• Home
  • Releases/Store
  • Artists
    • Scary Hours
    • Alpha Du Centaure
    • PAM RISOURIE
    • JoobieSeaz
    • Cosmokaze
    • David Wilson & the Summer Husbands
    • Galanos
    • Bug Martin
    • Inner City Basement
    • Tony Matura
    • Voice of Doom
    • The 65's
    • Tired Radio
    • Miss Ohio
    • Elvyn Rhud
    • Andrea Pranzatelli
    • Hidden Cabins
    • The Subterraneans
    • l'oceanic
    • Strange Monsters
    • Don Strange
  • News
  • Contact

PYRRHIC VICTORY RECORDINGS

  • Home
  • Releases/Store
  • Artists
    • Scary Hours
    • Alpha Du Centaure
    • PAM RISOURIE
    • JoobieSeaz
    • Cosmokaze
    • David Wilson & the Summer Husbands
    • Galanos
    • Bug Martin
    • Inner City Basement
    • Tony Matura
    • Voice of Doom
    • The 65's
    • Tired Radio
    • Miss Ohio
    • Elvyn Rhud
    • Andrea Pranzatelli
    • Hidden Cabins
    • The Subterraneans
    • l'oceanic
    • Strange Monsters
    • Don Strange
  • News
  • Contact
Back to all posts

Voice of Doom review/feature at Rebel Noise

"The album is a dark, dirty (as in grimy), and a dynamic blast of aggressive emotion."

Hackensack, NJ-based punk/metal hybrid band Voice of Doom actually formed way back in the ‘80s out of the remnants of experimental act The Systum. Voice of Doom, with London May (Samhain, Dag Nasty) in tow, released a 4-song EP in 1986, but soon called it quits. 

In 2014 the resurrected band dropped a 5-song EP, shedding the metal and focusing on punk music. More music arrived in 2016, 2018, and this year, with Voice of Doom unleashing their debut album, Saint Blaise, some three decades-plus after their inception. The album is a dark, dirty (as in grimy), and a dynamic blast of aggressive emotion.

09/14/2020

  • Leave a comment
  • Share
    Voice of Doom review/feature at Rebel Noise

    Share link

Leave a comment

Some images ©

  • Log out