From the obscure vaults of the Swedish underground, ‘Luftuz’ by Wulkanaz emerges like a relic unearthed from frost-covered soil. The sound is grim, raw, and suffocatingly muffled, as if the entire recording was buried beneath layers of ash and dirt before being exhumed and pressed onto tape.
The production feels intentionally claustrophobic: guitars rasp through a thick, fog-like distortion while the drums pound in a distant, hollow chamber. Rather than clarity, ‘Luftuz’ thrives on obscurity and decay, evoking the sensation of listening to a forgotten rehearsal recording echoing through a damp cellar somewhere in the Scandinavian wilderness.
Vocals claw through the murk like a ritual incantation, half-drowned by the dense guitar tone yet still venomous in delivery. The riffs spiral in primitive repetition, conjuring that hypnotic trance familiar to devotees of the more occult and subterranean strains of Black Metal. Nothing here feels polished; every moment sounds deliberately corroded, suffocated, and hostile to modern production standards.
Yet within that murky veil lies the album’s power. ‘Luftuz’ does not seek accessibility; instead it immerses the listener in a bleak sonic fog, where atmosphere overtakes precision and the raw spirit of underground Black Metal reigns supreme. The muffled production almost becomes another instrument, wrapping the compositions in a shroud of ancient malice.
In the end, ‘Luftuz’ stands as a grim artifact of the underground, raw to the bone and proudly obscured in its own lo-fi mysticism: an album that sounds less recorded than summoned from somewhere deep beneath the earth.