
The album was self-produced by Iron Kingdom with mixing done by Andy Boldt and mastering by Greg Reely (Overkill, Fear Factory, 3 Inches of Blood). This upcoming album sees a lot more music content coming from lead guitarist Megan Merrick and having drummer Max Friesen (ex-Ophelia Falling) has added another layer of ideas giving this latest offering a new perspective than the previous ones, while maintaining the shredding heavy metal thunder fans have come to love. Since their conception, they have toured around the world, keeping old-school vibes alive. Since no one else seemed to be doing it, they decided to play metal the way it used to be played in the 70s and 80s while transporting listeners into unique, fantastic worlds. Iron Kingdom set out to create music in a style of metal that seemed to have been forgotten when they were kids. A fate that twists Chaos and Law, and leaves Elric in the grip of nightmares.” The sword ‘consumes’ the souls of those who it strikes down and feeds the energy into Elric, who needs it to survive.

It tells the tale of the legendary sentient sword ‘Stormbringer’ and its relationship to Elric. We rewrote the tune to be what it is today. In late 2020, during the Covid-19 lockdown, we took a second look at what was to become ‘In The Grip Of Nightmares’. “We started writing this song during the ‘On The Hunt’ sessions back in 2019, however, the song had a different energy than the rest of the album so we decided it would be best to come back to it at a later date. Fast and driving, it is also melodic with plenty of solos and focus on the leads. Bound together by fate, Elric consumes the souls of those he slays with Stormbringer and this dramatic relationship is conveyed through progressive traditional heavy metal in the vein of Helloween and Fates Warning.

The single is about the sword Stormbringer from the Michael Moorcock books Elric of Melnibonè Series. The album is not a concept album, but they exhibit a passion for fantasy themes and pays homage to tales woven by acclaimed authors.
#Rules of prey book used movie#
The otherwise terrible 2012 slasher movie Smiley has a pretty interesting take on the concept, its central killer has a blank face that it carved features into to create its trademark grin.Canada’s NWOTHM outfit Iron Kingdom is releasing their fifth studio album “The Blood Of Creation” this fall and in advance have the melodic new single “In The Grip Of Nightmares” ready for your consumption. Multiple horror films have used the concept as the film's primary gimmick.
#Rules of prey book used series#
Tons of sci-fi series feature beings that steal the faces of others, often complete with a blank facade. Doctor Who has featured plenty of aliens that lacked some or all of their features. Stephen King's The Stand introduced Randal Flagg, a being who often appears in dreams with a black hole for a face. It's most often used to make an otherwise banal human antagonist a bit more threatening.

There aren't many works of fiction that used the Blank in the way that Trumbo did. It's one of the most venomous and unpleasant pieces of cinema ever put to the screen, and it's part of what made the image of a faceless human so nightmarish. Joe lives out an indeterminate lifespan, numbed to reality by constant painkilling drugs and driven mad by the fate worse than death he must now endure. When they refuse, he requests that they kill him. He requests his superior officers put him on display at a freak show to demonstrate the horrors of war.
#Rules of prey book used code#
Joe finds that he can communicate by tapping out Morse code with his head. Joe's face is atomized, and in Trumbo's own 1971 film adaptation of the work, all the audience can see of him is the featureless white box that covers his caved-in skull. He can't move, he can't perceive the world around him. Joe goes off to World War I and is hit by an artillery shell. Dalton Trumbo's 1938 anti-war novel Johnny Got His Gun tells the tale of a young soldier counterintuitively named Joe.

Lovecraft is far from the only voice in the Blank as a trope, but the next big step forward for the concept's use in horror is a bit more disturbing than eldritch abominations. It's a common theme, but it's not the only one. Even some depictions of Nyarlathotep depict him with a writhing tentacle where a face should go. The Night-guant is a winged dream monster with a blank slate underneath its curved horns. Hastur isn't even Lovecraft's only faceless creature. One of Hastur's many forms is a yellow-clad humanoid who bears a blank face, helpfully shrouded by a tall hood. That figure is the half-brother of Cthulhu, Hastur, AKA The Yellow King. The stranger and his featureless face became the inspiration for one of Lovecraft's iconic creatures.
