The life and career of pioneering heavy metal frontman Paul Di’Anno, the powerhouse voice heard on Iron Maiden’s early albums, will be celebrated in the forthcoming documentary, Di’Anno: Iron Maiden’s Lost Singer, to be released by Cleopatra Entertainment this summer.
In a strikingly raw and intimate film, director Wes Orshoski captures the late singer riding an emotional rollercoaster toward the end of his life. Featuring appearances by James Hetfield(Metallica), Gene Simmons (Kiss) Maiden’s Steve Harris and members of Exodus, Slayer, Megadeth, Overkill and Sepultura, the film chronicles how two Iron Maiden fans encounter Di’Anno at the lowest point of his life and then set out to restore his health and relaunch his career.
Wheelchair-bound since the mid-2010s, Di’Anno’s health nosedived during the Covid-19 pandemic, when those two fans launched a crowdfunding campaign which ultimately led to him relocating to Croatia, where – through the help of those fans and doctors – he made a dramatic turnaround while running out of money, reuniting with his former Maiden bandmates, and falling in love. Eventually he makes a heroic and drama-filled return to the stage. All of this is captured in Di’Anno: Iron Maiden’s Lost Singer, which Orshoski began shooting in 2017.
“For years there wasn’t much to capture,” says Orshoski, whose credits include Lemmy, a study of Motörhead frontman Lemmy Kilmister and The Damned: Don’t You Wish That We Were Dead. “Paul was waiting for surgeries that doctors in the U.K. would not green-light. He was in an incredibly dark place. But once he got to Croatia, fans and doctors gave him the hope he was desperately searching for. It was beautiful to witness. I wanted to make a film that was unlike any rock doc you’ve ever seen. And in the end, I think we got there.”
One of icons of the New Wave of British Heavy Metal scene of the late 1970s and early 1980s, London-born Di’Anno helped launch Iron Maiden around the world, appearing on two of the most foundational metal albums ever released: Iron Maiden’s 1980 self-titled debut and the celebrated follow-up, Killers, released in 1981. In one of the most epic sagas in metal history, Di’Anno left Maiden in 1981 and was replaced by Bruce Dickinson, leaving metal fans around the world to debate which line-up and which singer was/is better. It’s a debate that continues to this day, almost 50 years later.
Orshoski finished work on the film (which was shot in England, Croatia, Brazil and the United States) shortly before Di’Anno’s death at 66 in October 2023. Di’Anno: Iron Maiden’s Lost Singer has been screening at European film festivals and will be released worldwide on both streaming services and on Home Entertainment DVD and BLU RAY formats.
The official Trailer can be viewed here:
About Cleopatra Entertainment:
Cleopatra Entertainment is an Austin, Texas – based multimedia company founded in 2015 by Cleopatra Records head Brian Perera. Recent notable films in release include the Film Festival darling Vampire Zombies From Space, Beyond Trainspotting: The World Of Irvine Welsh documentary film, The Japanese Sci-Fi hit Shin Ultraman, The Tubular Bells: 50th Anniversary Tour, Glenn Danzig’s critically-acclaimed horror film Death Rider In The House Of Vampires and the award-winning biopic Street Survivors: The True Story Of The Lynyrd Skynyrd Plane Crash. For more information about Cleopatra Entertainment, please contact VP/General Manager Tim Yasui, tim@cleorecs.com or (310) 526-7210
Swiss hard rock / heavy metal force THE ORDER proudly announce the release of their new studio album “Empires”, due out on March 27th, 2026 via Massacre Records on Digipak CD, Black Vinyl LP and digital formats.
To mark the announcement, the band have unveiled the album’s first single and official video, “Fight For Your Rights”, a powerful and uncompromising statement that sets the tone for what is shaping up to be the most focused and mature release in THE ORDER’s career.
With “Fight For Your Rights”, THE ORDER deliver a song driven by urgency, rebellion and resistance, reflecting the album’s overarching themes of power, manipulation and the inevitable fall of empires. The accompanying video underlines the song’s intensity and message, making it a perfect first chapter in the “Empires” story.
Musically and lyrically, “Empires” brings together nearly 20 years of the band’s history, reconnecting with the political sharpness and raw energy of their acclaimed debut “Son Of Armageddon” while sounding more relevant and forceful than ever. Produced by V.O. Pulver at Little Creek Studios in Switzerland, the album delivers massive riffs, strong melodies and an unmistakable hard rock / heavy metal backbone.
Alongside the album announcement, THE ORDER also share an important piece of news: frontman Gianni Pontillo has officially joined legendary Scottish rock band NAZARETH as their new lead singer and will hit the road with them already in February.
Most importantly for fans of THE ORDER, Gianni remains a full-time member of THE ORDER, continuing to front the band and being fully involved in all future recordings and activities. While some live plans for 2026 may require minor adjustments, THE ORDER remain very much alive, active and committed to celebrating their upcoming 20th anniversary with selected shows and a special setlist spanning their entire career.
“We are incredibly proud of our brother Gianni and very happy for him,” the band comment. “At the same time, The Order will continue stronger than ever.”
“Empires” track listing
Empires
Fight For Your Rights
Warriors
Thieves In The Night
Living For The Nightlife
Wherever I Go
The Last Call
Of Martyrs And Tyrants
The Bonehead’s Back – Promises And Illusions
THE ORDER are: Gianni Pontillo – Vocals Bruno Spring – Guitars Alain Schwaller – Bass Mauro «Tschibu» Casciero – Drums
Distorted Reflection have revealed their second lyric video “3000 A.D.” out from their upcoming second album “Doom Zone”. The most essential thing in the third millennium is to stay human.
Distorted Reflection was formed in August 2022 by Kostas Sal (ex-Sorrows Path) to pursue a heavier vision of the doom metal genre. The band maintains a low-profile approach, yet their first full length album (Doom Rules Eternally-2024) received significant radio airplay, positive reviews and decent sales.
“Doom Zone” will be released on February 27 via German Iron Shield Records. Tracklist as follows:
1) 3000 A.D. 2) My Second Father 3) Gates Of Paranoia 4) Love On Earth 5) Asphyxiating 6) Certain Death 7) Diminished 8) Tower Of Dreams 9) Forecourt To Death 10) The Final Attempt 11) Morbid Reality
Jack Starr: Guitar Solo on “3000 A.D.” Kostas Sal: Guitar, Vocals Vangelis Yal: Bass, Synth, Backing Vocals Thomas Zen: Drums Cover Artwork, CD Artwork and Logo Artwork by Tomas Arfert Recorded, Mixed and Mastered by Vangelis Yal at Fragile Studio
What do you get when you combine punk rock influences with heavy melodic rock? KISSING KAOS is born. And it was born kicking. Dive into “Chaos Inside,” a raw, unrelenting track that captures the thrill of surrendering to life’s wild, unpredictable ride. Heavy melodic guitars rip through an unforgettable, massive sing-along chorus built for pure adrenaline. This is the sound of letting go from a band delivering chaos you can’t resist singing along to. Produced by Andy Reilly (UFO, Bruce Dickinson, Cradle of Filth) at Muse Productions in Atlanta, GA.
Join the premiering here:
After parting ways with his former band Asphalt Valentine, singer Joe Flynt began crafting heavier and more powerful songs. Drawing from a wide range of influences, Joe wanted to write songs that were melodic, full of energy and that could bridge the gap between old and new school bands. He quickly recruited Asphalt Valentine drummer Brian Jung after Brian heard the new material. Guitarist Jon Langsburg was recommended by producer Andy Reilly because of his broad musical influences, stage experience and technical abilities. Rounding out the lineup is bassist Chris Taylor of the band Kickin Valentina. Initially, Chris was just going to help with a couple music videos but loved the music so much, he ended up joining the band, co-writing a few songs and playing on the rest of the album.
Kissing Kaos’ debut album will be released later this year.
Lineup: Joe Flynt – vocals Brian Jung – drums Jon Langsburg – guitars Chris Taylor – bass
CRIPPLED BLACK PHOENIX are announcing their new album Sceaduhelm with a new video for its lead single “Ravenettes”. One of the first songs written for Sceaduhelm, “Ravenettes” establishes the album’s emotional framework. Built on repetition, restraint and controlled momentum, the song captures a state of psychological vigilance, where suppressed memories resurface without warning and avoidance proves brief.
Sceaduhelm comes out April 17th on Season of Mist.
“Ravenettes” frames trauma as cyclical rather than resolved, returning again and again as a glitch in the timeline. The song’s stripped-back construction and insistent rhythmic pulse mirror the sense of inevitability by favoring tension over release. Vocalist Belinda Kordic remains measured and urgent, carrying the song’s unease without exaggeration. Within the wider context of Sceaduhelm, “Ravenettes” introduces the album’s inward focus on endurance, emotional erosion, and the quiet violence of repetition, setting the foundation for what follows…
The official music video for “Ravenettes” was produced in collaboration with 9LITER FILMY, an audiovisual production collective, who are recognized for cinematic restraint and emphasis on mood-driven storytelling. Known for work that favors atmosphere, repetition and visual tension over linear narrative, 9LITER FILMY’s approach mirrors the song’s exploration of memory as disruption rather than closure.
Tracklist
One Man Wall of Death (04:14)
Ravenettes (04:22)
Things Start Falling Apart (05:21)
No Epitaph / The Precipice (08:30)
The Void (03:49)
Hollows End (04:26)
Dropout (03:48)
Vampire Grave (06:24)
Colder and Colder (04:56)
Under the Eye (07:07)
Tired to the Bone (04:50)
Beautiful Destroyer (08:33) Full runtime: 1:06:22
CRIPPLED BLACK PHOENIX are approaching a new threshold with Sceaduhelm, an album that withdraws from outward spectacle and turns instead toward interior collapse, exhaustion, and moral attrition. Severe, restrained, and emotionally exposed, the record presents itself not as a dramatic statement but as a slow accumulation of unease. Where earlier works often grappled with collective trauma or historical violence, Sceaduhelm listens to what lingers afterward: fatigue, memory, complicity, and the quiet weight of survival. The result is a unified emotional landscape rather than a narrative concept, marked by repetition, patience, and unresolved tension.
Crippled Black Phoenix was formed in 2004 by multi-instrumentalist and songwriter Justin Greaves, initially conceived as a fluid musical project rather than a fixed band. Emerging from Greaves’ post-Iron Monkey creative reset, the project was built around collaboration, instability, and a refusal of rigid identity. From the outset, Crippled Black Phoenix positioned itself as a voice for the marginalised and dispossessed, whether human or animal, individual or collective. This ethical undercurrent has remained constant throughout the project’s evolution, shaped in close creative partnership with vocalist and lyricist Belinda Kordic, whose role has extended far beyond performance into the wider artistic and conceptual framework of the band.
The band’s early releases established a reputation for long-form compositions, cinematic pacing, and emotional gravity. Albums such as A Love of Shared Disasters and The Resurrectionists introduced a sound rooted in repetition and slow transformation, drawing as much from post-rock and folk traditions as from metal’s sense of weight and endurance. With I, Vigilante in 2012, Crippled Black Phoenix reached a wider audience, refining their songwriting into more direct structures without abandoning their commitment to atmosphere and tension. The album remains a reference point within their catalogue, both for its accessibility and its bleak emotional clarity.
Subsequent releases resisted consolidation. White Light Generator and Bronze expanded the band’s textural range, incorporating harsher dynamics, sharper political commentary, and a more confrontational production approach. Great Escape functioned as both retrospective and re-contextualization, drawing together material from various sessions into a fractured but revealing whole. Throughout this period, the band’s identity remained deliberately unstable, with shifting lineups and an ongoing refusal to settle into a predictable formula.
In 2020, Ellengæst marked another pivot. Built around the use of multiple guest vocalists alongside Kordic, the album explored themes of death, memory, and historical residue, earning recognition for its cohesion and emotional impact. Rather than treating guest contributions as novelty, Crippled Black Phoenix used contrasting voices to deepen the album’s sense of dislocation and grief. The pandemic-era context further sharpened the record’s introspective tone, even as live activity was forced into suspension.
That inward momentum continued with Banefyre, a record concerned explicitly with persecution, inequality, and the violence inflicted on those deemed different by society. Drawing on historical and symbolic imagery, the album balanced outrage with ritual, placing acts of oppression within a broader continuum of human cruelty. Its production embraced rawness and abrasion, reinforcing the band’s long-standing commitment to evolution over repetition. Banefyre reaffirmed Crippled Black Phoenix as a project unwilling to offer comfort or resolution, even as it expanded their sonic and thematic reach.
Sceaduhelm emerges from this lineage as a narrowing of focus rather than a departure. Written primarily between 2023 and 2025, the album developed through uncertainty, self-questioning, and prolonged doubt. The process was deliberately fluid, allowing compositions to remain open and emotionally vulnerable until late in production. Justin Greaves remains the sole composer of the music, with lyrics written after the fact and assigned to voices according to emotional fit rather than hierarchy. Belinda Kordic, Ryan Patterson, and Justin Storms share vocal duties, each occupying a distinct but aligned psychological register.
Lyrically and thematically, Sceaduhelm is preoccupied with exhaustion as a condition rather than a moment, with time framed not as a healer but as an eroding force. Songs address burnout, grief, surveillance, institutional violence, and damaged intimacy, often blurring the line between the personal and the political. Musically, the album favours restraint over release, employing repetition, minimalism, and slow escalation to sustain tension without catharsis. Recorded across multiple locations and mixed with deliberate austerity, the record resists warmth, clarity serving discomfort rather than solace.
Within Crippled Black Phoenix’s wider catalogue, Sceaduhelm does not seek to resolve previous narratives or replicate past high points. Instead, it documents a moment of exposure and endurance, listening closely to what remains when spectacle fades and outrage exhausts itself. It stands as a severe, human record, concerned less with declaration than with persistence, and affirms once more the band’s refusal to stand still, soften its gaze, or offer easy answers.
Things are looking better than ever for GENERATION STEEL! The quintet from Wetzlar/Germany, has repositioned itself on all fronts and is literally blowing a storm with its upcoming third studio album.
With guitar wizard and songwriter Thilo Herrmann, who made his debut in 1985 on the FAITHFUL BREATH classic “Skol” and has written heavy metal history with RISK (“Ratman” a.o.), RUNNING WILD (“Black Hand Inn,” “Masquerade,” a.o.) and GRAVE DIGGER (“Ballads Of A Hangman,” a.o.), band leader and guitarist Jack the Riffer now has a living legend at his side.
There has also been a change behind the microphone, with Swedish singer Mike Stark, who currently also sings with the Argentine band FEANOR and the Swedish formation STORMBURNER, now setting the tone. His powerful, high-pitched yet dynamic voice gives the new tracks an absolute seal of approval.
GENERATION STEEL stands for genuine, traditional heavy metal influenced by the 80s, right between acts like ACCEPT and JUDAS PRIEST.
With the first demos of their upcoming third LP in tow, the metal commando scored two more hits: With WE-LIVE, they gained a renowned booking agency whose roster includes OVERKILL, SACRED REICH, SODOM, and their neighbors from BLIZZEN. The set-up is completed with a contract with the newly launched label FIREFLASH RECORDS, where GENERATION STEEL found a new home among acts such as WOLF, RUTHLESS, HOLY MOSES, and DEPRESSIVE AGE.
“I’ve always had a soft spot for Teutonic heavy metal, which was more tangible and present for me. For me, GENERATION STEEL in 2026 stand for the same values and sound that artists like ACCEPT, GRAVE DIGGER, RUNNING WILD, and RAGE established in the 80s. Even in their raw form, the new songs are pure dynamite and steel in its purest form!” says FIREFLASH RECORDS owner Markus Wosgien about his new protégés.
GENERATION STEEL are currently in the final stages of production with producer Piet Sielck (IRON SAVIOR) in his studio. Sielck has already refined classics from GAMMA RAY, GRAVE DIGGER, HEADHUNTER, STORMWARRIOR, BLIND GUARDIAN, and SAXON in the past.
GENERATION STEEL is: Mike Stark (Vocals) Thilo Herrmann (Lead Guitar) Jack the Riffer (Rhythm Guitar) Andreas Drommershausen (Bass) Marc Laukel (Drums)
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s ASA unveil the long-overdue release of "Collective Failure" + first music video for title-track! Check it out and stay tuned for more news! Click image to watch the video
Kimmo Kuusniemi’s SARCOFAGUS return with a Historic 2010 Concert Video Premiere on YouTube! Click image to watch the video
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Visionary artist KIMMO KUUSNIEMI's ANCIENT STREAMING ASSEMBLY (ASA) have released “Aurora Nuclearis”, a powerful 12-minute audiovisual experience, dedicated to the Late Keyboardist Esa Kotilainen. - Click image to watch the video