner or whenever the moment
allowed — it all added up to 619 plays, 41% above week #13’s 442. The artist count
fell to 13, 52% lower than the previous 27, while the album count moved to 29,
about 7% higher than last week’s 27. Tracks in rotation climbed to 269, a 186%
increase on the 94 new additions logged before. Total listening time reached 1
day and 18 hours, roughly 10% higher than the 1 day and 11 hours previously
recorded. The average stream count held at 88, sitting 40% above last week’s
63, and the peak rose to 150 plays on 29 March, a 25% lift from week #13’s high
of 120 on 20 March. Following on from last
week’s article, I hit a point halfway through where I realised I wasn’t living
with the bands enough. I was skimming new releases instead of sitting with the
artists themselves. Music — especially the stuff that matters — isn’t meant to
be background noise, so I shifted my approach. Instead of jumping to a new
album every day, I started diving into the full discography of whatever band
had just dropped something new. That change is written all over the stats. In week #13 I tore
through 27 new releases, but most of them were quick passes until I found the
ones that stuck — Pipe
Bomb, Neurosis, Crouch, MAGNITUDO, Dying Realm, and the new Nornasplit. To cut down the
skippage, the plan going forward is simple: if a band I already love puts
something out, I’ll run their whole catalogue; if it’s a new name, the release
has to hit hard enough to earn a deep dive. Bearing that in mind, I only
started this halfway through the week, so bands like Great Fallsand Terratomadidn’t get the full treatment even though their new records landed hard. The ones that did get the
full run ended up ranking in a loose tier list. Black Label Societyled the cycle with 218 plays across their
twelve‑album discography. Chamberfollowed with 140 plays
across their three records. The new Great Fallsrelease pulled 78 individual track plays, then Growthwith 57 across their two
albums, and finally Teratoma,
whose new release accounted for 56 individual track plays.
Artists That Defined My
Week 1) ⚔️ Artist: Black Label Society(218 plays) 🩸New Title:“Engines
of Demolition” ⚔️Genre/tags:heavy metal, southern rock, groove metal
Back in the day I was a
huge Zakk Wylde fan— No More Tears–era
Ozzyand the first four BLSalbums (Sonic Brew,
Stronger Than Death, 1919 Eternal, The Blessed Hellride) are simply classic
albums to me, the kind that locked me in early. As an aspiring guitarist too,
his tone and technique felt unparalleled — and those pinched harmonics alone
were enough to get me hooked (never did master them). With such consistency, though,
a reduction in quality was almost inevitable, and so from Mafia onwards
— driven in part by his vocals which, to my ears at least, drifted further into
an Ozzy cadence — what defined his music began to blur, and the x‑factor that
ran through that five‑album stretch gradually faded.
For me, since the last
truly consistent record, Order of the Black, every subsequent release
has felt like diminishing returns, and with that my enthusiasm waned. Which
leads me to their latest: Engines of Demolition, carrying all the usual BLStrademarks — the Ozzycadence, the Sabbath‑leaning
riffing, the southern, no‑fucks‑given swagger — yet nothing here really hits,
so, what we’re left with is solid and familiar, just not the kind of record
that leaves a mark once it’s done.
Black Label Society—
Albums ranked
12) Grimmest Hits (2018) 11) Engines of
Demolition (2026) 10) Hangover Music IV
(2004) 9) Doom Crew Inc. (2021) 8) Shot to Hell (2006) 7) Catacombs of the
Black Vatican (2014) 6) Order of the Black
(2010) 5) Mafia (2005) 4) The Blessed
Hellride (2003) 3) 1919 Eternal (2002) 2) Sonic Brew (1999) 1) Stronger Than Death
(2000)
Admittedly, mathcore can
be hit or miss, but the new record from Chamberdelivers 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.
Chamber—
Albums Ranked
3) Cost of Sacrifice (2020) 2) This Is Goodbye
(2026) 1) A Love to Kill For
(2023)
3)
⚔️Artist:
Growth(58 plays) 🩸New
Release: Under the Under ⚔️Genre/tags:progressive death metal
Coming six years after
their debut, Growthreturn with a sophomore
release that takes the blueprint of The Smothering Arms of Mercy and
pushes further into dissonant, off‑kilter death metal while keeping everything
lean and deliberate. The long tracks move through jagged riffs, sudden rhythmic
breaks, and calm, open passages that land as stark counterpoints to the
extremity. The Ulcerate‑adjacent
tension is there, sharpened by short flashes of melody and clean layers that
cut through without softening the impact.
The record focuses on
reconstruction rather than collapse — the slow, brutal work of trying to move
forward when nothing resolves cleanly. Vocals carry real strain, guitars shift
between force and unease, and the rhythm section keeps the pressure constant.
No repetition to lean on, no easy catharsis; the album only makes full sense as
a complete run.
Under the Under
is heavy in a way that reflects emotional turmoil, one of marked extremes. As
such, the music mirrors the grind of trying to fix what feels broken, folding
in on itself and pulling back together piece by piece. A focused, unflinching
step forward for Growth
Growth– Albums
Ranked
2). The Smothering
Arms of Mercy (2020) 1). Under The Under
(2026)
⚔️ Top Artist: Black Label Society (218
plays)
🩸 Top Album: Chamber– “This is
Goodbye” (98 plays)
⚔️ Top Track: Great Falls– “Misery
Lights” (11 plays)
⚔️🩸 The New Flesh Index Playlist #14
(30 biggest tracks of the week)