Highgate - Prophecies of Eternal Horror (2026) Review

Despite having been around for a little more than two decades, Kentucky’s sludge / doom metal trio Highgate have never entered my radar and their fourth full-length album, Prophecies of Eternal Horror, is the introduction work of the band for me. With a self-titled debut released as early as 2008, and 13 years since the previous record, Survival, these guys are no newcomers to the ominous sound of sludge nihilism. Latest work endorses the ugliness of urban reality over any kind of elegance, it has the grit of the street and a confrontational attitude that bears the scars of bands like Noothgrush and Grief, topped with criticism on systemic decay, control and decadence.

On Prophecies of Eternal Horror, there are five, riff-driven tracks mostly moving at snail pace, following a recipe rather simple but tested. Slow-burn repetition is used as a weapon and constantly exerts pressure on top of explicitly painful, high-pitched screams a la Eyehategod, aiming for an experience as uncomfortable as dragging yourself through day to day in the modern city life. The record deliberately lacks any sense of atmosphere often found in other forms of doom metal, and trades it for a stripped-down, corrosive texture that crawls and scratches the skin as it progresses. Highgate are friends of monotony, sticking to simplistic riff structures that lay on the genre’s basics. 

Paradoxically, it’s quite a listenable record despite the raw production, as each and every note gets enough exposure and there’s discernible separation between instruments that allows for the space necessary to avoid drowning the compositions. The background presence of the bass is essential, and the mixing gives emphasis on the raspy vocal work, which is one of the sharper elements to get through on the album. Lyrically, themes of immediate, tangible horrors of reality like war, class conflict and religious fundamentalism, are brought forth without much metaphorical cushioning. Prophecies of Eternal Horror is blunt music-wise and text-wise, as Highgate lack the subtlety and are proud of it.

After a gloomy acoustic guitar intro, the nine-minute opening track “Terraforming Hell” fuels riffing that advances languidly like a tired horse on an endless path, as the vocals maneuver at the same rhythm as the slow guitars. It’s one of the few moments that Highgate play a little bit faster in the middle part of the piece, which makes up for an initial slight diversity before diving back to the album’s overall inevitability of doom. Both “Death Comes” and “Deceiver” maintain cyclical moodiness, while the band turns sinister on “At Paranoia’s Poison Door”, which is more evidently charged in terms of lyrics, and looks into the neighborhood of blackened doom trouble.

Narration that channels anxieties of authoritarian control open the last track “The Writhing Dawn”, which doesn’t get any faster or brighter across its nine minutes of length. Rhetoric flows naturally with Highgate’s music, even if it never over performs, keeping the pace low and the theatrics even lower. Prophecies of Eternal Horror resonates well with bleakness and depletion, keeping a clear identity that you can recognize quickly when pressing play. It doesn’t really escalate at any point except maybe for a couple of instances, but that’s also the justified mentality of the band. Fans of barren doom / sludge of helplessness will appreciate this.

Release: March 27th, 2026 | HPGD Productions
Rating: 3.5 out of 5

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