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Heavy Song of the Week: Sinsaenum Honor Late Drummer Joey Jordison on 'In Devastation'

Heavy Song of the Week: Sinsaenum Honor Late Drummer Joey Jordison on 'In Devastation'

Yahoo23-05-2025
The post Heavy Song of the Week: Sinsaenum Honor Late Drummer Joey Jordison on 'In Devastation' appeared first on Consequence.
Blackened death metal supergroup Sinsaenum have returned with their first new music since the passing of late drummer Joey Jordison (best known as the founding drummer of Slipknot).
The band's new single 'In Devastation' — the title track from the group's forthcoming album — also serves as a tribute to Jordison, as well as the late father of guitarist/founder Frédéric Leclercq. As Leclercq explained, the title for the new record is quite literal.
'I was devastated, hence the title of this album,' said Leclercq of Jordison's passing via a press release. 'But we knew we had to carry on. This record is our tribute to my father, to Joey, and to anyone who's ever had to find strength in their darkest moments.'
Andre Joyzi, who previously served as Jordison's tech, has taken over behind the drum kit, rounding out a lineup that features Leclercq and returning members Attila Csihar (Mayhem), Sean Zatorsky (Dååth), Stéphane Buriez (Loudblast), and Heimoth (Seth).
The band's combined talent is a force to be reckoned with, as heard on 'In Devastation,' a crushing and technical extreme metal workout that puts Joyzi's abilities to the test. We'd like to think he would have done Jordison proud with his performance here, pacing one of the more intense metal compositions we've heard so far this year.
Sinsaenum's new album was produced and mixed by German engineer Lasse Lammert and is set to drop August 8th via earMUSIC. Stream 'In Devastation' below.
Robbie Williams – 'Rocket (feat. Tony Iommi)'
Britpop star Robbie Williams tapped one of the UK's greatest guitarists in Black Sabbath's Tony Iommi to assist on his new single 'Rocket.' It makes for a fitting collab, as the song is on the heavier side for the usually pop-centric Williams, who belts out his hooks over a surge of overdriven guitars and a classic Sabbath-esque solo from Iommi.
Smut – 'Touch & Go'
Singer Tay Roebuck of Chicago's Smut said that the band's new song 'Touch & Go' was 'pretty directly inspired by 'Time to Pretend' by MGMT.' However, we can't help but see it as a loose reference to the legendary Chicago label Touch and Go — especially considering Smut's brand of heavy, shoegazing indie rock would have been right at home on that label's roster.
Turnstile – 'LOOK OUT FOR ME'
Turnstile offer up another two-for-one with 'LOOK OUT FOR ME,' their new seven-minute single. The first half acts as its own song, a driving slice of '90s-esque guitar rock — that riff is very Nirvana — and bears similarities to the lead single and title track from their upcoming album NEVER ENOUGH. On the other hand, the second half of the new song eschews rock instrumentation altogether, coasting out on a downtempo electro/trance excursion.
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D-Day veteran and TikTok star ‘Papa Jake' Larson dead at 102
D-Day veteran and TikTok star ‘Papa Jake' Larson dead at 102

New York Post

time15 hours ago

  • New York Post

D-Day veteran and TikTok star ‘Papa Jake' Larson dead at 102

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Norwegian author Ingvar Ambjørnsen dies at 69

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Norwegian author Ingvar Ambjørnsen dies at 69

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Norwegian author Ingvar Ambjørnsen dies at age 69
Norwegian author Ingvar Ambjørnsen dies at age 69

San Francisco Chronicle​

time20 hours ago

  • San Francisco Chronicle​

Norwegian author Ingvar Ambjørnsen dies at age 69

STOCKHOLM (AP) — Ingvar Ambjørnsen, a Norwegian author who mixed a sharp, even dark tone with humor and empathy in works that depicted the lives of the oppressed and vulnerable, has died, his publisher said. He was 69. The Cappelen Damm publishing house did not specify the cause of death. Ambjørnsen had long been public with his battle against a lung illness called chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, or COPD. Born on May 20, 1956, in Tönsberg — described on his German-language author website as 'Norway's most bar-filled town' — Ambjørnsen grew up in Larvik and worked in various jobs in industry and psychiatry before publishing his first documentary novel in 1981. Four years later, he moved to Hamburg, where he lived for decades. 'His books are characterized by powerful, realistic descriptions of the seamier side of life,' the publisher said. Ambjørnsen became one of the publisher's best-known contemporary authors with four novels built around the character Elling, a shy and imaginative outsider who coped with the funny but endearing foibles of daily life after release from a psychiatric hospital. The comedy 'Elling' — the story of two recently released mental patients bunking together in an apartment in Oslo — was nominated in 2001 for an Academy Award as best foreign-language film. The tale landed on Broadway in 2010, with a play starring Denis O'Hare and Brendan Fraser: One of the misfits was fixated on his mother, the other obsessed with sex. According to the author website, Ambjørnsen wrote 18 novels and three collections of short stories, as well as several books for children and youth. A newly written collection of short stories is set to go on sale in Norway on July 31.

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