Metropolis Records has officially released “Rage,” the latest hard-hitting single from Damage Control, featuring an unrelenting collaboration with EBM and industrial icon Leæther Strip.
Built on pounding rhythms, harsh electronics, and a confrontational atmosphere, “Rage” lives up to its title—channeling pure aggression into a tightly wound, club-ready weapon. Damage Control bring precision and force, while Leæther Strip injects a signature intensity that reinforces the track’s raw, uncompromising edge.
The release stands as a meeting point between modern industrial ferocity and legacy EBM power, continuing Metropolis Records’ long-standing tradition of bridging generations within the dark electronic underground.
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Deep Dive into the Universe of Damage Control & Leæther Strip
Electronic agitator SPANKTHENUN, in collaboration with Belgian EBM pioneers A Split-Second, has officially released “Broken Machine”—a comprehensive New Beat and EBM reworking of the 1989 industrial landmark “Muscle Machine.”
Originally issued via Wax Trax! Records and Antler Records, Muscle Machine helped define an era of body-driven electronics and militant club culture. With Broken Machine, that original blueprint has been fully dismantled and reassembled for the present day.
This reboot doesn’t chase nostalgia—it weaponizes it. Classic structures are deconstructed and reshaped to reflect modern system failure, societal decay, and the grinding tension of a world stuck in perpetual malfunction. The result is a stark, club-focused release that bridges late-’80s industrial DNA with contemporary EBM and New Beat aesthetics.
Broken Machine stands as both a tribute and a warning: the systems we built are cracking, and the soundtrack has been rewritten to match the collapse.
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Deep Dive into the Universe of SPANKTHENUN & A Split-Second
After more than ten years of silence, Empyrean Asunder resurface with a striking stylistic pivot. Their new single “I Confess,” released January 2, 2026, marks a decisive move away from metal-rooted aggression and into industrial dance and EBSM territory—dark, seductive, and built for the club floor.
With over two decades of evolution behind them, Empyrean Asunder have continuously refused to stay confined to one sound. From black and industrial metal origins to anti-industrial rock, the project now embraces a pulse-driven electronic identity. “I Confess” introduces this new era with sinister, bass-heavy rhythms and a sleek, modern edge reminiscent of Gesaffelstein, while maintaining the project’s trademark darkness.
The release also includes “Everyone Wants To Be You,” a club-ready anthem elevated by the commanding vocal presence of Victoria Graves. Her delivery cuts through the dense electronics with confidence and intensity, making both tracks immediate standouts for goth and industrial dancefloors alike.
Produced by Jerry Barksdale, the single balances infectious earworm melodies with moments of vulnerability and cathartic screams. Massive synth work drives the tracks forward, while deeply personal lyrics add emotional weight beneath the relentless electronic momentum. It’s a combination that rewards repeated listens and signals a fully realized transformation.
Long known as an auditory manifestation of societal decay, Empyrean Asunder continue to channel chaos through sound and vision. Even as the genre framework shifts, the project’s core remains intact—harsh, theatrical, and unflinchingly confrontational.
Project Background & Evolution
Empyrean Asunder is the solo project of multi-instrumentalist Jerry Barksdale, a prolific force in extreme music circles, also known for work in The Promise Of Plague (black/death metal), Then We Died (grindcore), and Grief Cathedral (funeral doom/sludge). Conceived as an experimental outlet, the project frequently collaborates with different musicians, allowing each release to redefine its identity.
Rather than adhering to a fixed genre, Empyrean Asunder moves through distinct creative eras:
Black Metal Era Early releases such as Wrought In Dreams (1999) explored raw, avant-garde black/doom metal.
Industrial Metal & Anti-Industrial Rock Era Albums including The Human Virus (2005), Love At Your Own Risk (2006), They Call Her The Cure (2008), Hate (2013), and Serpent (2014) fused metal and punk with harsh industrial textures.
Electro-Industrial / Techno Era (Present) The current chapter pushes fully into electronic territory, incorporating EBM, darkwave, and techno influences—anchored by the 2026 release of “I Confess.”
ProNoize has officially unleashed “Aberration,” the newest release from hard-hitting industrial act Stahlschlag, further solidifying the label’s reputation for pushing uncompromising electronic and industrial sounds.
Known for their punishing rhythms, mechanized aggression, and cold, militant atmosphere, Stahlschlag delivers a release that lives up to its name. Aberration dives headfirst into distorted textures and relentless energy, offering a sonic experience built for dark clubs, underground dancefloors, and listeners who crave intensity without compromise.
With this release, ProNoize continues its mission of spotlighting forward-driven industrial artists who challenge boundaries while staying rooted in the genre’s harsh, confrontational core. Aberration stands as another sharp-edged entry in the label’s ever-growing catalog of dark electronic weaponry.
Fans of hard industrial, EBM, and power electronics are encouraged to explore Aberration now and experience Stahlschlag’s latest evolution firsthand.
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.
After years of silence and anticipation, Unter Null continues her long-awaited resurgence with the official music video for “Coming Up To Breathe,” translating raw emotion into a powerful visual statement that cuts straight to the core.
A Visual Reckoning 🖤 “Coming Up To Breathe” has already resonated deeply as a comeback track—equal parts defiance, vulnerability, and survival. With the release of its official music video, Unter Null elevates the song into a cinematic experience, pairing stark imagery with the relentless emotional weight that defined her earlier legacy while signaling a sharpened, more intentional evolution.
Rather than relying on excess or spectacle, the video leans into atmosphere and tension. Every frame reinforces the song’s central theme: the fight to reclaim identity and breath after prolonged suffocation—personal, creative, and societal. It’s not nostalgia. It’s confrontation.
A Milestone Moment in the Unter Null Revival 🔥 This release marks a significant chapter in Unter Null’s return to the industrial landscape. Long regarded as a defining voice in the aggrotech and dark electro movement, her re-emergence has been measured, deliberate, and uncompromising. The video for “Coming Up To Breathe” stands as both a statement and a promise: this era is not about revisiting the past—it’s about finishing unfinished business.
For longtime followers, it’s a powerful reminder of why Unter Null mattered then. For new listeners, it’s an invitation into a universe built on truth, pressure, and release.
KMFDM are back in full combat mode. The legendary industrial rock architects have unleashed “OUBLIETTE”, the first single from their upcoming 24th studio album, ENEMY—a release that reaffirms their role as permanent agitators in a world spiraling toward controlled amnesia and authoritarian comfort.
Released on December 12, 2025 via Metropolis Records, “OUBLIETTE” is available in WAV, MP3, streaming formats, and on Bandcamp, and serves as the opening salvo for what promises to be one of the band’s most confrontational chapters yet.
“OUBLIETTE”: A Place to Be Forgotten 🩸
Derived from the French word oublier (“to forget”), an oubliette is a dungeon accessible only through a trapdoor above—designed to erase its victims from memory entirely. From KMFDM’s perspective, it’s a perfect metaphor.
“A place to be forgotten. What nobody sees, nobody knows.”
Musically, “OUBLIETTE” balances dance-rock propulsion with razor-edged industrial force, setting the tone for ENEMY’s themes of erasure, control, and resistance in an age where truth is buried on purpose.
ENEMY: 42 Years of Defiance, Sharpened 🔥
Set for release on February 6, 2026, ENEMY arrives just weeks before KMFDM launch a previously announced and nearly sold-out European tour. The album is available as 2xLP, CD, and digital, with Bandcamp pre-orders live now.
Society may be unraveling, but KMFDM remain resolute. Forty-two years deep into their legacy, the Ultra Heavy Beat still rises to confront fascism, hypocrisy, and systemic decay—louder and more dangerous than ever.
Lineup: Power, Precision, and New Blood ⚙️
Still commanded by Sascha “Käpt’n K” Konietzko (songwriting, vocals) and Lucia Cifarelli (vocals, songwriting), KMFDM continue their sonic assault with the percussive force of Andy Selway. The current incarnation is further energized by Tidor Nieddu, a London-based guitarist injecting bold new textures and bite.
Following her standout performance of “Professional Killer” during the 40th anniversary tour, Annabella Konietzko makes a powerful return on the explosive track “YOÜ”, marking her official songwriting debut with the band.
A Brutal, Uncompromising Album Statement 💀
Never content with repetition, ENEMY stands among KMFDM’s most stylistically daring and politically scathing releases:
The dance-rock menace of “OUBLIETTE”
The shadowed grooves of “CATCH & KILL”
The satirical thrash of “OUTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION”
The vicious industrial metal of “L’ETAT”
The dark funk pulse of “VAMPYR”
The sly dub swagger of “STRAY BULLET 2.0”
KMFDM don’t retreat—they advance, roaring against a culture that demands silence and submission. The message is clear: join the Ultra Heavy Beat, or become the ENEMY.
Alfa Matrix has officially unleashed “Failure (Bonus Edition)”, the long-awaited full-length statement from American industrial agitators FRONTAL BOUNDARY — and it’s nothing short of a relentless psychological onslaught. Following the bile-drenched fury of Hate and the suffocating intensity of Faith, the trio return with a release that stares straight into collapse, rage, despair, and the fragile glimmer of hope that survives the wreckage.
A Brutal Core of 12 Tracks 🩸
At its heart, Failure is a merciless examination of the human condition. Across 12 devastating tracks, FRONTAL BOUNDARY tear open themes of anger, self-destruction, disillusionment, and emotional fracture, channeling them through crushing rhythms, corrosive textures, and an atmosphere that feels both intimate and apocalyptic. This is industrial music at its most confrontational — cold, punishing, and unapologetically honest.
Bonus Edition: Total System Overdrive 🔥
The experience doesn’t stop with the main album. The limited 2CD digipak edition pushes Failure far beyond its breaking point, adding 12 exclusive bonus tracks and remixes that reforge the album into new, club-annihilating forms.
A devastating roster of collaborators — including UNTER NULL, VISCERA DRIP, PYGMY CHILDREN, MISERIA ULTIMA, HER OWN WORLD, FACT PATTERN, BLAKLIGHT, DREAD RISKS, CONTRACULT, and LIVERNOIS — tear into FRONTAL BOUNDARY’s material, mutating it into fresh weapons of sonic destruction. The band themselves also return with their own punishing reworks, ensuring the bonus disc hits just as hard as the original.
Live at Dark Force Fest 2026 🖤
FRONTAL BOUNDARY are also gearing up to bring the Failure experience to a live stage this spring with a **scheduled appearance at **Dark Force Fest 2026 — the three-day goth/industrial music festival running from May 1–3, 2026, at the Sheraton Parsippany in New Jersey. This event gathers underground dark wave, industrial, and alternative acts from around the world for performances, club events, vendors, panels, and more. Dark Force Fest+1
Expect FRONTAL BOUNDARY to deliver their crushing new material live, surrounded by fellow heavy hitters in the scene and a weekend of immersive industrial energy.
Industrial Collapse, Perfected 💀
Failure (Bonus Edition) isn’t just an expansion — it’s an escalation. A deeper plunge into darkness, sharper edges, and a clear declaration that FRONTAL BOUNDARY are operating at full destructive capacity.
Till Lindemann, the unmistakable voice and provocateur behind Rammstein, has once again stepped beyond the boundaries of comfort with the release of his latest solo single, “Alles Ändert Sich…Ich Nicht” (“Everything Changes…Not Me”). Accompanied by an unsettling and visually intense music video, the track continues Lindemann’s uncompromising exploration of identity, decay, and defiance in a world obsessed with transformation.
A Defiant Statement Against Change 🩸
The title alone sets the tone: while the world shifts, mutates, and reinvents itself, Lindemann stands immovable. The song leans heavily into themes of personal stagnation versus societal evolution, delivered with his signature baritone that feels both confrontational and eerily introspective. It’s not nostalgia—it’s resistance.
A Video Designed to Disturb ⚙️
True to form, the accompanying video is deliberately provocative. Stark imagery, unsettling symbolism, and a cold, industrial atmosphere collide to create a visual experience that feels more like a psychological endurance test than a traditional music video. Lindemann doesn’t aim to shock for novelty’s sake—every frame reinforces the song’s core message: discomfort is the point.
Till Lindemann Unfiltered 💀
As with his previous solo work, Lindemann uses this project to push further into raw, controversial territory than Rammstein typically allows. Free from band consensus, his solo output feels more personal, more grotesque, and more confrontational—an unfiltered glimpse into the artist’s darker creative impulses.
“Alles Ändert Sich…Ich Nicht” isn’t just a song; it’s a declaration. Lindemann remains exactly where he wants to be—unapologetic, immovable, and utterly indifferent to expectations.
No album cycle. No compromises. Just raw, confrontational energy aimed straight at the dancefloor.
🔥 A New Single—And It Stands Alone
MIKROMETRIK has officially unleashed “Ashes of God [Club Mix]”, a standalone release forged to exist outside the upcoming album’s narrative. This isn’t a teaser or a leftover—this track is its own entity, built to hit harder, darker, and more aggressively than anything before it.
⚙️ Harsh Energy. Relentless Intent.
Driven by punishing EBM rhythms and aggrotech ferocity, “Ashes of God” channels unfiltered anti-religion fury into a club-ready assault. It’s confrontational, uncompromising, and designed to burn everything in its path. Expect zero mercy—only impact.
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