Doom in Bloom Announces 30th Anniversary Lineup

Posted in Whathaveyou on March 5th, 2026 by JJ Koczan

Hard not to appreciate a fest not only celebrating its 30th anniversary, but doing so in part with the same lineup that played the first edition. The second night of Doom in Bloom Festival will feature Astral Rising, Dawn of Winter, Mirror of Deception and Naevus; indeed the same bill as back in ’96. Think about that for a minute, because it’s pretty gosh darn special.

Bands like Naevus and Mirror of Deception, Ahab and Petrified have done shows and offshoot events and Doom in Blooms before, so one expects this jubiläumsausgabe to have a strong family-reunion aspect, which is an added appeal if you get to go. Certainly that second day will be emotional — and doomed — and with Aptera‘s thrashier take and Ahab‘s deathly cast, there’s some room to expand around the core tenets of the genre as well.

From somewhere on social media:

DOOM IN BLOOM 2026 final poster sq

DOOM IN BLOOM 2026

When: April 10th – April 11th, 2026

Where: Fabrik für Kunst und Kultur e.V. (Chapel)

Festival-Tickets: https://www.eventim-light.com/de/a/624562ab5ccd725ad6ca4025/e/68e670b6d3b6dd78d7a82193

The wait is over: here’s the official flyer! 🕯️

Get ready for two days dedicated to the celebration of Doom.

We’ve chosen a location that carries a heavy legacy: The @chapelkrypta in Göppingen.

To mark the 30th anniversary of the Doom in Bloom Festival, a two-day anniversary edition will take place in Göppingen Doom City on 10 and 11 April 2026.

All the bands from the first edition are still active and will share the stage again 30 years later. The venue will be the venerable Chapel in Göppingen, where the legendary Doom Shall Rise (RIP) once took place.

Line-up on day one:

AHAB
APTERA
PETRIFIED
WELL OF SOULS

On the second day, the original line-up from 1996 will be on stage:

ASTRAL RISING
DAWN OF WINTER
MIRROR OF DECEPTION
NAEVUS

Day tickets are available at the box office.

many thanx to Fabrik für Kunst und Kultur e.V.

https://www.instagram.com/doominbloomfestival/
https://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=61587114102709

Ahab, The Coral Tombs (2023)

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Buried Treasure and the Joys of the Garden State Parkway

Posted in Buried Treasure on April 10th, 2013 by JJ Koczan

Not that it’s not something I do on the regular anyway, but there’s something even more satisfying about going record shopping when The Patient Mrs. isn’t around. I guess it’s the illusion that I’m getting away with something, though basically, it’s that: an illusion. But a couple weekends ago, as I was headed down to Philly to catch Been Obscene share a Kung Fu Necktie bill with Borracho, SuperVoid and Clamfight (review here), she was gone for a few days and I took it upon myself to make a stop off at Vintage Vinyl in Fords to pick up a few odds and ends.

If ever there was a justification for the Garden State Parkway — which is among the most overpopulated, miserable, thin-laned highways I’ve ever driven on (and I’ve driven on California’s 101,  the Masspike into Boston and I-95 all up and down the Eastern Seaboard) — it’s Vintage Vinyl. Exit 130 if you’re going southbound, as I was, it’s a destination-type shop; one worth traveling to even if you’re not necessarily driving somewhere else. Jersey has a scant few remaining, but Vintage Vinyl is the one most geared toward the heavier end of the spectrum. The metal CD section is the first thing you see after getting in the door. Awesome.

Most of what I grabbed this time through was stuff I’d reviewed by wanted a physical copy of. I’ve ranted enough about how much it annoys me to make these purchases — I suppose if someone had to be the last one to place any value whatsoever on my time, it was bound to be me — so I’ll spare that, but I was still glad to nab recent outings from Samothrace, Troubled Horse, Darkthrone, Orange Goblin and SardoniS. I’d wanted to get Royal Thunder‘s CVI and finally give it the listen I’ve felt it really deserved since I saw the band in Manhattan in February — even though their guitarist spit beer on the crowd — but decided to roll with the preceding 2010 self-titled instead.

That’s an old impulse. I remember being upwards of 10 years old, hearing a band’s song on the radio, and then buying the album before to hear where they came from. I don’t know if I’m the only one who does it, but it’s something I’ve always done. It’s a two-sided deal, because I do get to listen to the origins of a band, or at least the relative origins, but don’t get the material I want to hear. Why, when I was obviously buying a stack of discs, was I limiting myself to just one Royal Thunder CD when I could’ve easily solved the problem by getting both? I don’t know. Old habits die hard.

Fortunately, the self-titled is pretty awesome in its own right, though I think the pick of the haul might have to be Beast in the Field‘s 2009 sophomore outing, Lechuguilla. The Michigan instrumentalists hadn’t quite yet adopted the Satan-loving aesthetic of their two subsequent albums to date, 2010’s World Ending and 2011’s Lucifer, Bearer of Light, but the work itself is no less malevolent. Broken into six tracks, the 37-minute long-player is essentially one extended piece, building a huge tension throughout the first several tracks before finally landing at full impact with “Lake OF Blue Giants” and carrying a vicious lumber through the remaining two extended cuts, “Castrovalva” and “The Emperor’s Throne Room.” I got turned on to these guys last summer when I was out their way en route to Days of the Doomed II, and I have yet to regret getting ahold of one of their albums. I’ve got them all now, so they’re four for four in my book, and hopefully Lucifer, Bearer of Light has a follow-up soon.

I’d heard Mirror of Deception‘s previous outing, 2006’s Shards, and so was glad to pick up 2010’s The Smouldering Fire on the cheap with the bonus disc, and something I’ve been meaning to get as long as I’ve been meaning to get to Vintage Vinyl was My Sleeping Karma‘s last album, Soma. The purchase was bittersweet (it’s the first of their albums I’ve not been given a physical promo to review), but I was comforted by the opportunity to hear the two bonus tracks in the digipak version. First is “Interlude by Sheyk rAleph,” performed by the long-tenured German sitarist/psychedelic soundscaper Ralph Nebl, who uses Sheyk rAleph as a stage name, and second is “Glow 11,” a remix credited to Holzner & Kaleun that brings electronic beats into the melting pot of My Sleeping Karma‘s heavy psych meditations. What’s really interesting about it is neither would’ve been out of place had they been included as part of the album proper, which I guess shows just how expansive the band’s palette has become.

Of course, the subsequent gig at Kung Fu Necktie was the highlight of the night, but a bit of record shopping beforehand certainly took the bite out of the trip, there and back afterwards. And The Patient Mrs. was kind enough to not even mention it later, letting me keep my delusions of sneakiness, so really it was an all-around win however you might want to look at it.

My Sleeping Karma, “Interlude by Sheyk rAleph”

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