I feel like I say this at the end of every year, but this time, I mean it: 2022 was the strongest, deepest year for metal in recent memory. For each of the albums included below, there were 10 more that easily could have taken their place. Narrowing this list to a manageable length was a brutal task, and I lost sleep over all the great records that I couldnât find room for. I finally did manage to get it down to a dozen, which are presented below, alphabetically by artist. Happy headbanging.
Ashenspire
Hostile Architecture
Vinyl LP, Compact Disc (CD)
Thereâs nothing academic about Ashenspireâs Hostile Architecture. The second album by the Scottish avant-garde black metal troupe is a leftist rallying cry aimed at the gut and the heart, performed so viscerally it practically demands action. Beginning with its title, defined by bandleader Alasdair Dunn on âThe Law of Asbestosâ as âanother set of fucking homeless spikes outside another empty shop,â Hostile Architecture is as close as art gets to praxis. Dunn is angry, but heâs also inspired by the power of what he calls âthe great many,â whether thatâs workers standing in solidarity for a living wage or the enormous team of musical collaborators who helped him bring the album to life. His pummeling drums and frenzied, Devil Doll-inspired vocals propel songs like âTragic Heroinâ and âBeton Brutâ forward, but itâs the heaving mass of the collective, all its churning guitars and violins, and saxophones, that make Hostile Architecture the anarchic masterpiece that it is.
Blind Guardian
The God Machine
Coming on the heels of 2019âs completely guitar-free Legacy of the Dark Lands, The God Machine may seem at first like a hard reset for Blind Guardian. Indeed, itâs the heaviest, most direct album the German power metal stalwarts have made in years. Yet itâs still subtly informed by everything they learned in their epic, orchestral years. Lead guitarist and primary songwriter André Olbrich sounds like heâs having a blast playing speed metal again, but heâs also become a brilliant arranger, and the canny detail work on highlights like âSecrets of the American Godsâ and âLife Beyond the Spheresâ helps make The God Machine much more than a back-to-basics nostalgia trip. Instead, itâs the culmination of their 35 years as a band, a modern classic they could only have made at this point in their career.
Hath
All That Was Promised
T-Shirt/Shirt, 2 x Vinyl LP, Compact Disc (CD), Sweater/Hoodie
The most potent weapon at Hathâs disposal on All That Was Promised is the albumâs mix. The New Jersey death metal band builds moments so densely layered that theyâre almost suffocating. Just when the claustrophobia threatens to overwhelm the song, the band pulls back, revealing the beating heart of a growled vocal line or a jagged guitar riff. Hathâs use of density as a lever gives All That Was Promised a dynamism that feels thrillingly physical, like a roller coaster that withholds its moments of relief until the terror is almost unbearable. They couldnât achieve that effect without sharp songwriting and exceptional chops, and they deliver both in spades. Guitarists Frank Albanese and Pete Brown strike a balance between proggy exhibitionism and earwormy replay value throughout the album. The crown jewel is âKenosis,â an aural illusion of a track that either feels like a strangely catchy prog-death song or a deceptively complex pop-metal banger depending on the light. Like the rest of the record, it rewards obsessive re-listening.
Immolation
Acts of God
The Yonkers natives in Immolation have the reputation of being the nicest guys in death metal. You wouldnât know it by listening to Acts of God, their 11th full-length suite of pitch-black blasphemies. The only thing that matches their kindness to fans and tourmates is their antipathy toward organized Christianity, and they articulate their sacrilege vividly here, with tightly wound hymns like âNoose of Thornsâ and âWhen Halos Burn.â Founding members Ross Dolan and Robert Vigna havenât changed up their approach much in their 30 years leading Immolation; Acts of God is as relentlessly dark and dissonant as 1991âs classic Dawn of Possession. Itâs also very nearly as good. That makes them something like death metalâs AC/DC or Motörheadâa decades-long institution that continues to wring excellent material out of slight variations on a truly killer theme.
Messa
Close
2 x Vinyl LP, Cassette, Compact Disc (CD)
Thereâs a palpable warmth to Close, the third album by self-styled âscarlet doomâ practitioners Messa. Itâs there in the analog hum of Rhodes piano and the snarl of the saxophone, both introduced on the Italian bandâs previous album Feast for Water, as well as in the oud and duduk passages that transport Close to a sun-dappled Middle East. More than that, the warmth comes from the closeness of the musicians, who waited out multiple COVID-19 lockdowns until they could record together in person. Close is nothing less than their shared energy, captured on tape. Songs unfold patiently, seemingly in real-time, as multi-instrumentalist Alberto Piccolo leads his bandmates through labyrinths of moody proto-doom and Bohren & der Club of Gore-style dark jazz. (Itâs not all slow-going; the 45-second âLeffotrakâ is a cold-water shock of gnarly hardcore.) Frontwoman Sara Bianchin completes the effect with a career-best vocal performance, her full-toned mezzo-soprano serving as an emotional beacon to guide the songs to the listenerâs heart.
Nansarunai
Ruins of the Moonlight Temple
Raw black metal, a genre now defined as much by the corner of the internet it occupies as the aesthetic properties of the music, is an overcrowded scene. Every week sees a new deluge of bedroom-recorded, provocatively underproduced albums with black-and-white covers and songs about vampires. Maybe five percent of them are any good. I donât like to sound jaded; hearing new music is still the most exciting feeling in the world to me. But itâs become a bit much. Thatâs why I thank the universe every day for the existence of Nansarunai, the anonymous Indonesian project whose raw black metal represents the pinnacle of what this sound has to offer. Their debut album, last yearâs Ultimul Rege, was a moving tone poem depicting the rise and fall of Borneoâs indigenous Dayak people, whose once-proud kingdom lent Nansarunai its name. Sophomore LP Ruins of the Moonlight Temple sees them expand on their vision. The album doubles down on Nansarunaiâs now-signature blend of martial vigor and melancholic pensiveness. Musically, it sees the projectâs lone member more confidently experimenting with melody and arrangements, adding complexity without sacrificing any emotional heft. Itâs powerful stuff.
Nechochwen
Kanawha Black
Vinyl LP
Nechochwenâs Aaron Carey has devoted his musical life to the history of his native West Virginia, especially the chapters involving its indigenous peoples. His Shawnee and Lenape heritage has guided the band since their largely acoustic debut, 2008âs Algonkian Mythos, and it remains a central influence on the blazing black metal of Kanawha Black. The title refers to a type of flint that local tribes used in crafting arrowheads, but Carey also uses it as an allegory for the black cloud that stalks West Virginiaâs bloody past and uncertain future. That makes for a heavy listen, but no one is better equipped to bring this music to life than Carey and his longtime collaborator Andrew DâCagna. With sinewy, melodic black metal riffs, blistering leads, forays into classical and folk guitar, and impassioned vocals both clean and shrieked, Nechochwen tell the story of Kanawha Black as only they can.
The Otolith
Folium Limina
Compact Disc (CD), 2 x Vinyl LP
Itâs impossible to talk about the Otolith without first talking about SubRosa, the Salt Lake City doom band who broke up in 2019 after a string of four striking, singular albums. Four of the five members of the Otolith were also in that group, including violinists/vocalists Sarah Pendleton and Kim Cordray. Their preternatural chemistry lives at the very center of Folium Limina, the Otolithâs stunning debut LP. Their violins weave in and out of one anotherâs paths, and their singing voices frequently meet in exquisite harmony. The rest of the band is every bit as critical to epic-length crushers like âSing No Codaâ and âDispirit,â but itâs the pleasure of hearing Pendleton and Cordray playing together again that makes Folium Limina so essential.
Ripped to Shreds
åè® (Jubian)
Vinyl LP, Cassette, T-Shirt/Shirt
My favorite guitar album of the year is åè® (Jubian), the third LP by San Joseâs Ripped to Shreds. Its eight songs are home to, conservatively, two trillion perfect death metal riffs and a billion perfect leads. Founding frontman Andrew Lee is flanked by a full-band lineup for the first time in Ripped to Shreds history, which clearly helped. Without having to worry about the bass and drum parts, Lee was able to stay laser-focused on his guitar performance, and the result is jaw-dropping. His riffs are surprising and inventive while remaining firmly within the death metal tradition, and his buzzsaw tone is the genreâs platonic ideal. As a soloist, heâs even better, the brilliant phrasing of his lead work ensuring that even his shreddiest solos also function as melodic hooks. (Lee even has impeccable taste in guest spots; Churchburnâs Dave Suzuki delivers one of the finest solos on the album on âViolent Compulsion for Conquest.â) Even before considering Leeâs incisive lyrics on Chinese history and his own Asian American identity, Jubian is a scorching success.
Sigh
Shiki
For three decades, Sigh have been relentlessly, unapologetically themselves. Despite coming up in Tokyo in the early â90s alongside fellow Japanese metal trailblazers like Abigail and Sabbat, the band led by Mirai Kawashima never really fit into their local sceneâor any other scene, for that matter. Theyâve made their home at black metalâs bleeding edge, endlessly piling alien sounds and textures onto their proggy, psychedelic songs in a fearless embrace of the avant-garde. Shiki is Sighâs 12th album, and while it isnât short on unusual sounds, itâs also perhaps the most emotionally direct album theyâve ever made. The title translates to âfour seasons,â and Kawashima has remarked that, at 52 years old, heâs nearing winter. That gives Shiki a death-stalked feeling, even as Kawashima works through a battery of traditional heavy metal-inspired riffage and rapid-fire black metal vocal exorcisms. (The albumâs eerie, glitchy electronics and doleful shakuhachi do a lot to balance the tonal ledger.) Death is inescapable, but it doesnât have to be terrifying. Kawashima hopefully has a lot of years left, but by wrestling with his lifeâs coming winter in this music, he helps defang it. His generosity of spirit shines through on Shiki.
Sonja
Loud Arriver
Other Apparel, Vinyl, T-Shirt/Shirt, Compact Disc (CD)
Maybe it was a down year for traditional metal, or maybe Sonjaâs debut was so damn good that everything else paled in comparison. Like it says right there in the title, Loud Arriver marks the, uh, loud arrival of a new force in American true metal. Fronted by ex-Absu guitarist Melissa Moore, the Philly band infuses their classic metal riffage with a healthy dose of â80s goth swagger. That doesnât make Loud Arriver spooky or shlocky but sexy, a quality thatâs tragically rare in modern heavy metal. Moore is a natural frontwoman, and itâs her raw charisma that powers libidinous anthems like âNylon Nightsâ and âFuck, Then Die.â Sheâs gonna set you on fire.
Undeath
Itâs Timeâ¦to Rise from the Grave
Compact Disc (CD), Vinyl LP, Cassette
There should be social media challenge where you videotape yourself trying to listen to Undeathâs Itâs Timeâ¦to Rise from the Grave without a big, shit-eating grin spreading across your face. I know I wouldnât be able to do it. For their second album, the Rochester death metal band made everything sharper and tighter and beefier than it was on 2020âs Lesions of a Different Kind. But more than any of that, they made it more fun. There are multiple songs on Itâs Time about zombie cyborgs, and another where frontman Alexander Jones spells out âD-E-A-Dâ during the chorus like a death metal kindergarten teacher. Guitarists Kyle Beam and Jared Welch trade razor-sharp riffs and solos that have the muscularity of Corpsegrinder-era Cannibal Corpse and the pop sensibility of Judas Priest. Like those bands, Undeath have an innate understanding of the ecstatic potential of heavy music.