The Metal Pigeon’s Best of 2024 // Part Two: The Albums

Here I go again, as David Coverdale once sagely sang, back with part two of The Metal Pigeon’s Best of 2024 feature, focusing on the best albums of the year (a tidy ten selections for you newcomers). If you missed part one of the feature a few weeks ago, focusing on the best songs of the year, be sure to check that out too. Looking back on the year in metal, I imagine we’re all going to have differing perspectives on whether or not it was a strong year for a particular subgenre or another. I’ve heard from many in our metal circle that it was a great year for black metal, and from others that it was another banner year for death metal. For my part, I was happily surprised at the renewed strength of gothic rock/metal coming through via several releases, something that I had been long hungering for over the past few years. Much like the recent folk metal revival of the past several years, there are new artists introducing freshness to gothic heaviness by putting their own spin on tried and true sounds and themes. It resulted in igniting a desire on my part to revisit a heap of classics in that vein, such as Sentenced, Charon, To/Die/For, The Man-Eating Tree, H.I.M., and many others. Much like my summer of Dio last year, it was liberating to drop out of the new music treadmill for awhile at will and just listen to older stuff I really longed to hear just for the sheer enjoyment of it. While it admittedly results in less updates here at the blog, that reconnecting with my roots keeps the metal fires burning so to speak. It reminds me of what I really love about this kind of music, and as a result, helps me sort through newer music with a more discerning and sharper ear. Well, at least I like to think so anyway, whether or not you’ll agree depends on your opinion of the list below. Read on!


10. Unleash the Archers – Phantoma

I think I might be one of the minority in feeling like Unleash the Archers stumbled onto something fresh and inspired on Phantoma. They had gone the conceptual/storyline route before, but even on the previous album Abyss where they were dabbling in a few different sounds (synths for example), they still kept tethers to the direct, USPM influenced metal attack as a nod to their past. Here they completely cut that cord, and in turn, created a sparkling, shimmering synth based soundscape for the songs on this album to flow through, the result being their most cohesive work to date — something that convincingly gelled with Phantoma’s theme of sentient AI running amok. Take the title track, ostensibly one of the heavier songs on the record, and its riffs are dressed up with glossy keyboards and layered vocals that lend themselves towards the futuristic vision the song is illustrating. This album also saw the band furthering the shift towards embracing more rock songwriting structures as opposed keeping everything metallic, a decision that has greatly shifted the weight of so many of these songs onto Brittney Hayes shoulders. This album has her finest vocal performances to date, and we discussed her career defining moment earlier on the first part of this best of feature on the epic “Give It Up Or Give It All”, but we shouldn’t ignore her impact on “The Collective” or “Buried In Code”. Her vocal choices in melody direction and inflection are undeniably addictive. I’ll admit this was a album that took time to grow on me, but I found myself yearning to hear it when I’d step away from it for awhile. It snuck its way onto this list before I realized it, but its earned its place here.

(Also appears on: The Metal Pigeon’s Best Songs of 2024)

9.  Iotunn – Kinship

Iotunn made waves a few years back with their debut Access All Worlds and its blending of progressive melodic death metal with traditional prog metal elements such as soaring clean vocals and dual lead guitar harmonies, but they really arrived on most everyone’s radar with this year’s incredible Kinship. This album was written with a degree of craftsmanship and attention to detail that underscores the album’s deliberate nature. This is illustrated in the patience of the songwriting, with most of these songs being built on long narrative arcs that culminate in emotionally powerful payoffs. It certainly was an album that required effort to immerse oneself fully, not offering up ultra hooky choruses or sugary melodies, its shifting riff sequences instead driving towards larger payoffs, much like classic Opeth albums such as Blackwater Park or Still Life. Its not an exaggeration to suggest that Kinship could be comparable to classics of that caliber, and vocalist Jón Aldará is to my ears as skillful a harsh/clean vocalist as Mikael Akerfeldt back in the day (some of you might know him from his work in Barren Earth after Mikko Kotamäki left). On such a complete and integrated album, its hard to pinpoint individual songs as standouts, but what comes to mind is the finale of “Twilight”, where after a bruising black metal tinged buildup, there’s a classic prog metal-esque riff sequence that transitions into Aldará’s earnest clean singing “Twilight / Hope flies free” over an epic melodic guitar motif echoing underneath. I debated on putting this album up higher than number nine, but because it came out relatively late in the year it received less spins than the other albums in this top ten. And lets not ignore the fact that this album is so mood dependent, and more of a full album experience (I didn’t just drop in on this thing to jam a particular song), that it had a bit of a handicap set against it terms of the amount of repeat spins it would receive. That being said, its a testament to its sheer artistic merit that it made such a monumental impact upon me in a short amount of time, that I couldn’t fathom leaving it off this list.

8.  Wolfheart – Draconian Darkness

Wolfheart delivered one of the best comebacks of the year with Draconian Darkness, bouncing back from what I felt were two lacking albums in a row. Unrelenting, punishing, bleakly sorrowful and filled with spring loaded aggression that is let loose in carefully constructed sequences, their newest effort saw Tuomas Saukkonen and company marrying their distinctly Finnish melodeath with swaths of orchestral soundscapes to amp up the grandeur and majesty. I remember spinning this on its release day in the morning not expecting much given how I felt about the aforementioned prior albums, but was left thrilled and far more awake as a result — it worked better than the little stick of instant coffee from the Korean grocery store (I take them to work, I do proper coffee at home!). Not only is the songwriting as sharp as the band’s best work on Tyhjyys and Constellation of the Black Light, but I’d argue that the gorgeous, cinematic symphonic arrangements here adorn them so well that this is in the running for my favorite Wolfheart album period. And its just a nonstop onslaught, storming the gates with the opener “Ancient Cold”, one of their hookiest songs to date, and then ratcheting up the intensity with “Evenfall” and the crushing “Burning Sky”. I love the little delicate acoustic touches that are scattered among these songs, bringing a little Gothenburg flavor to Finnish melodeath in a crossover that we need more of. And I can’t speak highly enough about the quality of the orchestrations, courtesy of Saku Moilanen, who carefully paints dark colors in the backgrounds that accentuate passages, and on occasion unfurl into gorgeous melodic motifs to carry a sequence on their own such the rising swells in “Grave”. A welcome return to the year end list for one of Finland’s greatest exports.

7.  Carmeria – Tragédie D’amour

It was when I first heard Tragédie D’amour that I began to take stock of just how much goth metal has been going through a nascent resurgence in 2024. For their sophomore album, Sydney based Carmeria decided to mix the Kamelot-ian symphonic progressive power metal heard on their 2021 debut album Advenae with a generous splash of Finnish gothic metal/rock for a heady cocktail that tastes both fresh and nostalgic. I initially appraised this album as an indulgent curiosity that fit into the Sentenced/Charon/H.I.M. kick I was going through for a couple months there, something that I would enjoy as a temporary aside, a casual aural fling. Well, that was a ridiculous notion as I soon realized, because any album that earns as many repeat listens as Tragédie D’amour has eventually comes calling when you start examining play counts, and in being honest with yourself as to what you really loved listening to the most during these past twelve months. I seem to learn that lesson anew every year and vow to never repeat it but… well here we are (I’m almost certain I’ll repeat the same mistake in 2025 at some point). Vocalist Jordan von Grae and keyboardist Mishka Bobrov were the brainchild behind injecting some of that melancholic gothic heartache into their sound as a direct homage to their shared love of H.I.M., and von Grae is a perfect melodic vocalist to blend both Roy Khan-esque dramatic theatricality with Ville Valo’s desperate, lovelorn crooning. I gushed about the album highlight “Immortal” on the Best Songs list, but this early 2000s gothic rock influence permeates much of the album, being mixed into the songwriting en masse so its not just relegated to isolated moments. Consider the ultra hooky “The Hoping Heart”, a keyboard and vocal driven song that blurs the lines of mid-tempo rocker and power ballad the way H.I.M. would with songs such as “The Funeral of Hearts” or “The Sacrament”. I also love the bands forays into pure balladry as on “Whispers of Forgiveness” with acoustic guitar and piano accompaniment that reminds me of Fourth Legacy/Karma era Kamelot; and on the short but gorgeous “Burning Ships” with bassist Emma Louise Nagy stepping in for lead vocals in a stirring performance. In listening to interviews with the band about this album, I get the feeling that maybe this marriage of goth rock into their sound was a temporary decision they made for this album, but I’d hope they would continue to pursue it. This is a sound that has been in desperate need of resurrection, and who would have thought it would take some sunbaked Aussies to bring it back to life?

(Also appears on: The Metal Pigeon’s Best Songs of 2024)

6.  Opera Magna – Heroica

Considering that I listen to K-Pop on a part time basis (its definitely not taking up as much of my listening time as it was in 2021 and 2022), you’d figure that I wouldn’t have a stumbling block with clean vocal sung metal in a foreign language. But I guess its fair to say that I have, considering this is the first non-extreme or folk metal entry by a foreign language metal album on a year end list of mine. I definitely did not think that in a year with some biggish power metal names releasing new records, that Opera Magna, relative unknowns outside of Spain, would drop the best pure symphonic power metal album of the year. I vaguely remembered hearing this band name thrown around in power metal circles around early 2000s when they were being tipped as the next Dark Moor, but I don’t think I recall actually hearing anything they did when I learned their debut album was sung in Spanish. I’m of course guilty of being close minded in retrospect, but that was a long time ago and things have changed in my ability to enjoy all forms of art in other languages (subtitles are no problem these days!). This is the band’s first genuinely new album in over a decade, considering 2023’s Of Love and Other Demons seems to be an English language version of the collection of the three Spanish language Del amor y otros demonios EPs (which are far more enjoyable in their native tongue). Their approach on Heroica takes the theatricality of Alfred Romero era Dark Moor and fuses it with the speed and technicality of influences such as Angra and Rhapsody of Fire. Songs such as “Volver” and the title track ripple with an electricity that is mood elevating and adrenaline infusing, and although the translated lyrics are quite thoughtful, its purely the sonic impact that I’m referring to here. Elsewhere, such as on “Que el amor, la vida y la muerte así te encuentren”, we get a sense of how their commitment to writing in Spanish gives their sound a unique sense of identity that perhaps the Italian power metal greats miss out on by singing in English. I can’t quite define what exactly is so appealing about the way Spanish language lyrics are phrased, perhaps its their smoothness and affinity for a grandiose delivery that I’m responding to. So even though I probably missed much of the lyrical subtext happening throughout this stellar album, I loved every second of it.

(Also appears on: The Metal Pigeon’s Best Songs of 2024)

5.  Judas Priest – Invincible Shield

At one point, this was sitting at the pole position on this list and I was certain that it wasn’t going to be dislodged from that spot. But perhaps the fact that I played the hell out of this thing upon it’s early March release date and on through the weeks and weeks thereafter made me shelve it for too long as a result (the same thing happened to Helloween’s incredible self-titled album in 2021 as I recall). I did bust this out recently in preparation for Priest’s show here in southwest Houston in October, but on the evening before the show word came down that Judas Priest was cancelling (for what we’d later find out might’ve been due to Rob getting the flu), and after that whole debacle my enthusiasm for giving it more spins faded. So yeah, I guess its fair to say that there was a tangible punishment for Invincible Shield as a whole in terms of their sliding down the year end rankings a bit, and perhaps that’s unfair, but it also has a lot to do with the competition it faced down below. I will say, in the past few weeks prepping for the finalization of this list, I have given it refresher spins and I do think its legitimately one of the best albums of the band’s career, easily their Brave New World moment in the post-reunion era (2005 and onwards). It is the strongest traditional metal album of the year as well, with Ritchie Faulkner and Glenn Tipton unleashing a dual guitar torrent that builds upon the focus and intensity of what was established on Firepower and turn it up to eleven. The album opens up with “Panic Attack” which brought to mind flashes of the Turbo album with those opening synths (happy connotations in my book) and kicks into the kind of full power attack that reminds one of “All Guns Blazing” or “Painkiller”, references I wouldn’t make unless I really believed they were apt. Then its just a murders row of absolute bangers one after another; “The Serpent and the King” (awesome), “Invincible Shield” (awesome), “Devil in Disguise” (awesome), “Gates of Hell” (awesome), “As God As My Witness” (so awesome). I skipped over “Crown of Thorns” in that sequence because it deserves special mention, featuring Halford’s most soulful vocal performance since “Angel” off Angel of Retribution, I love it so much. And things don’t dip in the second half, “Sons of Thunder” is at moments my favorite song on the record with that shouted back chorus, and “Trial By Fire” has the sort of classic mid 80s Priest-ian swagger that is so inimitable no matter how hard others have tried. I have yet to see other people’s lists, but I trust that this will be in most everyone’s top ten for obvious reasons. A late career championship for one of the greats.

4.  Myrath – Karma

No strangers to the year end best albums list (having an appearance on the 2016 edition with Legacy), Myrath returned earlier this year with their first album in over five years, no thanks to a half year delay on the release date of Karma for whatever reason (purely speculation but vinyl wait times tend to be the singular reason for any metal album delay lately). In all ways an improvement over 2019’s Shehili in which the band tried for a sound that was too heavy for its own good, they’ve seemed to realize where the sweet spot of their sound truly lies, that being the intersection between sharply written metallic hard rock with unabashed pop songwriting instincts and Maghrebian folk instrumentation. Long removed from their Symphony X influenced progressive roots, their efforts in cultivating their poppier side have culminated in what is to my ears their strongest and most cohesive album to date, even eclipsing Legacy. Central to this effort is vocalist Zaher Zorgati, whose rich tone and impressive ability to inflect and emote carries this album via some truly captivating vocal melodies which these songs are built around. The use of a small horn section (well its actually one guy, Julien Duchet, handling everything with aplomb) as a punctuating accent (particularly on “Into the Light”) really brought to mind the sound of Phil Collins solo discography, particularly given the tone of Zorgati’s vocal similarity (both singers have a character rich voice, unmistakable in their identity). The positive vibes heard there and on a song such as “Let It Go” (not a cover of the Disney super ballad in case you were suspicious!) are something that few hard rock and metal bands can pull off as convincingly as Myrath. The closest to achieve similar results would be Orphaned Land who have dabbled in writing uplifting music, but tend to skew darker and more mournful by comparison. Much of Karma’s success I attribute to Zorgati and his vocal charisma, but major credit goes to guitarist Malek Ben Arbia for maximizing a single guitar approach and as always, playing with a balance of restraint and flair when needed, as well as longtime collaborator and producer Kévin Codfert for marrying all these disparate elements so seamlessly. Easily one of the most satisfying listens of the year.

3.  Oak, Ash, & Thorn – Our Grief Is Thus

Denver’s Oak, Ash, & Thorn were one of the truly unknown bands on this list that took me by storm this past spring with the blackened folk metal of Our Grief Is Thus. They were introduced to me on an episode of the MSRcast, and described as having major Woods of Ypres vibes, which was of course enough for me to pay really close attention. After that show I binged this album nonstop, and to be sure, I do hear shades of the Canadian legends in their musical DNA, but I hear more in the way of Borknagar and Agalloch as primary influences. I will say that vocalist Adam Armstrong does sound a little like David Gold in certain moments with his clean vocals (but moreso on his very enunciative harsh vox), but I hear quite a bit of Lars Nedland in here as well. Yet what separates Oak, Ash, & Thorn from these possible influences is their songwriting, which is imbued with a personality of its own in its far looser, dare I suggest alternative rock stylistic bent. That doesn’t mean clean vocal pop choruses abound however, but the band favors a more stripped down, accessible riff sequence or rhythm pattern to usher in the choruses (they’re not buried in layers and layers of a wall of sound). The statement song here is the album opener “Dying Culture”, with one of the most artfully composed set of lyrics from any artist in 2024 and sporting a hugely memorable chorus. Yet in terms of accessibility, its hard to outdo “Light My Pyre” and “Auras”, the former being the most straight ahead rock influenced tune on the album, complete with one of the few instances of a band dropping the f-bomb in the lyrics and it feeling appropriate and warranted. But my favorite was “Auras”, with a shouting over the cliffside chorus that many a Scandinavian band would admire, Armstrong bellowing a brilliant clean vocal melody, and drummer Cierra White absolutely destroying the kit with a dynamic and engaging performance (she’s a darkhorse MVP on this album). This album got the band signed to Season of Mist, and rightfully so. Hopefully this is just the beginning of a career of masterpieces.

2.  Swallow the Sun – Shining

Arguably the most controversial album on this list, with even die hard Swallow the Sun fans being divided in opinions, it’s also perhaps the most intriguing album of the year for exactly that reason. Worn down from the exhaustive experiences writing When a Shadow Is Forced into the Light and Moonflowers, two albums dealing with grief in its various permutations, guitarist and songwriter Juha Raivio just couldn’t keep delving into the darkness any further. I loved those albums, both made my year end lists in their respective years, but they were at times too dark and sorrowful to casually listen to, so I get it. So he began a slow climb upwards, and in the process, shifted the bands sound somewhat away from the charcoal black tones of those two albums and introduced elements of light into the band’s sound, which we’ve really not heard Swallow the Sun entertain since almost a decade ago with some of the stuff off the Songs From the North triple disc outing. I say somewhat to describe this shift because there certainly still exists the band’s trademark bruising, uber heavy tones and riff sequences happening all across this album, and vocalist Mikko Kotamäki growls through plenty of it. Yet much of this album is imbued with lighter shades in guitar tones that borrow from gothic metal and dare I suggest darkwave, making use of space and textures in a way that sometimes reminds me of Steven Wilson. The producer here is Dan Lancaster, a big name in mainstream rock circles, who helped the band reimagine their sound in such a way as to emphasize atmosphere and what I’ve thought of as a de-escalation of the traditional Swallow the Sun attack. And maybe its because I’ve been in this headspace where I’ve craved that gothic metal vibe this year, but this album struck a hugely personal chord with me. It inspired a pensive and thoughtful atmosphere, a slowing down of scattered thoughts into a purely singular focus, an incredible achievement for any album. It was an intense and heavy album that was also meditative, and that utterly surreal strangeness captivated me.

(Also appears on: The Metal Pigeon’s Best Songs of 2024)

1.  Unto Others – Never, Neverland

Six years ago, when they were known as Idle Hands before US trademark law forced their name change, vocalist/guitarist Gabriel Franco, lead guitarist Sebastian Silva, and drummer Colin Vranizan crashed onto the 2019 best albums list at a staggering number two with their debut Mana, and instantaneously became a band that I’d keep at the forefront of my attention for future releases and shows. I caught them live sometime in 2021 on their headlining Strength tour and although I have mixed feelings on that album now (too heavy for its own good), the show here in Houston was fierce, with precision performances, and an intensity onstage from everyone involved that only bands who’ve really gelled together can muster. I left that show thinking with some degree of certainty that their best work was ahead of them, but I don’t think I ever suspected it would be right around the corner on their next frigging album. That is exactly what Never, Neverland could be (but if we’re lucky, its only just the start), because this album — a wild kitchen sink collection of gothic rock, traditional heavy metal, post-punk, and even some new wave strained through a Sisters of Mercy t-shirt — is the complete encapsulation of everything weird and wonderful about Unto Others. The band is an open book emotionally, at times expressing themselves with detached irony, at other times with tongue-in-cheek silliness, and often, with a disarming earnestness that cuts deep.

The songs that illustrate those emotional perspectives are just perfect in their simplicity, even downright elegant in moments, as on the album opener “Butterfly”, where Franco metaphorically examines the fine line between desire and destruction in regards to something or someone beautiful. Similarly on “Fame”, he delivers his wry observations of the trappings of stardom and success, singing in a icily detached tone (he’s so goddamned good at that) “The beauty often fades / And people hate when people change”. But without warning, Unto Others pulls me deep into nostalgia with something like “Momma Likes the Door Closed”, where I’m reminded of listening to stuff like Green Jelly and Primus in a friend’s bedroom on summer vacation from middle school, where you just nod along to a scorching riff and grin foolishly because you know its stupid but you love it anyway. And I get Faith No More vibes from the not quite instrumental “Hoops”, with its inexplicable, nonsensical shouted lyrics alongside awesome lead guitar parts, where its all so excellent even though you’re wondering why this was turned into a song in the first place. The beating heart of the album resides in its most vulnerable moments however, where on “Suicide Today” Franco disguises pleading urgency behind wryly glib, off-handedly conversational lyrics. Or on “Time Goes On”, where through a beautifully arranged guitar motif Franco sings about the dangers of being stuck in one’s own memories of the past, figuratively shouting (“Hey!”) to wake us from our stupor. The studio version of their “Pet Sematary” cover here that they actually played at the aforementioned Houston gig feels like a Christmas present by the time the album concludes. Captivating from start to finish, Never, Neverland made me run the gamut of emotions, kept me guessing, and had me playing the album in repeat mode on Spotify for countless weeks on end. Truly the album of the year.

The Metal Pigeon’s Best of 2024 // Part One: The Songs

Another year nearly done, and another look back at the metal that served as its soundtrack, this list being part one of a two-part Best of 2024 feature, focusing first on what are the ten best songs of the year to my ears. One of the things I’ve come to accept over the many years that I’ve been writing and publishing year end metal lists is that I rarely overlap with the general consensus. Blood Incantation for instance, is nowhere to be found on my lists, though I acknowledge their unorthodox brilliance and I get why so many love what they’re doing. A long time ago I used to think that in being so very far apart from the general consensus, I was missing out on a collective experience that the rest of the metal community was having, and that it was a fault of mine.

I’ve come to let go of that hang up as time has passed, and have embraced being out here in left field with a handful of other metal obsessives whose lists I eagerly await. I wish more people would offer up best songs lists in addition to their album lists, because I feel that in picking out individual songs worthy of the spotlight, you get an even bigger window into not only someone’s musical tastes, but their personality as well. Enough of the soap box for now, I hope everyone finds something about the songs below to love as much as I did, and I did make one concession towards looking like other lists — I’ve finally decided to number them in descending order (I’ve been a curmudgeon on this, but I’ll grudgingly admit there’s a logic to doing it).


10.   Fellowship – “Victim” (from the album The Skies Above Eternity)

The most recent of all the entries on this list, being a late November release, “Victim” is simply that undeniable of a power metal song. Its constructed in what is now trademark Fellowship fashion, where they pull you in with cheerful, major key sugariness only to gut punch you with some pretty emotionally loaded lyrics. Vocalist Matthew Corry has been a revelation for the power metal scene in this regard, bringing a literate pen and more thoughtful consciousness to his voice as a lyricist. He seems to possess an innate understanding of how to craft a lyrical phrase that cuts straight to the heart in a poetic, yet direct manner, as he demonstrates here when he asks in the refrain “Will I always feel like a victim? / Will I always fight on my own?” Its this album’s answer to “Glint”, the now power metal classic off their debut EP that rocketed them to collective power metal consciousness. Both songs speak about some facet of mental health, barely concealed with fantastical metaphors and imagery, which sets Fellowship apart from other power metal bands where that kind of interpretation is solely left to the listener to decide.

9.   Suidakra – “Unraveling Destinies” (from the album Darkanarad)

Striking like a coiled serpent, Suidakra exploded on their new album Darkanarad with a classic melodic death metal attack that they haven’t had since the days of Emprise to Avalon and Signs For the Fallen. Emblematic of this return to their melodeath roots is the single “Unraveling Destinies”, as catchy and instantaneous a song Suidakra has ever penned, with the introductory riff motif being hooky as all get out. Part of this song’s charm is the unorthodox structural arrangment happening here, such as the complete drop out save for some tight riffing and cymbal work in lieu of second verse stanza — then where you’d expect a chorus, we get another drop out with insistent riffing and an abrupt change of pace clean vocal led passage. When you step back and consider just how bizarre this song’s pacing is, its even more impressive that it is so beautifully harmonious and unforgettable. Arkadius’ approach to riffs has always been a defining feature of this band’s appeal, at once bleak and punishing yet also vividly colorful and resonant. No more is that evident than during the sequence at the 3:40 mark, where riff intensity and layered harmonies create magic that fades far too quickly.

8.   Carmeria – “Immortal” (from the album Tragédie D’amour)

I was already digging Tragédie D’amour during my first listen thru before hearing “Immortal”, sitting far back at number seven on the track listing when this absolute goth metal diamond shined forth its glorious light and entranced me (picture the heart eyes emoji). I was already in the full blown swing of a heavy goth mood where for a few weeks I was constantly spinning Charon, Sentenced, and H.I.M.’s entire catalogs when the ever reliable Josh of Heavy Debriefings pointed out Carmeria to me. He sold the recommendation by saying that they had just put out the perfect 00s Finnish goth metal album, despite their Australian passports, and damn he wasn’t exaggerating. I love this stuff, and I know I know — the bright, euphoric hook here has more in common with the sweet gothic hard rock ear candy of H.I.M. than their more abrasive, harder edged countrymen mentioned above. Hey, I’m unabashed these days about my admiration for Ville Valo as a songwriter and vocalist, and Carmeria distilled the essence of everything that was great about that sound into one of the most earwormy singles of the year.

7.   Tribulation – “Hungry Waters” (from the album Sub Rosa In Æternum)

Tribulation’s new album is one of the strangest yet ultimately most compelling that 2024 had to offer, if not exactly the most surprising. This band was telegraphing moving further away from their black metal roots on their past two albums, so while the gothic metal they’re exploring throughout Sub Rosa In Æternum was expected, its surreal to hear just how incredibly well they’re pulling it off. The standout example of this success is “Hungry Waters”, as convincing a Sisters of Mercy-esque clean vocal driven song that these guys could have dreamed up. I love that drum roll intro right into that sparse guitar lick that fills the space over smoothly rolling bass, while Johannes Andersson croons in a Nick Cave meets Johnny Cash amalgam that doesn’t sound like a pastiche. The band’s usage of space as a instrument unto itself is gorgeous, particularly in the sequence after the guitar solos, where lesser bands would fumble such an atmospheric sequence and lose our attention as listeners. There was never a danger of that throughout this tune, a song so entrancing that it still is the first thing I listen to when revisiting this album. Yet another example of why gothic metal reigned supreme over everything else this year.

6.   Unleash the Archers – “Give It Up Or Give It All” (from the album Phantoma)

A transcendent moment on Unleash the Archers concept album Phantoma, this was the anthemic, arena rock resonating chorus that stuck in my head after every pass through the album. This song makes this list not just because its an expertly written mid-tempo, arms outstretched quasi power ballad epic, but because even in a career filled with no shortage of powerful grit and full throated, lung obliterating screams, this is Brittney Hayes singular greatest vocal performance to date. Of course she is jaw dropping on the magnificent chorus here, ringing with shades of Roxette’s Marie Fredriksson in her tone and delivery, at once smooth but absolutely reverberating with power. But I’m just as gripped by her performance during the verses, with her choices in vocal melody and lyrical pacing the kind of stuff that you’d normally hear coming from greats such as Mutt Lange and Desmond Child. I really enjoyed a ton of Phantoma whereas it was met with a bit of a collective head scratch from the power metal community as a whole, and maybe I’m in the minority in saying this, but I’m entirely down for them to do more stuff in this vein instead of trying to out heavy their older albums.

5.   Opera Magna – “Volver” (from the album Heroica)

This magnificent song was the magnum opus from Opera Magna’s Heroica, and the first instance on this blog’s best songs of the year lists to be a Spanish language track (I don’t know what took so long but I blame only myself!). I’m not entirely up on my Spanish despite years of taking it in high school, but unless I’m mistaken “Volver” means “return”, and that makes sense in context of the scenes in the music video above, but I didn’t need the visuals of the MV to put imagery into my head while listening to this spectacularly inspiring gem. There’s so much to praise here, but lets start with the soaring vocals of Jose Vicente Broseta, whose voice is so phenomenally powerful and soaring that I wonder why I haven’t heard him in some guest spots around the power metal landscape (oh wait, actually he has a laundry list of guest appearances, but they’re all for Spanish metal bands). The composition and arrangement of the symphonic elements here is, dare I suggest, on another tier above much of the rest of symphonic power metal, with an ear towards understated refinement, eschewing Hollywood soundtrack histrionics. A lesson in elegance.

4.   Swallow the Sun – “What I Have Become” (from the album Shining)

Emblematic of what I respect and love about Swallow the Sun’s recent new album Shining, “What I Have Become” is one of the strangest hopeful songs I could possibly imagine, and it wasn’t even anywhere close to being my favorite cut off the album initially. But as I stuck with the album through repeated listens in order to try to decipher its unorthodox mixing of Swallow the Sun’s patented gritty death doom with a glossy, sparkling production finish, this song began to emerge as one that lingered with me long after the album had finished. There’s something hypnotizing about this song for me that I’m not sure I can quite verbalize, but it must have something to do with vocalist Mikko Kotamäki’s split personalities happening simultaneously. He sings a graceful melody in a wistfully hopeful major key, while shadowing it with that inimitable hellish screaming vocal, with the two being layered together towards the end for a particularly unsettling effect. I never knew how to feel exactly after listening to this song, but that mystery is what kept me coming back.

3.   Saltatio Mortis w/ Blind Guardian – “Finsterwacht”

I didn’t know who Saltatio Mortis were before this collaboration with Blind Guardian (in the form of co-lead vocals by Hansi Kursch and presumably some guitar parts by Andre or Marcus (no one seems to know for sure…), but they grabbed my attention this year with the release of the single “Finsterwacht”. The song is in German, marking one of the rare instances where you can hear Hansi sing in his native tongue (he previously did so on a guest appearance on In Extremo’s “Roter Stern”), but it’s stormy, grandiose, and epic arrangement and songwriting transcend language barriers. Saltatio Mortis have made a name for themselves lately for penning music inspired by videogames and general nerdery, and “Finsterwacht” tells a story about the events in the German version of Dungeons and Dragons, Das Schwarze Auge (“The Dark Eye”). The construction of this song lives up to the pedigree of their esteemed guests in Blind Guardian, finding a way to merge driving, surging build-ups with gloriously triumphant, exuberant payoffs in the refrain, and a highly memorable bagpipe motif that serves as the frequent segue glue. They released an English version of this later on during the year, complete with Hansi’s participation, and that was cool, but the magic resides in the original German version, one of the surprise gifts of 2024.

2.   DreamGate – “Dreamgate” (from the album Dreamgate)

Power metal flagbearer Johannes Skyblazer (of the band Skyblazer) introduced me to this song with an impassioned recommendation on Facebook, declaring of the song, “You want to know what happiness sounds like for me? Check out the song Dreamgate, by Dreamgate off their album Dreamgate. That chorus progression will ALWAYS do it for me more than anything ever will.” And yes, its somewhat of a metal tradition to have a eponymous song off their eponymous album, Iron Maiden did it after all, but somehow its funnier to me when Dreamgate’s doing it. That’s not a slight in any way I should emphasize, because I love this song, and I love this album, and I love the band. Hailing from Italy, they’re very new on the power metal scene, but possess an old school, early 2000s stylistic aesthetic — and it all makes sense that Johannes, who is one of the biggest Power Quest fans in the world, would be the one to recommend this song to everyone. It is unabashedly cheerful, hopeful in tone, and yes that progression in the chorus is indeed everything myself and any other fan of the cheerier end of power metal could ever want. Its the kind of thing that can instantly lift your mood, stave away depression, or help you celebrate a tiny victory of some sort. It was my most listened to song of 2024 for all those reasons and more.

1.   Unto Others – “Suicide Today” (from the album Never, Neverland)

I never imagined a song could be at once equal parts sardonic and encouraging, hopeful even, but the dudes in Unto Others (America’s greatest goth metal export since Type O’ Negative) managed to birth such a creation with “Suicide Today”, the standout single from Never, Neverland. Immediate, infectious, and thrilling, this song ignites mere seconds in to pop off like a rocket, with lead guitarist Sebastian Silva delivering perhaps his most energetic riff progression to date, and an earworm to boot. And while Silva, bassist Brandon Hill and drummer Colin Vranizan lay down the firepower, guitarist and vocalist Gabriel Franco sings in his charismatically deadpan vocal, “You don’t gotta be suicidal / Don’t have to kill yourself today / No, you can do it tomorrow”. I’m sure it elicited a guffaw from all of us the first time we heard it, but he’s specifically directing it at a litany of distraught characters he describes with succinct word pictures during the verses, so its not just a throwaway lyric to fill a syllabic need. He leaves off by saying “And you’re gonna die anyways / So give it a day”, and its such a wryly worded bit of motivation without sounding schlockily… erm, motivating. Its a brilliant, unforgettable song that walks the thin line between heart on sleeve emotion and dark humor the same way goth metal masters such as Sentenced and the aforementioned Type O were interweaving both throughout their own music. A career defining moment for the new heirs to the goth throne.

Scroll to top