No Place Of Warmth
Frozen Soul
No Place of Warmth is the third studio album from Fort Worth, Texas death metal band Frozen Soul — vocalist Chad Green, guitarists Michael Munday and Chris Bonner, bassist Samantha Mobley, and drummer Matt Dennar — released on May 8, 2026 via Century Media Records. Entering the studio with no material written in advance, the band spent six weeks building eleven songs from scratch, arriving at what Century Media describes as their "most definitive and defiant record to date." Firmly rooted in classic American death metal — drawing on Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, and Carcass as primary touchstones — the album is built on the band's core formula of beefy mid-tempo riffs, two-step grooves, grinding HM-2 buzzsaw guitar tones, and Green's multi-textural, sandpaper bellow. Thematically, the album surveys the cold realities of daily life — pain, loss, and the struggle against forces that grind you down — with Green describing the central message as a choice between letting life's coldness consume you or using it as fuel to march on. The eleven tracks clock in at just 35 minutes, keeping things focused and direct.
Three high-profile guest features punctuate the album's front half: the title track opens with Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance, whose distinctive voice intertwines with Green's cavernous growl in a genuinely collaborative exchange rather than a gimmick; "Invoke War" brings in Machine Head for a slow-creeping riff assault that suits both bands naturally; and "Dreadnought" features Columbus death metal band Sanguisugabogg adding further brutality to an already crushing track. Beyond the features, standout moments include the blisteringly fast 53-second "Absolute Zero," the sinister groove-driven "Deathweaver" — the album's most philosophically ambitious track, exploring identity and the cycle of life and death — and the glacially heavy album closer "Killin' Time (Until It's Time to Kill)," which builds patiently before delivering its final devastating assault. The album leans into what Frozen Soul do best: straightforward, hook-conscious death metal that prioritizes the mosh pit and the live setting above all else.
No Place of Warmth is the third studio album from Fort Worth, Texas death metal band Frozen Soul — vocalist Chad Green, guitarists Michael Munday and Chris Bonner, bassist Samantha Mobley, and drummer Matt Dennar — released on May 8, 2026 via Century Media Records. Entering the studio with no material written in advance, the band spent six weeks building eleven songs from scratch, arriving at what Century Media describes as their "most definitive and defiant record to date." Firmly rooted in classic American death metal — drawing on Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, and Carcass as primary touchstones — the album is built on the band's core formula of beefy mid-tempo riffs, two-step grooves, grinding HM-2 buzzsaw guitar tones, and Green's multi-textural, sandpaper bellow. Thematically, the album surveys the cold realities of daily life — pain, loss, and the struggle against forces that grind you down — with Green describing the central message as a choice between letting life's coldness consume you or using it as fuel to march on. The eleven tracks clock in at just 35 minutes, keeping things focused and direct.
Three high-profile guest features punctuate the album's front half: the title track opens with Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance, whose distinctive voice intertwines with Green's cavernous growl in a genuinely collaborative exchange rather than a gimmick; "Invoke War" brings in Machine Head for a slow-creeping riff assault that suits both bands naturally; and "Dreadnought" features Columbus death metal band Sanguisugabogg adding further brutality to an already crushing track. Beyond the features, standout moments include the blisteringly fast 53-second "Absolute Zero," the sinister groove-driven "Deathweaver" — the album's most philosophically ambitious track, exploring identity and the cycle of life and death — and the glacially heavy album closer "Killin' Time (Until It's Time to Kill)," which builds patiently before delivering its final devastating assault. The album leans into what Frozen Soul do best: straightforward, hook-conscious death metal that prioritizes the mosh pit and the live setting above all else.
No Place Of Warmth
Frozen Soul
No Place of Warmth is the third studio album from Fort Worth, Texas death metal band Frozen Soul — vocalist Chad Green, guitarists Michael Munday and Chris Bonner, bassist Samantha Mobley, and drummer Matt Dennar — released on May 8, 2026 via Century Media Records. Entering the studio with no material written in advance, the band spent six weeks building eleven songs from scratch, arriving at what Century Media describes as their "most definitive and defiant record to date." Firmly rooted in classic American death metal — drawing on Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, and Carcass as primary touchstones — the album is built on the band's core formula of beefy mid-tempo riffs, two-step grooves, grinding HM-2 buzzsaw guitar tones, and Green's multi-textural, sandpaper bellow. Thematically, the album surveys the cold realities of daily life — pain, loss, and the struggle against forces that grind you down — with Green describing the central message as a choice between letting life's coldness consume you or using it as fuel to march on. The eleven tracks clock in at just 35 minutes, keeping things focused and direct.
Three high-profile guest features punctuate the album's front half: the title track opens with Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance, whose distinctive voice intertwines with Green's cavernous growl in a genuinely collaborative exchange rather than a gimmick; "Invoke War" brings in Machine Head for a slow-creeping riff assault that suits both bands naturally; and "Dreadnought" features Columbus death metal band Sanguisugabogg adding further brutality to an already crushing track. Beyond the features, standout moments include the blisteringly fast 53-second "Absolute Zero," the sinister groove-driven "Deathweaver" — the album's most philosophically ambitious track, exploring identity and the cycle of life and death — and the glacially heavy album closer "Killin' Time (Until It's Time to Kill)," which builds patiently before delivering its final devastating assault. The album leans into what Frozen Soul do best: straightforward, hook-conscious death metal that prioritizes the mosh pit and the live setting above all else.
No Place of Warmth is the third studio album from Fort Worth, Texas death metal band Frozen Soul — vocalist Chad Green, guitarists Michael Munday and Chris Bonner, bassist Samantha Mobley, and drummer Matt Dennar — released on May 8, 2026 via Century Media Records. Entering the studio with no material written in advance, the band spent six weeks building eleven songs from scratch, arriving at what Century Media describes as their "most definitive and defiant record to date." Firmly rooted in classic American death metal — drawing on Bolt Thrower, Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, and Carcass as primary touchstones — the album is built on the band's core formula of beefy mid-tempo riffs, two-step grooves, grinding HM-2 buzzsaw guitar tones, and Green's multi-textural, sandpaper bellow. Thematically, the album surveys the cold realities of daily life — pain, loss, and the struggle against forces that grind you down — with Green describing the central message as a choice between letting life's coldness consume you or using it as fuel to march on. The eleven tracks clock in at just 35 minutes, keeping things focused and direct.
Three high-profile guest features punctuate the album's front half: the title track opens with Gerard Way of My Chemical Romance, whose distinctive voice intertwines with Green's cavernous growl in a genuinely collaborative exchange rather than a gimmick; "Invoke War" brings in Machine Head for a slow-creeping riff assault that suits both bands naturally; and "Dreadnought" features Columbus death metal band Sanguisugabogg adding further brutality to an already crushing track. Beyond the features, standout moments include the blisteringly fast 53-second "Absolute Zero," the sinister groove-driven "Deathweaver" — the album's most philosophically ambitious track, exploring identity and the cycle of life and death — and the glacially heavy album closer "Killin' Time (Until It's Time to Kill)," which builds patiently before delivering its final devastating assault. The album leans into what Frozen Soul do best: straightforward, hook-conscious death metal that prioritizes the mosh pit and the live setting above all else.
