Anoxide – Morals & Dogma Review

Anoxide is a death metal act from the UK. On August 9th, 2024, Anoxide released their debut album, “Morals & Dogma,” which was released through Ghastly Music and promoted through The Metallist PR.
The First Three Sins, The Summary
The Fourth Sin, Overall Discussion
As the listener embarks on the album, they are immediately drawn into the progressive instrumental and guttural vocal introduction of the opening piece, Simulacrum. This sets the stage for an immersive journey to captivate and keep the audience engaged.
Each of the remaining seven pieces, including the opening and second pieces, Indoctrinated, challenges the listener to engage with profound themes of societal decay, misinformation, and human folly. This intellectual stimulation is vital to the album’s appeal, ensuring the audience feels intellectually engaged and stimulated.
“Simulacrum: Explores identity construction in a media-saturated world, misinformation’s influence, and the effect of marketing and divisive media. Tear Down Their Citadels: About the inescapable cycles of systemic corruption within society. Age of Austerity: A grim portrayal of socio-economic disparity and the devastating effects of neoliberal policies on the working class and marginalised communities.
The Ceaseless March: Describes a dystopian future where humanity is reduced to a nomadic existence, scavenging for survival under oppressive control, inequality, and resistance to subjugation. An Old Foe Emerges: Depicts the resurgence of far-right ideologies and the cyclical nature of human conflict. These Walls Shall Crumble: Reflects on the inevitable decline of empires due to resource exploitation and societal neglect. To Starve in Decadence: A lamentation on humanity’s inherent brutality and the perpetual cycle of suffering and inequality.”
This London band, Anoxide, unleashes this brutal -yet complex death metal with complex song structures and thought-provoking lyrics upon the listener’s ears and soul. Moral and Dogma is a fifty-minute, relentless onslaught of aggression. Combining intricate guitar riffs that drive the music, pounding drums that shake the foundation of the music and guttural and snarling vocals that tear through the music and lyrics like something escaping from the pits of hell.
The production of Morals and Dogma is a testament to Anoxide‘s unwavering dedication to delivering high-quality music. The impeccable sound engineering ensures that every musical element is distinctly audible, from the subtlest tones to the powerful beats, intricate riffs, and resonating cymbals. This pristine audio quality enriches the listener’s experience, allowing them to fully immerse themselves in the album’s artistry and musical intricacies.
As Moral and Dogma processes my ears and soul, which is a good thing—right? Anoxide plays extreme metal that’s difficult to pinpoint—brutal death? Progressive/technical death? At the same time, Morals and Dogma plays like some Clive Barker novel, while the pages provide the listener with this barrage of brutal and progressive/technical death metal, all combined into one; each song tells a story that merges into one book/play-through.
But Gojira, Opeth, and Meshuggah fans will feel at home with Anoxide and their Moral and Dogma. Drawing inspiration from these influential bands, Anoxide has crafted a unique sound that pays homage to the extreme metal genre while pushing its boundaries.
The album ends with the ten-minute closing piece, To Starve in Decadence. This closing piece features all brutal -yet complex death metal with complex song structures, instrumentation and devilmanship from the first eight pieces. It adds occasional clean, haunting passages to create a dynamic and immersive sound at the right moment. The song and album close with a short acoustic outro.
We want to thank The Metallist PR for letting us review Anoxide and their Morals & Dogma album. We will wrap it up by discussing the final three sins and concluding the review.
The Fifth Sin, The Memorabilia

The Sixth Sin, The Artwork
The Seventh Sin, Disrelish
Anoxide
Alex Houlder — Guitar
Michael Heraghty — Drums
Jack Taylor — Bass
Chris Butterworth — Vocals