Death Doom

Hooded Menace: annunciano il loro settimo album; online il video del primo singolo

Di Orso Comellini - 6 Agosto 2025 - 10:39
Hooded Menace: annunciano il loro settimo album; online il video del primo singolo

Gli Hooded Menace pubblicheranno il prossimo 3 ottobre, per Season of Mist, il loro settimo album, intitolato “Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration”. La band finlandese ha inoltre pubblicato il video del primo singolo estratto: ‘Portrait Without a Face’.

Over the past 20 odd years, Hooded Menace have stood not as a bridge but a pillar between two different realms of underground metal. The cultishly beloved band’s upcoming seventh album is still bound by a morbid obsession with classic horrors. But on Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, Finland’s stewards of death-doom remain far from stuck in their ways. Lead single “Portrait Without a Face” cranks up the neon-soaked nightmares while digging out a grave new surprise from under their long-sleeve.

Watch the classic horror video for “Portrait Without a Face” on the Season of Mist YouTube channel.

https://youtu.be/eylIsTVj5U0?si=gYYyBxqCKE5gvh0p

Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration comes out October 3, 2025 on Season of Mist.

Pre-order & Pre-save
https://orcd.co/hoodedmenacelachrymosemonumentsofobscuration

Available formats
Digital download
CD Digipack
12″ Vinyl (Black)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Red)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Purple)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Crystal clear with red and blue marble)
12″ Liquid-filled Vinyl (Slime yellow)

Hooded Menace continue to pave a harrowing path for undying metal legions who crave creepier, crushing tempos. The band’s new single opens with drummer Pekka Koskelo pounding like death’s door. Their flesh-eating muse still looms over Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration. Cover artist Wes Benscoter recreates director Amando de Ossorio’s the Blind Dead in all of the film’s ghoulish glory. But the album hammers home the influence of ’80s heavy metal that was rung in by previous LP The Tritonus Bell. With its conspiratorial web of leads, “Portrait Without a Face” bears a glowing resemblance to King Diamond.

The lasting influence of Candlemass and Paradise Lost hasn’t vanished without a trace, but Hooded Menace continue to break the mold that they’ve set for death-doom. While the bone-crushing riffs of founding member Lasse Pyykkö cement the rock-solid foundation beneath Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, even he was surprised when sculpting the album’s lead single. Like an echo from beyond the grave, what should appear within “Portrait Without a Face” but the haunted moan of a cello.

“Sucked into the realm of sweet damnation“. Vocalist Harri Kuokkanen growls deep into the dead of night, as if lured down a darkened hallway by former live bassist Antii Poutanen’s sorrowful string saws.

The video for “Portrait Without a Face” was directed by Tekla Valy with additional footage filmed by Mikko Saastamoinen.

More praise for Hooded Menace

Hooded Menace have consistently succeeded in boasting a bludgeon of unruly extremity” – Angry Metal Guy

“As always, hail Lasse” – BangerTV

“After the riffs fade into the cavern’s ancient silence, the shrouded specters turn and watch Pyykkö, a hoodie casting shadows over his eyes. In unison, they nod in approval. Fade to black” – Decibel

“…it’s good to see metal’s customary dance with past being respected and admired, but also put to enlightened use” – Metal Injection

Hooded Menace have figured out how to do death-doom with honest-to-Elder Gods hooks, and it fits them like an executioner’s glove” – New Noise

“The have gone above and beyond by not just being satisfied with being heavy, but writing good songs that challenge their playing and the listener” – No Clean Singing

“If horror/ doom / death is a sub-genre, Hooded Menace is undoubtedly its master” – Last Rites

“…they have proven risks can pay off” – Distorted Sound

Hooded Menace‘s approach to death and doom gives listeners an array of hard-hitting and darkly sublime cuts” – Treble

Hooded Menace are back to put on a death-doom clinic” – Everything Is Noise

Hooded Menace cement their status at the forefront of modern death/doom and prove Pyykkö’s songwriting prowess once again” – Toilet Ov Hell

“…these Finns started and perfected this modern death/doom sound that everyone has been aping for the past decade, so it is always good to see the originators back in action” – The Sleeping Shaman

“They manage to separate themselves with a more diverse sound that constantly changes and avoids the generic death metal templates” – MetalBite

“Death-Doom’s most consistent band” – The Metal Meltdown

“These guys know how to write devastatingly killer dual guitar work” – Forgemaster Metal (Best Doom Metal Albums of 2021) 

Tracklist
1. Twilight Passages (1:04)
2. Pale Masquerade (7:50)
3. Portrait Without a Face (7:15) [WATCH]
4. Daughters of Lingering Pain (7:25)
5. Lugubrious Dance (7:20)
6. Save a Prayer (6:12)
7. Into Haunted Oblivion (9:47)

Origin: Finland
Style: Death-Doom
FFO: Paradise Lost, Autopsy, Mercyful Fate

Photo by Pasi Nevalaita

For closing in on two decades, Hooded Menace have stood not as a bridge but the pillar between two underground realms. The band’s upcoming seventh album still paves the way for metal legions who prefer headbanging to more creepily, crushing tempos. However, while Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration is still rooted in a cultish obsession with the classics, these stewards of death-doom remain far from stuck in their ways.

Starting as a teenager in the late ’80s, founding member Lasse Pyykkö got his start in Joensuu, Finland with the band Phlegethon. But the undead spirit that’s guided Hooded Menace since its 2007 conception first appeared back when he was just a young hesher. DraculaPoltergeistA Nightmare on Elm Street and other horrors piqued his morbid curiosity. Though later on, it was feasting on the cult classic Tombs of the Blind Dead that spawned the band’s accursed two-track demo.

“It’s the dark element”, Lasse recalls when asked what Hooded Menace draws from its source material five albums removed from the band’s terrifying breakthrough Never Cross the Dead.

The blind dead still stand watch over Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration. Returning cover artist Wes Benscoter recreates the Knights Templar in all their glowingly ghoulish glory. “Pale Masquerade” paints a familiar scene, summoning Amando de Ossorio’s flesh-eating muse with a fresh heap of Lasse’s bone-crunching chugs. “The dead army grows“, Harri Kuokkanen commands with growls that reek of the crypt. Lifelong converts will quickly fall in line behind steadfast drummer Pekka Koskelo, who dips “Daughters of Lingering Pain” into the same dripping vat of wax as the band’s 2010s effigies for Relapse Records. The lasting influence of Candlemass and Paradise Lost hasn’t vanished without a trace. But Hooded Menace continue to break the mold they helped set for death-doom right from the album’s opening jump scare. Neon keys beam through “Twilight Passages” as if firing up a time machine.

Reinvention isn’t new to Hooded Menace. While a menacing vocalist in his own right, Lasse passed the proverbial mic torch to Kuokkanen for the gloomier melodies that haunted the band’s initial offering after signing with Season of Mist late in 2016. Ossuarium Silhouettes Unhallowed was also pulled more from the shadows of their imagination as opposed to the silver screen. Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration trends further in that direction; the lyric sheet unfurls like a house of psychological horrors, where the hallways are hung with shattered mirrors and faceless portraits. Only this time around, the trio really hammered home the influence of ’80s heavy metal that was rung in by previous long-player The Tritonus Bell. “Lugubrious Dance” twists between the hallucinogenic spires of Cathedral in conspiracy with King Diamond before cranking into a chorus that’s classic Hooded Menace.

MicroPitching and other effects aren’t the only tricks of the trade that are pulled out from under Hooded Menace‘s cloak. Traditional death-doomers might have been pleasantly surprised by the band covering W.A.S.P., so imagine the delighted screams upon hearing a Top of the Pops’ gem like “Save a Prayer” splattered in their signature blood-soaked dread. Lasse’s riffs still cement the rock-solid foundation beneath Lachrymose Monuments of Obscuration, but even he was surprised when sculpting its lead single. What should appear from the double bass swirling amidst “Portrait Without a Face” but the moan of a cello. Like an echo from beyond the grave, the cry of strings reappears during the album’s grand finale. Former live bassist Antti Poutanen sorrowfully saws as the band marches, gallops then sinks back “Into Haunted Oblivion”.

On Lachyrmose Monuments of ObscurationHooded Menace cast death-doom in a ghostly new light.

Line-up
Harri Kuokkanen — Vocals
Lasse Pyykkö — Guitar, Bass, Keyboards
Pekka Koskelo — Drums

Guest Musicians
Antti Poutanen — Cello
John McNulty — Spoken Word

Production Credits
Recorded by Heikki Marttila at Guru Studio, Joensuu, Finland.
Mixed by Heikki Marttila.
Mastered by Jaime Gomez Arellano at Orgone Studios, Portugal.

Cover Art
Wes Benscoter (https://www.wesbenscoter.com)

Photography
Pasi Nevalaita

Pre-order & Pre-save
https://orcd.co/hoodedmenacelachrymosemonumentsofobscuration

Available formats
Digital download
CD Digipack
12″ Vinyl (Black)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Red)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Purple)
12″ Colored Vinyl (Crystal clear with red and blue marble)
12″ Liquid-filled Vinyl (Slime yellow)