fbpx

Select your language

Last:
TROG – “The Pre-Ectelent Monodon”: Randy Michaud’s Heavy Metal Spirit Endures
   |   
His Kingdom Suffers: Lighting the Shadows — “There’s No Light In This House” and the Music of Grief
   |   
Rottweiler Records & Broken Curfew Records: Ultimate Christmas Singles 2025
   |   
Declarations Debuts with Power: "This is the End (Ft. Ian Kelly)" and the Spirit of Restless Reinvention
   |   
When Sound Becomes a Sermon: HolyName “Three Bar Cross” – Hope Inside Metal’s Brutality
   |   
Pyphomgertum: Unmasking Death in the Heart of Mexico’s Metal Underground
   |   
Sacrificial Betrayal – “Take Risk” Manifest of Courage
   |   
Dawnbreaker – “Pactum Sanguine Novo”
   |   

News

Rottweiler Records
News
November 14, 2025

Rottweiler Records & Broken Curfew Records: Ultimate Christmas Singles 2025

As the year fades and traditions resurface, Christmas becomes a canvas for reinvention—nothing proves this more than the annual Rottweiler Records Christmas singles, a staple for fans who want emotion and intensity instead of nostalgia. In 2025, the label teams up with Broken…

More News

November 09, 2025

Dawnbreaker – “Pactum Sanguine Novo”

From the first guttural roar, Dawnbreaker’s “Pactum Sanguine Novo” (“New Covenant of Blood”) throws its mission statement into the cold, steel-tinged air: heaviness, darkness, and faith run together, bound tightly in a pact both ancient and urgent. As the sun lifts above ash and echoes, Dawnbreaker draws on the raw geology of metalcore and deathcore—each riff like tectonic plates colliding—while chilling, atmospheric passages drift like morning mist across ancient forests.
November 07, 2025

The Band JAREN Drops “Poetic”: Raising a Banner for Gen Z Faith

The opening notes of “Poetic” ring out, and it’s clear why The Band JAREN is turning heads across the Christian music scene in 2025. Riding a surge of more than 16 million career streams and viral growth on social media, this sister duo’s voice lands with the kind of honesty that pulls you in and asks you to stay awhile. On their newest single, The Band JAREN doesn’t just make music — they make a statement.
November 06, 2025

Mr. Weaverface Drops New Rock Anthem: “Identity Theft” Is Out Now

In the opening seconds of “Identity Theft” by Mr. Weaverface, a jagged guitar riff breaks in without asking permission — setting a tone that feels like a declaration, a spiritual battle cry for anyone who has felt lost, dismissed, or unsure of who they really are.

New Music

More Music

Fear Not - Crashin' Down

Some records pass by unnoticed; some leave an emotional crater. “Crashin’ Down” sits firmly in the latter. The title telegraphs an…

Nattesorg – Blackcrust

BLACKCRUST landed on September 29, 2025 via Coleiosis Records, the Davenport (Iowa) imprint explicitly dedicated to Christian media across…

Reviews

Lunatic Soul – The World…

Oct 25, 2025 Albums
Lunatic Soul – The World…
Pre-release listen: we were granted access to the full new album by Lunatic Soul, Mariusz Duda’s solo project. Titled The World…, it…

Zombie Mortician – Reanimated Corpse

Oct 21, 2025 Albums
Zombie Mortician – Reanimated Corpse
There’s a certain thrill, a delicious discomfort, when you press play on Reanimated Corpse — the latest offering from Zombie Mortician. The…

More Reviews

Fear Not - Crashin' Down

Some records pass by unnoticed; some leave an emotional crater. “Crashin’ Down” sits firmly in the latter. The title telegraphs an…

Nattesorg – Blackcrust

BLACKCRUST landed on September 29, 2025 via Coleiosis Records, the Davenport (Iowa) imprint explicitly dedicated to Christian media across…

Interviews

Artists

Lazarus Grimm

Sep 14, 2025 Artists
Lazarus Grimm
Origin: USA Year formed: 2025 Genre: Christian metalcore / rap-metal

Vials of Wrath

Sep 14, 2025 Artists
Vials of Wrath
Vials of Wrath – Atmospheric Unblack Metal from Tennessee

Wytch Hazel

Aug 23, 2025 Artists
Wytch Hazel
Origin: Lancaster, Lancashire, United Kingdom | Formed: 2011 | Genre: NWOBHM, hard rock, classic heavy metal, folk rock

Video

Radiation – “Restoration” (EP) Christian metalcore review with hope and renewal

In August 2025, Radiation released their new EP “Restoration”. With only four songs, the record plays like a miniature concept album: “Resurrection”, “Restoration (feat. Scott Stephenson)”, “Judgement”, and “Paradise”. Each piece is more than a track — it is a chapter. Together, they trace a spiritual arc from awakening to rebuilding, confrontation with truth, and communion in hope.

Radiation – Restoration EP cover art (Christian metalcore full review)At less than twenty minutes in length, “Restoration” proves that short form can carry long weight. Rather than serving as filler between albums, the EP functions as a manifesto — a statement of intent that Christian metalcore can still be visceral, intelligent, and spiritually rooted.

Why “Restoration” works

Many EPs feel like leftover tracks grouped together. Here, every movement carries narrative and theological purpose. The opener must ignite, the title track must integrate, the third must confront, the closer must invite. The result is not a random playlist but a journey. Musically, Radiation weld classic elements of metalcore — breakdowns, palm-muted chugs, melodic refrains — to a discipline of space and breath. Negative space is engineered, not accidental. Drops hit harder because silence precedes them.

In refusing to max out the limiter, the band protect the integrity of dynamics. The EP breathes, and as a result, its heaviness hits harder. This design choice lifts “Restoration” above many modern peers who equate loudness with intensity.

Track-by-track: four chapters of one arc

1) “Resurrection” — the spark of life

“Resurrection” opens with taut palm-muted riffing and an immediate blast of vocals. No long intro, no hesitation: the song bursts like a clean breath after drowning silence. The mix keeps detail intact: cymbals wash naturally, guitar mids carry grit, bass and kick carve their own lane. Lyrically, resurrection is personal before it is cosmic. The song speaks of individual awakening — the moment you know you’re alive again. As an opener, it sets the EP’s tone: raw control over sterile polish.

2) “Restoration (feat. Scott Stephenson)” — rebuild as identity

The title track forms the EP’s backbone. Muscular verses carry groove, while Scott Stephenson’s guest chorus provides melodic lift without robbing weight. A deliberate half-beat pause primes the breakdown, which lands seismic because the silence earned it. The lyric frames restoration as architecture, not cosmetics. Grace replaces structural beams, not just paint on walls. In sound and message, this is the heart of the EP — both memorable and meaningful.

3) “Judgement” — truth as light

The fiercest cut. Chugs and syncopation tease the pit, high screams rake the grid, tremolo riffs fracture tension. The final breakdown strikes surgical. Theologically, judgement is exposure, not condemnation. Light unmasks illusion, mercy refuses falsehood. Aggression here is not for its own sake: it is the sound of revelation. For many listeners, this will be the EP’s most cathartic track.

4) “Paradise” — the threshold

Instead of spectacle, the finale chooses invitation. Open chords, restrained percussion, and reflective vocals leave the door ajar. Paradise is communion, not escape. After resurrection, restoration, and judgement, the arc concludes at a threshold: you are invited to step through. The ellipsis at the end signals continuation, not closure.

Production and sound design

  • Headroom over volume: transients remain intact; drops hit harder.
  • Low-end discipline: kick and bass dance instead of colliding.
  • Guitar mids textured: riffs translate without brittle top-end.
  • Vocals built as architecture: doubles and shouts serve story, not filler.
  • Dynamic honesty: silence before breakdown multiplies impact.

Spiritual arc in lyrics

Radiation employs classic Christian imagery — resurrection, restoration, judgement, paradise — but strips it of triumphalism. Healing is surgical, truth is bright and painful, hope is relational. Lyrics voice lived experience rather than slogans. That honesty makes “Restoration” resonate beyond the church pew. Anyone who has faced fracture and longed for renewal will recognize themselves here.

Context in the metalcore scene

On a scene where many bands recycle tropes, Radiation demonstrate that Christian metalcore can still be fresh and deep. Their EP appeals to fans who crave breakdowns and to listeners who want content. It bridges aggression and spirituality without softening either. In 2025, when the genre risks over-saturation, “Restoration” stands as proof that conviction and craft still matter.

Summary

“Restoration” is a manifesto in miniature. Short in form, vast in implication. By sequencing four tracks into a spiritual arc, Radiation show how Christian metalcore can sound both heavy and meaningful. Every replay reveals more: ghost notes on the snare, hidden counter-lines, microscopic pauses before drops. This is music built for endurance, not just a one-time hit.

Save, share, support

To support the band, stream it, save it to your playlist, hit “Like,” and spread the word. Small gestures fuel momentum. Radiation’s consistency — from “Genesis” to “Restoration” — suggests more chapters are already on the horizon.

➕ Save to Playlist 👍 Like it 📌 Featured on Eternal Flames

Stream “Restoration”

▶️ Spotify  Apple Music ▶️ YouTube (EP) 

Browse the New Music section for more Christian metal and hardcore releases.

 

 

Last:
TROG – “The Pre-Ectelent Monodon”: Randy Michaud’s Heavy Metal Spirit Endures
   |   
His Kingdom Suffers: Lighting the Shadows — “There’s No Light In This House” and the Music of Grief
   |   
Rottweiler Records & Broken Curfew Records: Ultimate Christmas Singles 2025
   |   
Declarations Debuts with Power: "This is the End (Ft. Ian Kelly)" and the Spirit of Restless Reinvention
   |   
When Sound Becomes a Sermon: HolyName “Three Bar Cross” – Hope Inside Metal’s Brutality
   |   
Pyphomgertum: Unmasking Death in the Heart of Mexico’s Metal Underground
   |   
Sacrificial Betrayal – “Take Risk” Manifest of Courage
   |   
Dawnbreaker – “Pactum Sanguine Novo”
   |