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Category: ASHEN HORDE

0 EPK – Ashen Horde – The Harvest (2026)

  • March 18, 2026
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE · EPKs

EPK – Ashen Horde – The Harvest (2026)

Publicist – Jon Asher – jon[@]ashermediarelations[.]com

For fans of Opeth, Voivod, Enslaved, Ihsahn, Strapping Young Lad

Band: Ashen Horde
Album Title: The Harvest
Release Date: May 1, 2026
Label: Self-Release
Genre: Extreme Metal
Location: Los Angeles, CA, USA

Facebook.com/AshenHorde | Youtube.com/@Ashenhorde | Instagram.com/ashenhorde

Ashenhorde.bandcamp.com | Apple Music | Ampwall.com/a/ashenhorde | Ashenhorde.bigcartel.com | Spotify

“The harvest is coming! The new Ashen Horde album is a multi-faceted journey into every nook and cranny of extreme metal. “The Harvest” is challenging and quirky, but unlike a lot of other progressive/experimental releases, it never loses track of the key ingredient in music – good songwriting. All tracks are well-crafted and interesting in their own right, and the skillful instrumental performances are more like the icing on the cake and not the main focus. Highly recommended!” – Nik Sundin (Dark Tranquillity)
“The song (Entropy and Ectasy) captures this dichotomy of collapse and exhilaration — of entropy and ecstasy — through a fast-spinning (and head-spinning) kaleidoscope of sound. The moods of the music change along the way, but even the relatively slower and more desolate passages include inventive and intriguing nuances. Karl Chamberlain’s remarkably multi-faceted voice is a perfect match for the remarkably multi-faceted nature of the music. He expels brutal death metal gutturals and ripping black metal screams, but he also sends his singing voice in ravishing upward arcs that are spine-tingling to hear, and down into gloomy troughs. As for the surrounding music, it’s intricate and exhilarating, especially when the band are in full flight, discharging rapidly darting and maniacally swirling notes, incendiary bursts of tremolo’d delirium, or riffing that feverishly slashes with vicious, serrated edges. In less frantic phases, the music dismally groans and throbs, creating a pall of desolation, even when Chamberlain’s voice might be reaching for the clouds. The fretwork also includes angular progressions that generate moods of disorientation and fearfulness, and the song further includes an astonishing guitar solo that all by itself seems to capture the song’s thematic dichotomy of collapse and jubilation. Perhaps needless to say, Robin Stone’s drumming is as constantly changing as everything else, and surgically crafted to match all the other head-spinning, pulse-pounding, and heart-sinking twists in this shapeshifter of a song.” – No Clean Singing

“Antimony; 3/5 rating; “the sound Ashen Horde has developed over three albums is pretty much theirs alone. It’s a dense but accessible approach that rewards both casual listens and sustained attention.” – Angry Metal Guy (2023 –  Antimony)

“Equal parts blackened madness, death metal riffing, and clean vocals, “The Neophyte” should get just about anyone stoked for Antimony.” – Metal Injection (2023 –  Antimony)

“an amazing odyssey all around and the amount of remarkable coherency as well as the instrumentation work and musicianship is just top notch.” – Metal Purgatory (2023 –  Antimony)

“Progression like what Ashen Horde has undergone over the years is what the best tales in the underground are made out of.” – Head-Banger Reviews (2023 –  Antimony)

“Fallen Cathedrals; 4.0 rating; “I can’t recommend this enough for fans of black and death metals being combined in unique ways.” – Angry Metal Guy (2019 –  Fallen Cathedrals)

[Download Album Cover | Download Album Lyrics]

Band: Ashen Horde
Album Title: The Harvest
Release Date: May 1, 2026
Label: Self-Release
Genre: Extreme Metal
Location: Los Angeles, CA, USA

Track Listing:
1. Autumnal (6:12)
2. Entropy and Ecstasy (5:47)
3. Backward Momentum (5:21)
4. Voids in the Ash (5:41)
5. Remnant (4:37)
6. A Place in the Rot (4:38)
7. Apparition (4:57)
8. The Harvest (5:46)
Album Length: 43:03

Credits:
Mixed by Ricardo Borges and mastered by Tony Lindgren at Fascination Street Studios
Artwork by Venus Kohana (venuskohana.com)

Lineup:
Trevor Portz: Guitar, Bass, Harmony Vocals
Karl Chamberlain: Vocals
Robin Stone: Drums

Live Line-up:
Trevor Portz: Guitar
Karl Chamberlain: Vocals
Greg Murphy: Drums
Second guitar and bass: TBD

===============================================

About the album artwork:

The cover art was created by an extremely talented artist named Venus Kohana. I actually. discovered her work at an art show at my wife’s work. There were several pieces of hers that I loved, but the image of the two red skeletons really caught my attention. I bought a print of it at the show, and after staring at it for a few days, I realized I wanted it to be the cover art. Even the color scheme fits with the Autumn vibe. I tracked Venus down through Instagram and asked if she’d be down to license it to us. Luckily, she said yes, and I’m so happy about it. It’s unique and cool, and very metal; it even inspired the lyrics to the title track, which closes the album.

About the album as a whole (lyrically and musically):

Unlike the previous four albums, “The Harvest” is not a concept album; however, it does have an overarching theme: endings. For the first time in Ashen Horde’s history (at least when it comes to full-lengths), I didn’t have a single story | wanted to tell. But after I came up with a couple of different lyric ideas, I realized they had a connecting theme. “Entropy and Ecstasy” is about a couple who get a thrill from the tragedy and chaos all around.

“Autumnal” looks at old Pagan beliefs and ceremonies that came with the end of the harvest season; “Backward Momentum” focuses on the seemingly devolution happening across society. Each is rooted in a reaction to something ending, so we leaned on that for the rest of the songs. Karl wrote “Voids in the Ash” about the last days of Pompeii, which was certainly a dramatic end!

Track By Track (lyrically and musically):

1. Autumnal
The music for this song was inspired by Sensorio, an outdoor light installation in Paso Robles, CA. My wife and I were there for a mini vacation, and the overall vibe of the lights spread across the countryside triggered the idea for both the intro melody and lyrics, which are about old Pagan activities that came with the end of the harvest season and coming of Fall. The slow build from quiet to full-on black-metal blast beats seemed like a perfect way to kick off the album.

2) Entropy and Ecstasy
This song, which we chose as the first single and shot a video for, is about a couple who, instead of being terrified by the world collapsing around them, get a thrill from it. I don’t remember what initially sparked the idea, but it’s fair to assume the initial Covid lockdowns had something to do with it! I thought the music, which definitely takes some influence from Voivod, reflected both the chaos of the outside world and the bizarre passion of the couple. This was also the song Karl used for his “audition.” I sent him a demo with some unfinished lyrics, and he sent back his take on it. I was immediately blown away. His vocals on the core melody, “how can we thrive if we expect to survive?” give me chills every time I hear them.

3) Backward Momentum
This is a weird song with a lot of different things going on musically! There’s actually a fair bit of melody buried under some pretty unconventional riffs. There’s definitely Opeth inspiration, particularly using layered clean vocals over some fast blasting. This technique was used on the Lotus Eater from “Watershed,” and I thought the synergy of the extreme and melodic was just super effective. Then you get this riff-heavy, hard rock break in the middle that taps into my love of all things 90s. The extended solo here is probably my favorite on the album, and the one I worked on the hardest.

Lyrically, it’s my angry rant about people seemingly devolving and falling into superstitious and conspiratorial beliefs while ignoring science and rational thinking.

4) Voids in the Ash
Trevor: I wanted something a little more moody and slow, so that drove this song. I didn’t have any idea about what the vocals should sound like, so when Karl came back with this Soundgarden/Alice in Chains-esque melody for the verses, I realized he’d stumbled onto exactly what it needed. Yet again, the contrast of a dark melody with some unconventional riffs makes for a unique listen. Interestingly, the black-metal sounding blast beat parts were not originally intended to be fast, but Robin came up with the idea to go that direction, and the jarring jump from slow to fast was better than what I’d come up with, haha!

Karl: Voids in the Ash is a special track for me. The last one was written and recorded vocally for this record. The song is about Pompeii, told from the perspective of the people of Pompeii and the gods who hated them enough to bury them in ash.

5) Remnant
Trevor: I honestly don’t remember a lot about what inspired the music on this one, other than my love of trying different things. It’s not too fast or progressive, but has a lot of energy.

Karl: Remnant is about a man out hunting in the wilderness when a storm hits. His trail gets destroyed, and he hopelessly wanders until he finds salvation at a stranger’s cabin. He’s taken in, fed, and then the storm picks up again, destroys the cabin, and everybody dies. No happy ending.

6) A Place in the Rot
Trevor: We slow things down again here, and while it’s still heavy, the guitar parts are pretty melodic. The solo at the beginning was sort of an afterthought, but I think it works really well. I get the middle section stuck in my head a lot, which is hopefully an indicator that it’s cool.

The name of the song came from the Swamp Thing series; I’ve always been fascinated by how the Rot contrasts the Green (read the series for more info on what that means). But all I had was the title and no lyrics. I told Karl that’s where the name came from, and he replied, letting me know that he was a huge fan of the series and even had a Swamp Thing “Love and Death” tattoo! It further proved that he was the right choice for the band!

Karl: A Place in the Rot is about Swamp Thing and how our destiny is the soil. In the end, we all die, so live a good life!

7) The Apparition
This is probably the heaviest song on the album. The main riff was inspired by early death metal—basically all the stuff that got me into extreme metal in the first place. But in typical Ashen Horde fashion, that leads right into a strange little riff with an odd rhythm and vaguely 70s feel (at least, that’s how I see it).

The lyrics are sung from the perspective of a ghost who sees people doing truly horrible things, but who is helpless to do anything about it. He wonders if it’s punishment for things he did in life, yet doesn’t recall what he did. Thus. He’s slowly going insane in his eternal prison.

8) The Harvest
The music for this song was inspired by a trip I took to Iceland a few years ago. We were driving through the countryside, and the insane scenery: black beaches, glaciers, and an almost unearthly landscape, was just so awe-inspiring. I can’t explain exactly why it translated to these riffs, but it did! I didn’t realize it at the time, but I hear some definite influence from Demonaz’s album “March of the Norse.” Apparently, some subliminal inspiration crept in!

While I already knew I wanted to have a title track for the album, I wasn’t sure what the lyrics would be about. It wasn’t until I found the cover art that the idea finally came to light. Inspired by the red skeletons, I imagine an entity that’s watching humanity from the shadows, judging how awful and stupid we’ve become. At some point, when things have reached whatever the creature deems to be the absolute end of hope for humanity, it will emerge and devour everything. It’s really a metaphor for the bizarre tendency of humans to go out of their way to destroy themselves and the planet.

=================================================

Fun Facts:

1. Ashen Horde began as a solo project, and Trevor was the only member for the first two albums.

2. Until the filming of the Entropy and Ecstasy video, no two members of the band had ever played (or even mimed) together. The album was recorded completely remotely, with the members never meeting.

3. Obviously, based on the previous statement, the band has never played live! But for the first time since Ashen Horde’s inception in 2013, the band will play its first shows in May.

4. Karl was introduced to Trevor via George Washburn, host of the Metalheads Podcast. Both Trevor and Karl had been on the show at various times, so when Trevor was seeing a new vocalist, George suggested Karl.

5. This is the first Ashen Horde album that isn’t a true concept album. The previous four told (mostly) self-contained stories, but The Harvest is based on an overall theme instead; that being “endings.” We did something similar with the Tintregen EP back in 2019 (the theme there was “agony”), and I like having everything connect in some way.


Photos by @still.squill (Trevor); Photo Dun Right (Karl); unknown (Robin)

For over 10 years, Ashen Horde has been delivering extreme metal that strives to embrace a multitude of metal subgenres without being bound to any one of them. Drawing influence from metal’s crème de la extreme, Ashen Horde has a sound rooted in death and black metal, but can’t truly be called either. Touching on everything from melodic prog to 90s alternative, they’re sure to appeal to fans of prog metal’s elite, from Opeth and Enslaved to Amorphis and Ihsahn.

The band, fronted by guitarist and primary songwriter Trevor Portz, has just completed work on its fifth album, The Harvest. The first full-length to feature new vocalist Karl Chamberlain, The Harvest sees the band expanding on the sound they’ve been building over the last decade. Taking full advantage of Chamberlain’s expansive vocal range, they’ve created an album that is as melodic as it is heavy. From the Voivod-with-blastbeats energy of “Entropy and Ecstasy,” to “Apparition,” which interrupts its brutal death and black metal sections with progressive wanderings, The Harvest epitomizes Ashen Horde’s love of variety. “Voids in the Ash,” with lyrics that examine the fall of Pompeii, combines grunge-inspired harmony vocals with hyperspeed black metal bursts. It’s an album of sharp contrasts, but all through a tight, extreme metal filter.

Breaking tradition from its predecessors, The Harvest is not a concept album; however, the lyrics are linked together by a central theme. Each song explores an aspect of things ending… or approaching an end. Opening track “Autumnal” explores end-of-harvest-season pagan traditions, while “Backward Momentum” takes a look at humanity’s unnatural desire to revert to a more primitive state. It’s not an album about hopelessness, but it does ponder the question of whether endings really are new beginnings, as the saying goes.

Launched as a one-man project in 2013, Ashen Horde has released four critically-acclaimed albums, as well as several EPs and 7” singles. Ashen Horde’s 2019 album, Fallen Cathedrals, received a coveted 4/5 on Angry Metal Guy, with the reviewer stating, “I can’t recommend this enough for fans of black and death metals being combined in unique ways.” The band signed with Transcending Obscurity Records for 2023’s Antimony, which helped elevate the band’s status across the globe. Antimony also made Sick Drummer’s “Favorite Drumming Albums of 2023” list, praising the incredible work of acclaimed drummer Robin Stone.

2025 will also be a banner year for the band, as it will finally see them take to the stage. While the band has existed as a studio-only project previously, the new lineup is ready to bring their brand of chaos to audiences this fall, with tour dates in the works. While The Harvest may be about endings, the band sees this album as a new beginning.

Discography:
The Harvest (full length, 2026)
Decayed (EP, 2024)
Antimony (full length, 2023)
Black Curse (EP, 2021)
Archaic Convictions (single, 2021)
A Semblance of Normalcy (single, 2020)
Tintregen (EP, 2019)
Fallen Cathedrals (full length, 2019)
The Alchemist (7″, 2017)
Nine Plagues (full length, 2015)
Feral (EP, 2015)
Echthros (7″, 2015)
Obcisus (EP, 2014)
Sanguinum Vindicta (full length, 2014)
Ab Initio (EP, 2013)

0 ASHEN HORDE Announces New Album “The Harvest” Out May 2026; Unveil Music Video “Entropy and Ecstasy”

  • March 17, 2026
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE · Music News

NEWS RELEASE

Montreal, QC – March 17, 2026

ASHEN HORDE Announces New Album “The Harvest” Out May 2026; Unveil Music Video “Entropy and Ecstasy”

Photos by @still.squill (Trevor); Photo Dun Right (Karl); unknown (Robin)

Los Angeles extreme‑metal shapeshifters Ashen Horde return on May 1st, 2026, with “The Harvest”, their fifth full‑length album and the first to feature new vocalist Karl Chamberlain (Putrefier, Alcyone, Necrotic Remains). Known for weaving black metal, death metal, prog, and 90s‑inspired grit into something unmistakably their own, Ashen Horde push their sound further than ever, embracing melody, chaos, and sharp contrasts across eight thematically linked tracks.
​
Alongside the album announcement, Ashen Horde have unveiled the first single, “Entropy and Ecstasy”, a whirlwind of jagged riffs, angular Voivod‑like progressions, and Chamberlain’s soaring, chilling vocal hooks. The accompanying video represents a major milestone for the band: despite recording the entire album remotely, this is the first time the members have appeared together on camera.

The first preview to the album, “Entropy and Ecstasy,” captures the album’s core idea: finding exhilaration in collapse. The song follows a couple who thrive on the chaos of a world falling apart, a concept Portz admits was likely sparked by the early COVID lockdowns.

Guitarist and primary songwriter Trevor Portz recalls being floored by Chamberlain’s audition:
​
​“I sent him a demo of ‘Entropy and Ecstasy’ with unfinished lyrics, and he sent back his take. His vocals on the line ‘how can we thrive if we expect to survive?’ still give me chills.”

Listen and watch the music video for “The Harvest” via its premiere on NoCleanSinging HERE.

Add to your Spotify playlist – pre-save – https://show.co/z0ZVdF9​
​
​“The Harvest” marks a turning point for Ashen Horde. After a decade as a studio‑driven project, the band is preparing to play its first‑ever live shows in May, coinciding with the album’s release. It’s also the first full‑length to feature Chamberlain, whose dynamic range helped reshape the band’s sonic identity.
​
While Ashen Horde’s previous four albums were tightly constructed concept records, “The Harvest” takes a different approach. Each track stands alone, yet all orbit the idea of endings, personal, societal, historical, and cosmic.
​
​“I didn’t have a single story this time, but the lyrics kept circling reactions to things ending. From societal collapse to ancient rituals to the last days of Pompeii, everything tied together naturally,” explains Portz.
​
Musically, the album is a showcase of the band’s eclectic influences. From the opening track, “Autumnal”, a slow-burning ascent into full black‑metal fury, inspired by the Sensorio light installation in Paso Robles. “Backward Momentum” blends Opeth‑style clean‑vocal layering with 90s‑rock riffing and one of Portz’s favorite solos on the album. “Voids in the Ash” pairs grunge‑inflected vocal harmonies with hyperspeed black‑metal bursts, telling the story of Pompeii from both mortal and divine perspectives. “The Apparition” channels early death metal before spiraling into odd‑meter prog weirdness. The title track, “The Harvest,” closes the album with an apocalyptic vision inspired by Iceland’s stark landscapes and the album’s striking cover art.
​
The album’s cover, featuring two red skeletons locked in an eerie, autumnal tableau, was created by artist Venus Kohana, whose work Portz discovered at an art show. The imagery’s blend of beauty, decay, and ritual perfectly mirrors the album’s themes.
​
​“I bought a print and couldn’t stop staring at it. Eventually, I realized it had to be the cover. It even inspired the lyrics to the title track.”​
​
For over a decade, Ashen Horde has carved out a unique place in extreme metal, refusing to be confined to any single subgenre. Rooted in black and death metal but unafraid to explore melodic prog, 90s alternative, and avant‑garde experimentation, the band appeals to fans of Opeth, Enslaved, Amorphis, Ihsahn, and metal’s more adventurous corners.
​
Originally founded as a solo project by guitarist and primary songwriter Trevor Portz, Ashen Horde has evolved into a full lineup featuring vocalist Karl Chamberlain and Australian-based drummer Robin Stone (The Amenta, Convulsing).

“The Harvest” represents the band’s most dynamic, collaborative, and ambitious work to date.

Album pre-order (release date May 1, 2026) available on limited splatter vinyl and CD (along with t-shirt bundles) on Bandcamp, as well as everywhere digitally – https://ashenhorde.bandcamp.com/album/the-harvest​

Tour Dates:​
May 14 – Montclair, NJ – The Meatlocker
May 15 – Wallingford, CT – Cherry Street Station
May 16 – Brattleboro, VT – Midnight’s

Track Listing:​
1. Autumnal (6:12)
2. Entropy and Ecstasy (5:47)
3. Backward Momentum (5:21)
4. Voids in the Ash (5:41)
5. Remnant (4:37)
6. A Place in the Rot (4:38)
7. Apparition (4:57)
8. The Harvest (5:46)
Album Length: 43:03

Credits:​
Mixed by Ricardo Borges and mastered by Tony Lindgren at Fascination Street Studios
Artwork by Venus Kohana (venuskohana.com)

Lineup:​
Trevor Portz: Guitar, Bass, Harmony Vocals
Karl Chamberlain: Vocals
Robin Stone: Drums

More Info:

​https://www.facebook.com/AshenHorde/

​https://www.instagram.com/ashenhorde​

-30-

“The harvest is coming! The new Ashen Horde album is a multi-faceted journey into every nook and cranny of extreme metal. “The Harvest” is challenging and quirky, but unlike a lot of other progressive/experimental releases, it never loses track of the key ingredient in music – good songwriting. All tracks are well-crafted and interesting in their own right, and the skillful instrumental performances are more like the icing on the cake and not the main focus. Highly recommended!” – Nik Sundin (Dark Tranquillity)

“Antimony; 3/5 rating; “the sound Ashen Horde has developed over three albums is pretty much theirs alone. It’s a dense but accessible approach that rewards both casual listens and sustained attention.” – Angry Metal Guy (2023 – Antimony)

“Equal parts blackened madness, death metal riffing, and clean vocals, “The Neophyte” should get just about anyone stoked for Antimony.” – Metal Injection (2023 – Antimony)

“an amazing odyssey all around and the amount of remarkable coherency as well as the instrumentation work and musicianship is just top notch.” – Metal Purgatory (2023 – Antimony)

“Progression like what Ashen Horde has undergone over the years is what the best tales in the underground are made out of.” – Head-Banger Reviews (2023 – Antimony)

“Fallen Cathedrals; 4.0 rating; “I can’t recommend this enough for fans of black and death metals being combined in unique ways.” – Angry Metal Guy (2019 – Fallen Cathedrals)

—
ASHER MEDIA RELATIONS
Jon Asher – Music Publicist
#.514.581.5780
jon[@]ashermediarelations[.]com
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0 Heavy New York – Countdown-Top 60 Albums of 2019 – Ashen Horde is on the list! Find out what spot!

  • December 4, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

0 Glacially Musical – Interview: Ashen Horde Hates Cheese

  • July 17, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

http://glaciallymusical.blogspot.com/2019/07/interview-ashen-horde-hates-cheese.html

0 ASHEN HORDE Premiere New Video ‘Retaliation-Regret’

  • July 3, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

(contact info below)

NEWS RELEASE

Montreal, QC – July 3, 2019



For fans of Ihsahn, Opeth, Borknagar

ASHEN HORDE Premiere New Video ‘Retaliation-Regret’

New Album “Fallen Cathedrals” Out Now! via Extreme Metal Music

  

Unleashing their third full length “Fallen Cathedrals” in Europe and North America via Extreme Metal Music/Rockshots Records this past March, Hollywood, California duo ASHEN HORDE are premiering a new lyric video for their track ‘Retaliation-Regret’ in support of the release via Angry Metal Guy along with an exclusive interview at the following link: https://www.angrymetalguy.com/video-premiere-and-interviews-with-stevie-boiser-and-trevor-portz-of-ashen-horde/


“Fallen Cathedrals”
 is available on CD, vinyl plus stream and download on the following platforms:

Rockshots.eu (CD, Vinyl)
Bandcamp
iTunes
Spotify

Album Stream – https://ashenhorde.bandcamp.com/album/fallen-cathedrals

Lyric Video – “Profound Darkness” – https://youtu.be/Dvb03K0WPvM

Drawing influence from metal’s crème de le extreme, from Enslaved and Devin Townsend to Ihsahn and Opeth, ASHEN HORDE (aka Trevor Portz and Stevie Boiser (Vale of Pnath, Inferi)), may have a sound rooted in death and black metal, but can’t truly be called either. The concept album is in the vein of J.G. Ballard’s dystopian novel “High Rise,” and explores class warfare and a society’s descent into primitive, warring tribes. Musically, the album expands further on the complexities of the band’s earlier releases, but with even more emphasis on progressive and melodic elements, even incorporating clean vocals for the first time. It will appeal to fans of the more progressive side of extreme metal, from Ihsahn and Borknagar to Opeth and Enslaved.

The band adds:

“Fallen Cathedrals, is the perfect illustration of what Ashen Horde is all about. Musically, it draws influence from across the metal spectrum. There is hyper speed, blast-beat-fueled black metal that runs alongside pummeling death metal riffs; clean-sung melodic passages juxtaposed against face-melting screams, and headbanging beats intermixed with progressive odd-time signatures.”


Track Listing:
1. Parity Lost (7:37)
2. Profound Darkness (5:22)
3. Retaliation-Regret (4:45)
4. The Vanishing (4:36)
5. Atavism (3:55)
6. Cages (5:07)
7. Final Ascent (4:54)
8. Face of The Enmity (7:12)
9. Primal (bonus track on CD only) (4:33)
Album Length: 48:05

 

For more info:
https://www.rockshots.eu
http://www.ashenhorde.com
https://www.facebook.com/AshenHorde
https://www.instagram.com/ashenhorde 
https://twitter.com/ashenhorde 

About:
Launched as a one-man project in 2013 by writer and multi-instrumentalist Trevor Portz, Ashen Horde has released two critically acclaimed albums, as well as several EPs, over the past three years. Beginning with the ambitious Sanguinum Vindicta trilogy, Portz has worked tirelessly to develop a sound that is both challenging and unique.

While the earlier work was more firmly rooted in black metal, subsequent releases have begun to shape the Ashen Horde sound into something more genre-neutral. As noted by Dead Rhetoric, “Ashen Horde takes the best of what’s around and melds it into something more interesting than the [individual] parts.”

2015 saw the release of the sophomore album, Nine Plagues. Again written, performed and recorded entirely by Portz, the album was described by Transcending Obscurity as “the ultimate modern death metal experience.” Lavished with positive reviews, the album greatly helped to boost Ashen Horde’s presence in the extreme metal community. In fact, demand for Nine Plagues on vinyl led to a successful Kickstarter campaign, the result being a double-LP version of the album.

2016 brought a major change to the band, as Portz made the decision to bring in a lead vocalist, ending Ashen Horde’s run as a solo project. Portz drafted Stevie Boiser, known for his work with several tech death heavies, including Vale of Pnath, Inferi, and Equipoise. Notes Portz, “I always felt like the vocals I was doing was fine, but they never turned out quite as dynamic as I heard them in my head. Stevie’s skill will, no doubt, push Ashen Horde to a whole new level.” The first release with Boiser on vocals was “The Alchemist” 7”, which saw the band exploring black and roll, giving a nod to bands like Khold and Satyricon.

Which brings us to 2018 and Fallen Cathedrals. The album represents a more diverse Ashen Horde sound but doesn’t compromise on the intensity and aggression for which the band has become known.

Absolute Zero Magazine commented, “If we the underground can get this into the right hands Ashen Horde will be a major force in the extreme metal world for years to come.” Portz and Boiser are ready to see that prediction play out.

– 30 –

“The ultimate modern death metal experience.” – Transcending Obscurity

“No matter your flavor of the extreme metal underground, Ashen Horde is bound to draw your attention and hold it…” – Dead Rhetoric

“If we the underground can get this into the right hands Ashen Horde will be a major force in the extreme metal world for years to come.” – Absolute Zero Magazine

“What we have here is some very competent progressive black death metal that would please the Behemoth crowd.” — Teeth of the Divine

“…every single moment is filled with an absolutely aggressive energy that does not let up.” – Head-Banger Reviews

“…[Ashen Horde] manages to mash so much together and actually make it sound good without it even seeming difficult.” – Metal Addicts

“Absolutely brilliant.” – The Path Less Travelled Records

—

ASHER MEDIA RELATIONS
Jon Asher – Music Publicist
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0 Glacially Musical – Vinyl Review: “Fallen Cathedrals” by Ashen Horde

  • July 2, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

http://glaciallymusical.blogspot.com/2019/07/vinyl-review-fallen-cathedrals-by-ashen.html

0 Hard Rock Haven – Interview w/ Trevor Portz of Ashen Horde

  • April 19, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

http://hardrockhaven.net/online/2019/04/audio-interview-with-trevor-portz-of-ashen-horde/

0 Dead Rhetoric – Interview – Ashen Horde – Reveling in Profound Darkness

  • April 17, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

http://deadrhetoric.com/features/ashen-horde-reveling-in-profound-darkness/

0 Third Eye Cinema – #albumreviews – BackStabber , Norilsk , S.R.L. Rockshots Records , Oculum Dei , Crypteria , Ashen Horde Extreme Metal Music , Accursed Spawn , Saeva , The Flaying , Misshapen , Sludgehammer , Our Dying World , Blackguard , Extrema , Anomalism , Sinnrs , Helevorn https://buff.ly/2KLITmg

  • April 17, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · Accursed Spawn · ASHEN HORDE · Backstabber · Crypteria · Extrema · Misshapen · Norilsk · Oculum Dei · S.R.L. (Rockshots Records) · Saeva · Sludgehammer · The Flaying · Uncategorized

via Rally Round the Maypole, Make Merry, Make Mad!

0 Eternal Terror – Ashen Horde – The Fallen Cathedrals – “I would insist, though, that you give “Fallen Cathedrals” a try if you’re looking for fresh and unusual technical metal but you also miss old Opeth and Dimmu Borgir, with some serious twists.”

  • April 3, 2019
  • by Asher
  • · ASHEN HORDE

I would insist, though, that you give “Fallen Cathedrals” a try if you’re looking for fresh and unusual technical metal but you also miss old Opeth and Dimmu Borgir, with some serious twists.

https://eternal-terror.com/reviews/index.php?id=6454&type=B

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