Baelfyr — Empowered by Hatred Review

Rising Blackened British heavyweights, Baelfyr unleashed their colossal new EP, “Empowered by Hatred,” on August 8th, 2025, and promoted by SaN PR. A dynamic and unflinching EP—rich in atmosphere, heavy in tone, and packed with lyrical weight.

Baelfyr, Empowered by Hatred Review: This review will evaluate every aspect of the album, from its intricate musical composition to its production. Our analysis will provide valuable insights to help you determine if this album is worth adding to your collection.

The First Three Sins, The Summary

The First Sin, The Strings/Keys: A twin-guitar assault: one conjures oppressive atmosphere, the other delivers hammering riffs, bass coils beneath—forming the ritual’s sonic spine. The Second Sin, The Vocals: Shifts between guttural depth and shrieking anguish, each phrase steeped in emotional devastation. A true invocation, not mere exclamation.  The Third Sin—The Percussions: The drums are powered by a maiden, channelling restraint into power. Her groove-infused cadence builds tension, guiding the ceremony with precision and pulse.

The Fourth Sin, Overall Discussion

The Processional Curse Begins

The moment the play button is engaged, the initial hymn, At the Mercy of a Vain God, immediately ushers the listener into a solemn procession—slow, deliberate, and drenched in contempt. The guitars chant, the drums toll, and vocals summon the void.

As this foundational opening hymn transitions, a composition of formidable, intricate weight emerges, a progressive onslaught designed to confront and engulf the listener. The subsequent six hymns maintain this unwavering intensity. It possesses the listener’s soul with its dark devilmanship and instrumental composition—arranged to perfection—without fault—utterly flawless. At the same time, taking the listener on a lyrical journey, steeped in mental health, abuse, and humanity’s treatment of the world.

Sonic Alchemy: Raw Power and Clarity

Baelfyr’s audio production strikes a balance between raw power and clarity. It avoids the muddiness of lo-fi recording but shuns the sterile polish of overt gloss. Each sonic element is afforded space to breathe. The guitars command the forefront, their presence undeniable. Vocals reside in a cavernous sonic space, while the drums possess an earthy, grounded quality. There’s no artifice, no studio veneer; instead the listener experiences an authentic tone.

Twin Guitars as Ceremonial Weapons

The instrumental approach eschews the excess of modern metal, shredded solos or hyper-fast double-bass drumming. Baelfyr opts for a weighty, rhythmically driven sound that feels both ancient and inexorable. Imagine the deliberate pace of early death-doom infused with a chilling metal atmosphere.

Central to the instrumental composition are the twin guitars, functioning like ceremonial weapons of doom. Harry Mills
and Tom Mawbey riffs are chunky, their pace moderate, and their primary purpose is to build an oppressive atmosphere. Melodic elements are employed with great economy, serving to deepen the pervasive sense of gloom rather than brighten it. The guitar tone is dense, almost palpable, and the shifts between riffs feel ceremonial rather than overtly technical. Zak Banson-Noond’s bass work is subtle but essential. It forms a bedrock for the guitar riffs, providing a low-end pulse that adds weight without clutter.

Together, they establish the ceremonial twin-guitar assault—one conjuring oppressive atmosphere, the other completing the doom-laden structure with deliberate, hammering riffs. Zak bass provides the low-end pulse.

Baelfyr Shot
The Ritual Heartbeat and Vocal Invocation

Lorraine Stavesdrumming prioritizes ritualistic rhythm over ostentatious display. Her performance is precise, groove-infused, and emotionally paced. She builds tension through restraint, allowing the guitars and vocals to guide the narrative while she orchestrates the ceremonial cadence. Allan Thomson’s vocals stand as a significant fruit of art. His performance transcends mere guttural exclamations; he artfully manipulates pitch and tone, imbuing each utterance with profound emotional depth. 

Staves’ ritual heartbeat of the band—precise, groove-infused, tension-building. Allan’s delivery is fierce yet remarkably varied, a voice that speaks not only of rage but of profound spiritual devastation.

The Fruit of Art: A Statement of Sonic Consecration

Empowered by Hatred by Baelfyr is a fruit of art statement. Its powerful, substantial sound guarantees an immediate visceral reaction, compelling headbanging from the very first moment. This is blackened death metal distilled to its potent essence, stripped of extraneous elements, steeped in a compelling groove, and consecrated in an all-encompassing atmosphere and doom.

Closing

As Empowered by Hatred reaches its final moment, we offer sincere thanks to SaN PR for granting us the privilege to witness and review Baelfyr’s sonic ritual. Now, we descend into the final three sins—closing this ceremony with symbolic reflection and editorial reverence.

The Fifth Sin, The Memorabilia

For me, Baelfyr’s Empowered By Hatred delivers a no-nonsense brand of blackened death—no solos, no frills, just relentless, crushing intensity. This is the kind of record you reach for when you need a serious jolt of energy, a sonic wake-up call to banish apathy.

Lorraine Staves’ drumming is a major highlight, the ritual heartbeat of the record. Eschewing flash for primal drive, her steady, deliberate strikes anchor the chaos and fuel the dark energy. She doesn’t perform—she conjures, laying the bedrock for everything that follows. At the same time, those driven riffs, pulsing drum beats, and the vocals are highlights of sonic memorabilia.

Baelfyr — Empowered by Hatred Review

The Sixth Sin, The Artwork

This artwork doesn’t just announce itself, it erupts. The robed figure, head consumed in flame or smoke, feels like a priest of annihilation mid-ritual, while the serpents coil and strike like manifestations of wrath or divine judgment. It’s a visual liturgy of torment and power.

The Seventh Sin, Disrelish

There is nothing to dislike. Empowered by Hatred stands as a faultless invocation—relentless, emotionally charged, and sonically consecrated. Thus, we conclude this review not with critique, but with reverence. We encourage you to explore more from Baelfyr, whose artistry burns with ritual intent, and to follow SaN PR, whose support continues to elevate underground voices into the ceremonial spotlight.

The Hymns

01. At The Mercy Of A Vain God
02. Innocence Defiled
03. The Consequence Of Endless Expansion
04. Under a Starless Sky
05. Rust and Dust
06. Evil Incarnate
07. Empowered By Hatred

Baelfyr

Harry Mills — Guitar
Tom Mawbey — Guitars
Zak Banson-Noond — Bass
Allan Thomson — Vocals
Lorraine Staves — Drums

Hear The Music