Mixtape “The Deathbed Sessions” Out May 31st Via UNFD

Ahead of revealing the full force of their mixtape this Friday, Cursed Earth are unleashing one more brutal taste of "The Deathbed Sessions" in the form of new single "Tyranny Forever". Featuring ferocious guest vocals from Venom Prison's Larissa Stupar,"Tyranny Forever" was written in collaboration with Make Them Suffer frontman Sean Hermanis and was the first track to spawn from the mixtape.

Pitting politically-charged lyrics over Cursed Earth's signature brand of blistering metal, "Tyranny Forever" epitomises the scathing tone of "The Deathbed Sessions". The track is now available online here alongside previously released tracks "Fear" (ft. Matt Honeycutt) and "Torch" (ft. Joel Birch).

Cursed Earth guitarist and general mastermind Kieran Molloy explains that the track is a sharp rebuke at British colonisation in Western Australia, which specifically resulted in atrocities including the Pinjarra Massacre and Rottnest concentration camp – a prison and labour facility which incarcerated nearly 4000 Indigenous people between 1838 and 1931.

"It's also a reflection on the devastating impact the invasion has had on WA's landscape and a celebration of local hero Yagan of the Noongar people", Kieran adds.

Ahead of revealing the full force of their mixtape this Friday, Cursed Earth are unleashing one more brutal taste of "The Deathbed Sessions" in the form of new single "Tyranny Forever". Featuring ferocious guest vocals from Venom Prison's Larissa Stupar,"Tyranny Forever" was written in collaboration with Make Them Suffer frontman Sean Hermanis and was the first track to spawn from the mixtape.

Pitting politically-charged lyrics over Cursed Earth's signature brand of blistering metal, "Tyranny Forever" epitomises the scathing tone of "The Deathbed Sessions". The track is now available online here alongside previously released tracks "Fear" (ft. Matt Honeycutt) and "Torch" (ft. Joel Birch).

Cursed Earth guitarist and general mastermind Kieran Molloy explains that the track is a sharp rebuke at British colonisation in Western Australia, which specifically resulted in atrocities including the Pinjarra Massacre and Rottnest concentration camp – a prison and labour facility which incarcerated nearly 4000 Indigenous people between 1838 and 1931.

"It's also a reflection on the devastating impact the invasion has had on WA's landscape and a celebration of local hero Yagan of the Noongar people", Kieran adds.

Krijg het laatste FrontView Magazine nieuws in je Facebook nieuwsoverzicht:

More info
More about