Product Details
- An MVD Exclusive
- SKU: BR034P
- Format: LP
- UPC: 738553512724
- Street Date: 07/10/20
- PreBook Date: 06/05/20
- Label: Boris Records »
- Genre: Metal
- Run Time: 38:24 mins
- Number of Discs: 1
- Audio: STEREO
- Year of Production: 2019
- Region Code: 0
- Box Lot: 50
- Territory: WORLD
- Language: English
Cast & Crew
- Director:
Product Assets
Rotting Kingdom - A Deeper Shade Of Sorrow (Purple, Pink Swirl Vinyl)
The second offering of titanic, sorrowful death doom, summoned from shadows deep below.
- List Price: $25.99
- Your Price: $25.99
- In Stock: [{"available":"0"}]
You must login to place orders.
While the concept for Rotting Kingdom originated in 2012, the band formed in 2016 and is a melodic death doom quintet. It is comprised of members of various other Kentucky-based metal acts, who have all been friends for years and grew up together performing in other projects. Playing in a death doom style, the thematic focus of the band is the passage of time, loss, death, and the beauty that arises from the interstitial space of the three. The band released a critically acclaimed, self-titled EP in late 2017 and made limited live appearances. Spending the balance of 2018 and early 2019 on writing new material, Rotting Kingdom present an anguished powerhouse of emotive fury with their debut full-length record, "A Deeper Shade of Sorrow."
Media
Track Listing
|
|
Bonus Materials
- Includes 18x24 poster of the gorgeous cover art.
Sales Points
- Doom Death for fans of Mournful Congregation, Ahab and Hooded Menace. Limited to 150 copies.
Press Quotes
- it's a monolith of death-doom both churning with pissed-off energy and undulating slowly with a devilishly methodical burn. It feels neither entirely human nor machine, some kind of cyborgian blend of hard-hitting mechanical groove with flesh-and-bone riffage.
—Andrew Rothmund, Invisible Oranges
A Deeper Shade of Sorrow, Rotting Kingdom unveil some new breed of monstrous, deeply pained and twice-as-devastating approach to mixing the psychopathic carnage of death metal with the implacable pathos of doom.
—Dutch Pearce, Decibel Magazine