America’s largest goth-industrial festival returns May 1–3, 2026, transforming the Sheraton Parsippany “Castle” into a full-spectrum celebration of dark alternative culture.
Dark Force Fest has officially revealed its daily lineup for 2026, and the schedule reads like a living timeline of goth and industrial history—past, present, and future colliding across three immersive nights in Parsippany, New Jersey.
💀 Nightly Headliners: Icons After Dark Each evening is anchored by a genre-defining act, delivering a distinct chapter of the dark underground:
Friday Night: Combichrist return in full-band formation. A longtime U.S. fan favorite, their high-voltage assault sets an explosive tone for the weekend.
Saturday Night: Front Line Assembly take command. Revered as godfathers of industrial music, their legacy and unmistakable sonic architecture make this a must-see moment.
Sunday Night: London After Midnight close the festival with an iconic, long-awaited performance—an enduring force on dark dance floors for decades.
💀 Thursday Pre-Party: The Ritual Begins Early The descent starts Thursday night at QXT’s Night Club with an intimate pre-party featuring Ego Likeness—a perfect warm-up before the castle gates open.
💀 A Full-Scale Dark Culture Convergence Dark Force Fest 2026 delivers 36 bands across two stages over three days, surrounded by 100+ vendors, sideshow performances, DJ-driven club nights, a pool party, panels, and immersive activities celebrating goth and industrial culture in all its forms.
💀 New for 2026: Expanded Outdoor Experience This year introduces a brand-new outdoor tent area, adding more performers, food trucks, expanded vendor offerings, and a dedicated biergarten, amplifying the festival’s already massive atmosphere.
💀 Tickets Are Moving Fast Dark Force Fest sold out in record time last year—and demand for 2026 is expected to exceed it. If you’re planning to attend, hesitation is not your friend.
📍 Event Details Dark Force Fest 2026 May 1–3, 2026 Sheraton Parsippany Hotel (“The Castle”) Parsippany, New Jersey
The US electro-industrial institution returns with a harrowing new single, setting the emotional and thematic tone for the upcoming album On Enmity.
Flesh Field have released “Supplication”, a stark and emotionally devastating new single out now via Metropolis Records. The track arrives as a study in absence, grief, and survival—less about healing, more about learning how to exist inside the wreckage left behind.
💀 A Song About Longing That Never Ends “This song explores the ache of longing for what is absent and will never return,” explains founder Ian Ross. “That longing itself eventually becomes the only reason to continue on despite the knowledge that it will never be fulfilled.” “Supplication” doesn’t offer resolution. Instead, it dwells in the tension between memory and endurance, where persistence itself becomes an act of defiance.
💀 From Survival to Adaptation: On Enmity The single appears on Flesh Field’s forthcoming full-length On Enmity, due February 20, 2026. Described as the most personal material Ross has ever written, the album documents life after trauma—dissecting damage, chronicling endurance, and confronting the reality that survival is not always a choice. This is not an album about recovery. It is about adaptation to ruin.
💀 A Legacy Reforged On Enmity follows a powerful resurgence for Flesh Field. After resurrecting the project in 2023 with the concept album Voice of the Echo Chamber—exploring stages of political radicalization—Ross expanded the narrative with the Voice of Reason EP in 2024. In 2025, the band’s foundational works Viral Extinction (1999) and Belief Control (2001) were remastered and reissued, reaffirming their lasting impact on the electro-industrial canon.
At its core, j:dead is not simply a music project—it is a psychological space. A place where self-reflection replaces performance, where discomfort is not avoided but examined, and where creativity becomes a form of survival rather than spectacle.
The name j:dead was never meant to function like a conventional band identity. Instead, it represents a second state of being—a presence that takes over once the creative process begins. For him, it exists somewhere between an alter ego and a dissociated mindset, where instinct leads and the “normal” version of himself steps aside. It’s a familiar sensation for creatives: the moment when something internal assumes control and drives the work forward without hesitation or self-censorship.
That mindset arrived at a pivotal time. After touring since the age of 17 with various dark-scene acts—and quietly writing original material since the age of 14—he realized he was sitting on decades of unreleased work. Songs that had lived privately for years, heard only by him, accumulating meaning without ever being given space to exist publicly. Eventually, that archive became impossible to ignore.
More than a career move, j:dead became a necessity. Not because collaboration had failed—there were no creative conflicts—but because this project needed to belong entirely to him. It became a place to process thoughts honestly and therapeutically, without compromise or external expectation.
Lyrically and emotionally, j:dead is grounded in lived experience. While societal context inevitably seeps into the storytelling, the focus remains inward. He has no interest in positioning himself as a commentator or spokesperson. He writes from emotional proximity—his own life, his relationships, and the internal patterns he understands most intimately.
Looking back at the earliest releases, the project reflects a period of transition. New routines, reconnection with self, and the slow rebuilding of identity. Much of that music drew from experiences spanning nearly two decades, blending past trauma with present change. Years later, those releases are remembered fondly—not as endpoints, but as markers of growth, both personally and artistically.
The current chapter of j:dead unfolds through an approach that mirrors life itself—unstructured, reactive, and honest. While Pressure introduced themes of endurance and emotional strain, its follow-up, Disgusting, sharpens the focus inward. The escalation wasn’t meticulously planned; the upcoming twelve-track series is being released largely in the order the songs were written and finished, allowing real-time emotional shifts to guide the journey.
That unfiltered sequencing works. Disgusting arrives early, providing immediate contrast and signaling that the path ahead will not be linear or comfortable.
At its core, Disgusting is about self-directed disgust—an unflinching confrontation with personal behavior, insecurity, and physical self-image. It isn’t a plea for reassurance or sympathy. For him, tough love is necessary. Self-criticism, when handled constructively, becomes fuel rather than damage. He views this mindset as deeply human, culturally familiar, and not inherently unhealthy when it leads to reflection instead of paralysis.
Sonically, the track leans harder into industrial-rock aggression, though not by design. His process always begins with music before vocals or lyrics, and style is never predetermined. Writing primarily from his home studio, the emotional weight of the day dictates the sound. This instinct-driven approach has resulted in a wide emotional and sonic range across the upcoming releases.
That raw energy is sharpened through trusted collaboration. Friends and seasoned professionals helped refine the mix and master, adding precision and impact without dulling the emotional edge. Every distorted texture, rhythmic push, and dynamic shift acts as a catalyst for the lyrical content—and vice versa. Sound and emotion are inseparable here.
The decision to release music monthly comes from a desire to give each track its own moment. In a time when full albums are rarely experienced front-to-back, this strategy ensures no song is lost to passive listening habits. Not every track needs to be a “hit”—but each deserves recognition. At the same time, he is candid about the practical reality: this approach aligns with modern listening behavior and supports the continued growth of the project.
Creatively, the process required a fundamental shift. Instead of working linearly, the writing was divided into phases—melody and structure, sound design, lyrics and vocals, final production—allowing different mindsets to coexist without bottlenecks. The result is a body of work that feels more complete and intentional than anything before it.
Emotionally, detachment remains impossible. For him, release doesn’t come from letting go of meaning—it comes from getting the thoughts out of his head and into the music in the first place.
When listeners describe feeling uncomfortable or “called out,” the response is deliberate. j:dead does not project negativity outward. The harshness is inward-facing, reflective rather than accusatory. While many artists frame their work around triumph and uplift, j:dead occupies a different space—one where doubt, regret, and self-criticism are acknowledged without resolution. It isn’t about making people feel better. It’s about being honest.
Over time, a unifying thread has emerged across the upcoming releases: a personal reset. Frustration with others mirrored by frustration with self. Patience lost, then rebuilt. Each track stands on its own, yet together they trace an arc of internal recalibration.
Sonically, the direction moves toward something more emotionally raw and industrial-forward, balancing aggression and restraint with greater clarity. While synth-pop influences remain part of his creative DNA, the emphasis has shifted toward heavier textures and deeper emotional weight.
At its core, j:dead will always be about self-confrontation. The project exists first and foremost as therapy. There is no calculation around perception, no attempt to tailor the music for external approval. As life evolves, so will the project—but its purpose remains unchanged.
Live performance plays a crucial role in that evolution. j:dead was never meant to exist behind static keyboards. On stage, it becomes fully alive—drums, guitars, bass, vocals, and musicians fully present in every moment. That physicality has directly influenced the production choices on the upcoming material, grounding the recordings in movement and urgency.
Ultimately, he hopes listeners walk away with a simple understanding: it’s okay to be human. It’s okay to feel, to fail, to not have answers. Life doesn’t always deliver messages or resolutions—it simply exists. j:dead exists to reflect that reality without apology.
For those discovering j:dead for the first time through Disgusting, understanding isn’t required. The goal isn’t clarity—it’s presence. To offer something stylistically distinct in an overcrowded landscape, and to let the work stand on its own terms.
j:dead exists because without it, he isn’t sure where he’d be. It is the space where reflection happens, where growth begins, and where lived experience becomes sound.
On January 18, 2026, Evol Radio will publish an exclusive in-depth interview with j:dead, diving beneath the surface of one of the most emotionally confrontational industrial projects currently emerging from the underground.
This interview moves beyond standard promo cycles, instead unfolding as a PAST / PRESENT / FUTURE narrative—examining origin, escalation, and intent with brutal clarity.
A PROJECT BUILT FROM PRESSURE
Since the release of Pressure, j:dead has positioned the project as more than sound—using distortion, repetition, and emotional friction as tools for self-examination. With the follow-up single Disgusting, the project sharpens its edge, turning inward and outward at the same time, forcing listeners to sit with discomfort rather than escape it.
The upcoming Evol Radio interview traces the roots of j:dead’s identity, exploring the moments that demanded the project exist in the first place, and how those early impulses continue to shape its trajectory.
PRESENT TENSION, FUTURE COLLISION
At the center of the conversation is j:dead’s evolving release strategy—monthly drops designed not for algorithmic noise, but for progression in real time. The interview dissects how this approach affects creative detachment, listener connection, and the emotional cost of staying exposed in public.
Topics include:
The psychological meaning behind the name j:dead
The shift from endurance to confrontation between releases
The role of discomfort as a catalyst for growth
Whether j:dead is meant to exist on stage—or remain internal and solitary
This isn’t a surface-level Q&A. It’s a study in self-awareness, pressure, and refusal to numb out—a conversation for listeners who don’t just consume music, but use it as a mirror.
The full interview will be published January 18, 2026, exclusively on evolradio.com.
The Ultra Heavy Beat never dies—but sometimes it’s forced to regroup. German electronic and industrial rock pioneers KMFDM have officially postponed their nearly sold-out European tour, originally scheduled for February and March 2026, due to a severe illness requiring immediate medical intervention and ongoing therapy.
Tour Update: Health Comes First
The tour was set to support the band’s forthcoming 24th studio album, ENEMY, but circumstances beyond their control have brought plans to a temporary halt.
“We are so very sorry. We were looking forward to do this tour, but we will make up for it,” states KMFDM founder Sascha ‘Käpt’n K’ Konietzko. “We appreciate your love and support! Long live the ULTRA HEAVY BEAT,” adds co-vocalist Lucia Cifarelli.
All tickets will remain valid for the rescheduled dates. A revised tour timeline is expected to be announced soon.
Album Release Unchanged: ENEMY Arrives February 6, 2026
Despite the tour delay, the release of ENEMY remains locked in for February 6, 2026, via Metropolis Records.
The first single, “OUBLIETTE,” is already available and sets the tone for what may be KMFDM’s most confrontational release yet.
ENEMY
Formats: 2×LP | CD | Digital
Release Date: February 6, 2026
Label: Metropolis Records
Includes the single: OUBLIETTE (WAV | MP3 | Streaming | Bandcamp)
The Sound of Defiance
Society fractures. Fascism parades openly. Silence is demanded. KMFDM responds the only way they know how—louder, sharper, and more uncompromising than ever.
With 42 years of conceptual continuity through distinction, KMFDM declare themselves the ENEMY—a direct challenge to hypocrisy, discrimination, and systemic decay. The album is helmed by the songwriting and vocal command of Konietzko and Cifarelli, driven by the percussive assault of Andy Selway, and now reinforced by London-based guitarist Tidor Nieddu, whose vivid six-string attack injects fresh aggression into the KMFDM arsenal.
Adding another striking dimension, Annabella Konietzko appears on the explosive track “YOÜ,” marking her songwriting debut with the band after mesmerizing audiences during the 40th anniversary tour.
Musical Warfare Across the Tracklist
ENEMY is stylistically fearless—biting satire, political venom, and dancefloor-ready brutality collide across its runtime:
Dance/rock melodicism: OUBLIETTE
Dark industrial grooves: CATCH & KILL
Thrash satire: OUTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION
Vicious industrial metal: L’ETAT
Funk-driven menace: VAMPYR
Dub-laced defiance: STRAY BULLET 2.0
KMFDM continues to move—dancing on the blood-dimmed tide, roaring against a world that demands ignorance over awareness.
ENEMY – Tracklist
ENEMY
OUBLIETTE
L’ETAT
VAMPYR
YOÜ
OUTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION
A OKAY
STRAY BULLET 2.0
CATCH & KILL
GUN QUARTER SUE
THE SECOND COMING
Legacy of the Ultra Heavy Beat
Founded in Hamburg in 1984 by Sascha Konietzko, KMFDM carved a singular path through industrial rock—combining confrontational politics, abrasive electronics, and undeniable hooks. Early releases in Germany led to U.S. success through Wax Trax! Records, with the 1990s cementing their legacy via hits like “Juke Joint Jezebel” and soundtrack placements in Bad Boys and Mortal Kombat.
Bands such as Rammstein and Korn cut their teeth opening on KMFDM tours. After a brief hiatus in 1999, the band re-emerged on Metropolis Records with Lucia Cifarelli, continuing a relentless cycle of releases and tours. Their most recent album, LET GO (2024), capped a 40-year legacy, followed by a remixed and remastered edition of HAU RUCK in 2025.
The second single from j:dead, titled “Disgusting,” lands on January 2, 2026, via Infacted Recordings, marking a sharper, more volatile evolution of the project’s sound and intent.
Following the debut single “Pressure,” which centered on emotional strain and resilience, “Disgusting” turns inward with far less restraint. This release confronts the discomfort of self-awareness—those moments when complacency, emotional stagnation, and repetitive personal patterns become impossible to ignore. It’s not reflective for comfort’s sake; it’s reflective because looking away is no longer an option.
A More Aggressive Sonic Identity
Musically, “Disgusting” pushes j:dead further into industrial-rock territory. Distorted synth lines grind against driving rhythms while raw, unfiltered vocals deliver their message with urgency. The track is intentionally abrasive—designed to hit hard in both club environments and alternative live settings, trading subtlety for impact.
A Campaign Built on Progression
This release emphasizes evolution over repetition. Rather than chasing frequency alone, each monthly release exposes a different emotional and sonic dimension of j:dead.
The result is a project unfolding in real time—growing darker, heavier, and more self-aware with every chapter while maintaining a direct connection with listeners.
From the depths of the Dark Lands comes a new mutation: Collected: Into The Dark Lands – Chronicles of the Pale Wanderer: The Remixes, a collaboration forged by the ever-expanding Dark. Descent. collective — now available for descent, distortion, and ritual consumption.
The Pale Wanderer Returns… in New and Distorted Forms 🖤
The Pale Wanderer does not fade. Instead, its shadow stretches longer, darker, and more disfigured as familiar themes twist into unfamiliar shapes. This remix companion pushes the mythology of Chronicles of the Pale Wanderer further into the abyss, reshaping past echoes into something far more vicious, more cryptic, and more ritualized.
Each remix channels a different vein of the Wanderer’s essence, expanding the lore with fresh scars and spectral interpretations. What once was known is now reborn — warped, sharpened, and spiritually unhinged.
A Family of Shadows Reworking the Bloodline ⚔️
In true Dark. Descent. fashion, the artists themselves confront each other: Paired at random, members of the D.D. family were tasked with reimagining one another’s work, tearing apart familiar sonic DNA and rebuilding it into four axes of darkness.
The result? A convergence of minds, a communion of blackened creativity, and a shared frequency that vibrates between myth, memory, and metamorphosis.
UK industrial/electronic force j:dead has launched a massive year-long campaign—12 singles in 12 months—and the first strike has already landed with devastating impact. “Pressure”, released today via Infacted Recordings (DE), arrives as both a mission statement and a warning: expect zero restraint from here on out.
Built on urgency, tension, and raw emotional voltage, Pressure captures everything this campaign intends to deliver. The track radiates immediacy—dark electronics, visceral vocals, and a production style sharpened for both the introspective listener and the dancefloor addict.
The single moves like a psychological collapse in two acts: the first half drifts in with melancholic isolation, quiet tragedy, and emotional fragility… before detonation. The second half hits hard—percussive, aggressive, club-driven, and cathartic. It mirrors the human breaking point: sometimes shattering us, sometimes transforming us.
Musically, Pressure continues j:dead’s evolution toward bigger hooks, darker atmospheres, and increasingly cinematic storytelling. The vocals cut deep while the electronics pulse with a near-mechanical inevitability. It’s a powerful opening salvo for the 12-month series, setting a high bar for what’s ahead.
With performances at Amphi Festival, Wave Gotik Treffen, Plage Noire, and other major European dark-electronic events, j:dead is quickly embedding himself into the fabric of the modern industrial scene. His refreshed sound is wired for live impact, ensuring every upcoming single will land heavy in club sets across the world.
U.S. electro-industrial act genCAB rises from the depths once more with their haunting new single, “Open Grave,” out now via Metropolis Records. Released on October 31, 2025, this brooding club anthem drags listeners into a confessional spiral of self-sabotage, decay, and emotional dissection—set to a driving, dancefloor-ready beat.
💿 Includes:
Open Grave
Open Grave (Unsolved Remix by Lost Signal)
Last (Nine Inch Nails cover)
🩸 A Dance with Self-Destruction
“The song explores the decay of our own undoing. I’m a self-destructive person, and ‘Open Grave’ is about lying in my own mess that I create for myself,” confesses David Dutton, the creative force behind genCAB.
Dutton adds, “Most of the advice we get is to keep our inner pain hidden, so we isolate further. This song is me laying that pain bare—for anyone to hear, whenever they need it. It’s more accessible than my past work, but it carries a message that’s universal. Sometimes life is just a dance track and an outlet to lose yourself. Who knows what’s left when you tear yourself apart—but at least it’s honest.”
⚙️ genCAB’s Sonic Evolution
Since their 2008 debut II transMuter, genCAB has been a force in the darker corners of electronic music, expertly merging EBM, synth-pop, and alternative rock. After a long hiatus that saw Dutton and drummer Tim Van Horn touring with Aesthetic Perfection, genCAB returned in 2022 with Thoughts Beyond Words and the Everything You See Is Mine EP—showcasing a renewed energy and emotional intensity.
Their 2023 Metropolis release Signature Flaws introduced dreamlike shoegaze and post-hardcore influences, while 2024’s III I II (THIRD EYE GEMINI) reimagined and expanded upon their earliest material with modern, atmospheric depth. Now, Open Grave continues that evolution—melding catharsis with rhythm, and ruin with revelation.
Industrial chaos-agent Caustic has officially unleashed FIEND II into the world — no teasers, no countdowns, just pure shock-and-drop energy. Known for breaking rules and burning convention to the ground, Caustic once again flips the script with an album release that comes screaming straight from the underground.
⚡ The Sudden Drop
In true Caustic fashion, the announcement came raw and unfiltered:
“F–K IT! Let’s get this out. FIEND II is released! I’m sick of waiting. Thanks to everyone who preordered, and enjoy the album.”
That’s it — no PR gloss, no delay, just a direct hit from Caustic’s sonic arsenal.
🔥 The Sound of FIEND II
The first FIEND installment was already a snarling beast, and FIEND II doesn’t just pick up where it left off — it tears open new wounds. Expect pulverizing beats, searing distortion, and Caustic’s trademark venom, balancing between brutal catharsis and electronic anarchy.
Two underground heavyweights — Daniel McCullough of Silver Walks and Athan Maroulis of NØIR — have joined forces for a chilling reinterpretation of Cyberaktif’s legendary Wax Trax! classic “Nothing Stays.” This haunting cover marks the first new material from either project in quite some time, and it’s every bit as dark, layered, and timely as you’d hope.
🕸 A Collaboration Across Continents
True to its name, “Nothing Stays” embodies the fractured, borderless world we live in. Not a single artist involved was ever in the same room.
Athan Maroulis tracked vocals in New York City.
Valentina Veil (VV & The Void) added ethereal backing vocals from Berlin.
Daniel McCullough programmed the music in Lancaster, PA.
The single was mixed in Los Angeles by Dan Evans (Die Warzau).
Finally, it was mastered by Eric Oehler (KLACK) in Madison, WI.
The result? A globe-spanning collaboration that still feels like it was conjured in one shadowy, smoke-filled studio.
🔥 The EP & Remixes
Alongside the main track, the EP comes armed with beat-heavy, floor-destroying remixes courtesy of S Y Z Y G Y X, genCAB, and KLACK — each pushing the song into fresh, pulsing territory for DJs and dark music devotees alike.
Released via the Pittsburgh-based Distortion Productions, “Nothing Stays” is now available across all major digital and streaming platforms.
DSBP Records has unearthed a hidden gem from 2019 — the electrifying U-235 EP by DEVILS TOWER is officially available now! Check it out here.
🔥 A Fusion of Forces On U-235, DEVILS TOWER blends the instrumental power of his previous projects — Dark The Keeper, Darkmechanic, and Stellar Dynamics — into a fresh, genre-bending soundscape. This release is anything but ordinary.
🎧 Expect a Nuclear Cocktail of Sounds:
Dark Electro-Industrial
Tribal Noise Rhythms
IDM Intricacy
Melodic Synth Layers
Experimental Sonic Textures
This rare release radiates with creativity, seamlessly merging chaos and melody into something both brutal and beautiful. A must-listen for fans of futuristic and mind-expanding electronics.
🎶 Listen Now:
💀 Deep Dive into the Universe of DSBP Records Follow DSBP and DEVILS TOWER for more releases that push the boundaries of sound.
In 2008, a spark ignited in the unlikeliest of places: the cramped cabin of a car in Italy. Marco, already a seasoned vocalist, shared some old-school EBM—possibly Hocico—with his bandmate and bassist Stefano. That moment of discovery hit hard. Stefano fell headfirst into the world of electronic music, determined to master its intricacies. A couple of years later, he sent Marco a rough demo track and asked for some aggressive vocals. The result? A creative bond that would become Synapsyche.
The two began meeting almost nightly, sharing beers and ideas, their connection tightening with every session. Their creative rhythm developed organically. At first, they shrouded their identities and faces in mystery, constructing a conceptual world brick by brick—naming the band, penning lyrics, crafting their first demos. By 2012, they had a full-length album nearly complete and were just waiting for the right moment to strike.
What set them apart was a shared telepathy. They never fought about direction or style. One of the rare turning points came when Marco suggested blending clean vocals into their sound. Coincidentally, Stefano had been leaning into futurepop influences—proof their musical instincts were eerily aligned.
Looking back on their early work brings a smile. There was rawness, an almost innocent sonic violence, and a heavy-handed use of vocal filters. Yet that unrefined edge had charm, even pride. Like many artists, their evolving tastes and growing experience sharpened their ability to craft bolder vocal lines and higher-quality production.
But building a dark-electro identity in Italy came with its own shadows. The scene barely existed. While Germany and the U.S. had thriving support systems, Italy offered little. With scarce club support and limited media coverage, Synapsyche paradoxically found themselves among the country’s top-tier dark-electro acts—largely by default. Bands like Alien Vampires fled to London, a move Marco suspects gave them a better shot at survival. Staying in Italy, on the other hand, meant struggling to spread their wings.
Today, their creative process runs like a well-oiled machine. Stefano composes the foundations—melodies, synths, sonic bones—while Marco crafts lyrics and overarching themes. Once a track is ready, Marco finalizes vocals, records in Stefano’s studio, and together they polish it into its final form. That synergy remains unbroken.
Despite a more polished sound in their latest material, Synapsyche hasn’t lost their bite. Their inspirations stretch far beyond the industrial box—metal acts like Nightwish and Cradle of Filth, pop titans like Lady Gaga, and even classical composers like Bach and Beethoven. Movie soundtracks and dialogue often creep into their work, with samples dropped in like twisted Easter eggs.
The lyrical chaos Marco pens isn’t always his own—it’s often a psychological patchwork stitched from research and character immersion. He creates personas, explores pathology and morality, and writes with layered meaning, inviting interpretation. If a fan sees something in the words that even he didn’t intend, it’s a sign he’s struck gold.
Live shows, though rare in Italy’s skeletal scene, are electric when they happen. Their pre-show ritual? A couple of strong cocktails to loosen nerves. Stefano stays sharp on the keys, while Marco leans into a tipsy edge that amplifies the emotional charge of each performance.
Surprises continue to define their journey. One standout moment came when a Russian fan shared that Synapsyche’s music helped him endure life on the front lines. Another surreal milestone: collaborating with Chris Harms of Lord of the Lost on their track “The Last Dying Flame”—a dream come true for two artists who revere his voice.
The future of Synapsyche is already unfolding. With the single “Deafness” now out—the first chapter of a conceptual trilogy called The Miscommunication—Marco is already crafting the next narrative, one that promises harsher sonics and deeper exploration. Though tight-lipped on the full concept, he hints it will reflect society’s collapsing dialogue.
Dream collaborations still float on their horizon: Till Lindemann of Rammstein and Dave Gahan of Depeche Mode. The idea of mixing their low, commanding voices with Marco’s higher register is a tantalizing thought.
As technology reshapes music, Synapsyche embraces the digital wave. Always experimenting with new sounds, effects, and production techniques, they remain adaptable—even if adulthood outside the band makes it harder to keep pace. But in a world driven by progress, their genre gives them a unique advantage.
Looking ahead to 2025, the trio of Miscommunication singles will set the tone, with videos accompanying each release. Beyond that, they’ll plunge into the writing of their fifth full-length album—no details yet, but world domination is always a quiet goal, even if the cost of touring makes it a challenge.
Ultimately, Synapsyche doesn’t aim to reinvent the wheel—they aim to leave a fingerprint on it. If someone, somewhere, remembers their music as a lifeline, a catharsis, or simply as art that resonated, they’ve done their job. Marco puts it best: “To make art is nothing but to create something from nothing that conveys emotions to others… Long live Synapsyche!”
Prepare your neural pathways for full overload — Italian industrial duo Synapsyche brings their unfiltered energy, brutal honesty, and electronic chaos to EVOL Radio in a brand-new exclusive interview premiering April 20, 2025 on EvolRadio.com.
From the project’s raw beginnings to its genre-fusing evolution under the Alfa Matrix label, the interview explores Synapsyche’s unique soundscape—where aggrotech aggression collides with synthpop hooks and dystopian visions.
Marco Mantovani and Luca Sassi take us on a mind-bending journey across the past, present, and future of their musical and personal lives—diving into songwriting mechanics, lyrical psychology, cyberpunk philosophy, and what’s next for the duo as they push boundaries in both studio and stage realms.
This feature delivers:
Exclusive insights into their newest work
A breakdown of their creative rituals
Thoughts on the ever-mutating dark music scene
Techno-dystopian dreams and legacy talk
💀 “This is more than an interview — it’s a direct neural download from one of the most dangerous minds in modern industrial.” — DJ Darkside, EVOL Radio
The full feature will be available in text format only, with embedded tracks and direct links to Synapsyche’s digital domains.
Prepare for total immersion: Angelspit and Ice Planet 9000 have officially unveiled their latest deep-space transmission—The Nebula Suite, the third full-length album from Ice Planet 9000. This isn’t just a release—it’s a two-hour dark ambient voyage through the outer edges of the sonic void.
Spanning 8 expansive tracks across 2 CDs, The Nebula Suite is a masterclass in long-form ambient storytelling—a cosmic descent into sprawling textures, celestial melancholy, and meditative decay. It’s a richly woven soundscape designed for full-sensory absorption, wrapped in hand-painted sci-fi artwork that amplifies the journey’s visual intensity.
This is ambient as experience. Ritual. Reflection. Awakening.
Perfect for the midnight hours when the world feels lightyears away.
Twenty-five years into their reign, PSYCLON NINE have returned to the abyss with a vengeance. Their latest full-length offering, And Then Oblivion, out March 21, 2025 via Metropolis Records, is a genre-defying sonic invocation—a twisted ritual that fuses blackened industrial, deathcore, ambient, trap, and metal into something altogether untamed and unclean.
Helmed by longtime visionary Nero Bellum, the album shatters expectation with tracks like “CRWLNG FRM CNT T CSKT” and “I Choose Violence,” merging visceral textures with apocalyptic production and spine-splintering vocals. Bellum explains,
“I specifically set out to break as many genre limitations as possible, while staying true to the concepts and imagery Psyclon Nine evokes.”
Critics across the globe are already losing their minds over it:
🩸 “Doesn’t just cross boundaries – it tears them down…” – Sonic Seducer (DE) 🩸 “Black metal vocals matched with trap and glitch… blastbeats and atmospherics to die for.” – Metal Digest (UK) 🩸 “Creepy and awesome… nursery rhymes forged in hell.” – Jace Media (UK) 🩸 “Suspenseful, sinister, genre-bending.” – Tempelores (NL)
⚙️ Tracklisting – “And Then Oblivion”
DEVIL’S WORK
I CHOOSE VIOLENCE
SHOOT TO KILL
CRWLNG FRM CNT T CSKT
LOCUST OF EVERYTHING
SPEAK EVIL
SAY YOUR PRAYERS
APRÈS TOI LE DELUGE
TAXIDERMY
[Hidden Track]
The visual world of And Then Oblivion is just as intense. The official music video for “CRWLNG FRM CNT T CSKT” arrives 24 hours after the album’s global release, promising a brutal, cinematic descent into the core of PSYCLON NINE’s blackened psyche.
🎶 Listen Now:
🌍 European Tour Dates – Devil’s Work Tour 2025
1 July – Edinburgh, GB – Bannermans
4 July – London, GB – Camden Club
5 July – Leiria, PT – Stereogun
6 July – Madrid, ES – Sala Ya’Sta
9 July – Helsinki, FI – On The Rocks
12 July – Bolków, PL – Castle Party Festival
13 July – Leipzig, DE – Hellraiser Club
16 July – Munich, DE – Backstage Club
17 July – Berlin, DE – Badehaus
18 July – Hamburg, DE – Logo
20 July – Köln, DE – Amphi Festival
🩸 Note: Portugal date has moved to Leiria (5 July)
Industrial chaos. Sonic rebirth. Collective fury. Outer Darkness Records returns to the void with “Inquisition Vol. II: The Scorn,” the latest chapter in its searing compilation series—dropping April 4th, 2025.
Following the scorched-earth reception of Vol. I in 2024, “The Scorn” digs deeper into the raw circuitry of industrial, dark pop, and synth-laced aggression. This isn’t just a collection—this is a declaration of allegiance to the underground. Every track bleeds with intent, each artist pushing genre boundaries and blurring the edges between beauty and brutality.
“With the second volume of our annual compilation series, ODR is continuing to focus on bringing fresh voices to the dark music scene while fostering a community of creatives and forward-thinking individuals. This time around we’re expanding our roster to include Asphodel Ivory and Fatigue, while also bringing new tracks from some familiar faces.” — Patrick Brooks, Outer Darkness Records
Founded in 2022, Outer Darkness Records is more than a label—it’s a movement. A collective of visionaries fusing dystopian aesthetics with genre-defying sound, ODR remains devoted to ushering in the next generation of industrial destruction.
⚙️ TRACKLIST – “Inquisition Vol. II: The Scorn”
Hexen Prozess – Tears of the Guillotine
pixelgrinder – Louder than Death
Dilemma – 21 Grams
ANGER 奰 feat. pixelgrinder – Late Model Collapse
Fatigue – Agonizing Over the Filth
Arcane Strain – She’s got Scissors
9th Circle – Silence
Antidote for Annie – No Takebacks (Finality Mix)
Asphodel Ivory – Upgrade (Ground to Dust Remix)
Midi Nation, Dilemma – Industrialize
Null Aeon – Demon on the Dance Floor
Ground to Dust – Scalpel (Mechavian木鸢 Remix)
Hexen Prozess, Dilemma – Ritual/Sacrifice
Dream Feeder feat. pixelgrinder – Sometimes it Just Fits
💀 New faces. Familiar demons. All united in the sonic shadows. “Inquisition Vol. II: The Scorn” drops everywhere April 4, 2025. Open your ears. Join the order. The inquisition continues.
🎧 Listen Now
🌐 Deep Dive into the Universe of Outer Darkness Records:
Dark, divine, and unapologetically unholy—SinThya steps out of the shadow and into the fire with “Not Marilyn Manson, But Definitely Antichrist.”
This isn’t cosplay. This is crucifixion couture. A twisted sermon of self-worship. A soundtrack for the damned.
Channeling industrial menace, glitchy glam, and snarling femininity, SinThya doesn’t aim to shock—he aims to ascend. This is not an echo of past provocateurs; it’s a fresh gospel carved into neon flesh. Think glitch-pop at a black mass. Think lips on the blade. Think sacred rage.
Unfiltered. Unrepentant. Unholy. She isn’t your savior—she’s your reckoning.
Experimental industrial duo TANGERINECAT has just dropped their haunting new single “March of Mourn”, a powerful and visceral track that marches through shadows with hypnotic energy and uncompromising intensity.
Known for their boundary-pushing sound and politically-charged performances, TANGERINECAT blends darkwave, industrial, noise, and folk instrumentation into something wholly their own—raw, emotional, and impossible to ignore.
Re:Mission Entertainment proudly announces the latest dark electronic masterpiece, MIMIC, from Ritualz. Known for pushing boundaries with haunting soundscapes and brooding beats, Ritualz returns with a release that promises to captivate fans of darkwave, witch house, and industrial electronic music.
Stay tuned for an immersive journey through Ritualz’s unique sonic vision as MIMIC is now available on all major streaming platforms.
Dark/Alt/Dance Culture, Music Entertainment News, Mental Health/STEM updates, Educational/Informational Community Outreach resources, Fashion, and Interviews with the artists you know and love – Featuring a HUGE mix of THE Most Dirty, Heavy, Danceable, Electronica, Rock, Metal, and Industrial! from the underground to the mainstream, coast to coast, and ALL around the globe.