• HomeNewsReviewsInterviewsVideosGigs & ToursOur ServicesAbout Us
HomeNewsReviewsInterviewsVideosGigsServiceAbout Us

Evil Damn - Eons of Horror

Peru’s Evil Damn return with their 2025 EP Eons of Horror, due for release on January 30th via Hells Headbangers Records. The band continues to carve out their niche at the intersection of black and death metal, delivering a sound that is as unrelenting as it is precise. Across the EP’s runtime, listeners can expect a storm of crushing riffs, blistering blast beats, and guttural vocals, all wrapped in a dark, menacing atmosphere.

Evil Damn’s new EP kicks off with a punishing, dark, and uncompromising sound that immediately establishes the band’s intent. The faster sections are driven by relentless blast beats, giving the music a kinetic energy that never lets up. Vocal delivery is dominated by deep, guttural death metal growls, occasionally interspersed with harsh black metal shrieks, lending the songs a layered, menacing character. Guitar riffs blend raw aggression with carefully placed melodic flourishes, adding depth and nuance without diluting the overall intensity. Stylistically, the EP is firmly anchored in the mid-1980s to early 1990s extreme metal tradition, yet it’s delivered with a modern clarity and ferocity that ensures it doesn’t feel like mere nostalgia. For fans of blackened death metal, "Eons of Horror" is a concentrated burst of dark energy—raw, precise, and unflinchingly heavy. Whenever guitar solos and lead passages emerge, they remain firmly rooted in an old-school metal tradition, emphasizing raw expression and force rather than technical flashiness. The songwriting makes effective use of varied pacing, shifting confidently between slow, mid-tempo, and high-speed passages to maintain momentum and prevent stagnation. Throughout the EP, clear traces of both classic South American extremity and the harsher North American death metal school can be heard, merging into a sound that feels equally primitive and disciplined. Every track commits fully to a weighty, aggressive approach, reinforcing the EP’s uncompromising character and its allegiance to the heavier end of the genre spectrum.

‍

Evil Damn consciously anchor their sound in the violent spirit of late ’80s and early ’90s black and death metal, merging the two into a relentlessly heavy and abrasive whole. Rather than modernising the style, the band embraces its primitive roots, channeling the raw ferocity and sinister atmosphere that defined the genre’s formative years. This old-school approach is complemented by a strong, professional production that gives the EP considerable weight without sacrificing its abrasive edge, ensuring that the aggression remains sharp and immediate. Lyrically, Eons of Horror explores familiar but effective thematic territory, drawing on imagery of cosmic dread, death, evil, and Satanism. These subjects are not treated as mere aesthetic window dressing, but serve to deepen the EP’s oppressive mood, reinforcing a sense of nihilism and looming terror throughout. The result is a release that feels cohesive in both sound and concept — a brutal homage to the genre’s origins that delivers its darkness with conviction and clarity.

What ultimately sets Eons of Horror apart is Evil Damn’s ability to balance unrestrained aggression with disciplined songwriting. Each track is carefully constructed to deliver maximum impact without descending into chaos, allowing the brutality to land with clarity and purpose. This control over structure ensures the EP remains cohesive and memorable, rather than overwhelming for its own sake. With this release, Evil Damn further solidify their position within the extreme metal underground. Eons of Horror not only reinforces their established strengths but also hints at an evolving confidence in their sound and direction. It’s a release that rewards dedicated genre devotees while remaining accessible to newcomers seeking uncompromising, old-school extremity delivered with conviction.

‍

SCORE 8/10

‍

WORDS BY SWAMPY

HomeNewsReviewsInterviewsAbout Us
© 2026 Headbangers Australia. All rights reserved