Temple Of Void: The Crawl 12"
The caveman brawn of previous albums, namely Summoning the Slayer (2022), remains, but thereâs a wider dynamic on the groupâs fifth full-length album at play. Now a quartetâfeaturing guitarist Alex Awn, drummer Jason Pearce, vocalist/guitarist Mike Erdody, and bassist Justin Malekâthe Michiganders arenât shying away from their non-metal influences, seeking greater integration of grunge and post-punk with their brutish signature. Singles âThe Crawlâ and âSoulburnâ demonstrate the proficiency of TEMPLE OF VOID's death-cloaked, spearheaded attack. From the high intensity of opener âPoison Iconâ to the granite wall of âThe Twin Stranger,â The Crawl isnât just TEMPLE OF VOID evolved, itâs a harbinger of death metal to come.
âThe biggest shift for me on this record was not feeling like we had to fly the âdeath-doom bannerâ as part of our identity,â says Alex Awn. âDeath-doom, as a genre, gave us something to anchor our sound around when we started. It was always a reference and touchstone. At the same time, we always wanted to make sure we had our own spin on it. Weâve always been adding to the conversation, adding to the genre, giving our point of view. A huge part of what makes a Temple of Void record is the non-death-doom influences that make up our DNA. And on album five we never once asked ourselves, âDo we have enough death metal? Do we have enough doom metal?â We simply wrote a heavy-ass recordâlet the chips fall where they may.â
For lyrics, Erdody built on the psychology and fear themes of Summoning the Slayer. The overarching theme of The Crawl is, put rather simply, an âallegory about life, choices, and consequences.â Itâs a qualitative view on the horrors of the human condition and the contemplation of our monstrous capabilities. âThe Twin Stranger,â for example, is about being stalked by a personâs doppelganger; âGodless Cynicâ draws on a short story by sci-fi author Harlan Ellison; and âPoison Iconâ tackles the crushing effects of mankindâs intrinsic nature to deceive and control.
The Crawl was tracked in a single âcolder-than-hellâ week in January, etched into proverbial obsidian at Kurt Ballouâs GodCity Studio (Gatecreeper, High On Fire) in Salem, MA. Ballou was assisted by engineer Zach Weeks (Deafheaven, Fuming Mouth). Both studio mavens were enlisted by TEMPLE OF VOID because they wanted a âhumanâ-sounding, spontaneous record. This is evident from the heavy-as-fuck, raw-edged guitar and bass tones, as well as Pearceâs in-the-room drum sound. Ace Brad Boatright, whoâs handled everyone from Sleep to Michael Stein and Kyle Dixon (aka Stranger Things), was brought on to master at his Audiosiege Mastering Studio in Portland, OR.
TEMPLE OF VOID are evolving, rolling their 20-sided die yet again. This time, itâs raw, in-your-face, dissonant, heavy, and absolutely human. Featuring the captivating âreferentialâ cover art by Travis Smith (Opeth, Death), The Crawl burrows into bone, flays minds, and leaves metalheads wanting more. Venture into the deepest, darkest dungeons, fellow Templars!Â
- Label: Relapse Records
- Format Type: 12"
- Genre: metal
- Year: 2026
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Temple Of Void: The Crawl 12"
Temple Of Void: The Crawl 12"
The caveman brawn of previous albums, namely Summoning the Slayer (2022), remains, but thereâs a wider dynamic on the groupâs fifth full-length album at play. Now a quartetâfeaturing guitarist Alex Awn, drummer Jason Pearce, vocalist/guitarist Mike Erdody, and bassist Justin Malekâthe Michiganders arenât shying away from their non-metal influences, seeking greater integration of grunge and post-punk with their brutish signature. Singles âThe Crawlâ and âSoulburnâ demonstrate the proficiency of TEMPLE OF VOID's death-cloaked, spearheaded attack. From the high intensity of opener âPoison Iconâ to the granite wall of âThe Twin Stranger,â The Crawl isnât just TEMPLE OF VOID evolved, itâs a harbinger of death metal to come.
âThe biggest shift for me on this record was not feeling like we had to fly the âdeath-doom bannerâ as part of our identity,â says Alex Awn. âDeath-doom, as a genre, gave us something to anchor our sound around when we started. It was always a reference and touchstone. At the same time, we always wanted to make sure we had our own spin on it. Weâve always been adding to the conversation, adding to the genre, giving our point of view. A huge part of what makes a Temple of Void record is the non-death-doom influences that make up our DNA. And on album five we never once asked ourselves, âDo we have enough death metal? Do we have enough doom metal?â We simply wrote a heavy-ass recordâlet the chips fall where they may.â
For lyrics, Erdody built on the psychology and fear themes of Summoning the Slayer. The overarching theme of The Crawl is, put rather simply, an âallegory about life, choices, and consequences.â Itâs a qualitative view on the horrors of the human condition and the contemplation of our monstrous capabilities. âThe Twin Stranger,â for example, is about being stalked by a personâs doppelganger; âGodless Cynicâ draws on a short story by sci-fi author Harlan Ellison; and âPoison Iconâ tackles the crushing effects of mankindâs intrinsic nature to deceive and control.
The Crawl was tracked in a single âcolder-than-hellâ week in January, etched into proverbial obsidian at Kurt Ballouâs GodCity Studio (Gatecreeper, High On Fire) in Salem, MA. Ballou was assisted by engineer Zach Weeks (Deafheaven, Fuming Mouth). Both studio mavens were enlisted by TEMPLE OF VOID because they wanted a âhumanâ-sounding, spontaneous record. This is evident from the heavy-as-fuck, raw-edged guitar and bass tones, as well as Pearceâs in-the-room drum sound. Ace Brad Boatright, whoâs handled everyone from Sleep to Michael Stein and Kyle Dixon (aka Stranger Things), was brought on to master at his Audiosiege Mastering Studio in Portland, OR.
TEMPLE OF VOID are evolving, rolling their 20-sided die yet again. This time, itâs raw, in-your-face, dissonant, heavy, and absolutely human. Featuring the captivating âreferentialâ cover art by Travis Smith (Opeth, Death), The Crawl burrows into bone, flays minds, and leaves metalheads wanting more. Venture into the deepest, darkest dungeons, fellow Templars!Â
- Label: Relapse Records
- Format Type: 12"
- Genre: metal
- Year: 2026
Original: $1,189.00
-70%$1,189.00
$356.70Product Information
Product Information
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Description
The caveman brawn of previous albums, namely Summoning the Slayer (2022), remains, but thereâs a wider dynamic on the groupâs fifth full-length album at play. Now a quartetâfeaturing guitarist Alex Awn, drummer Jason Pearce, vocalist/guitarist Mike Erdody, and bassist Justin Malekâthe Michiganders arenât shying away from their non-metal influences, seeking greater integration of grunge and post-punk with their brutish signature. Singles âThe Crawlâ and âSoulburnâ demonstrate the proficiency of TEMPLE OF VOID's death-cloaked, spearheaded attack. From the high intensity of opener âPoison Iconâ to the granite wall of âThe Twin Stranger,â The Crawl isnât just TEMPLE OF VOID evolved, itâs a harbinger of death metal to come.
âThe biggest shift for me on this record was not feeling like we had to fly the âdeath-doom bannerâ as part of our identity,â says Alex Awn. âDeath-doom, as a genre, gave us something to anchor our sound around when we started. It was always a reference and touchstone. At the same time, we always wanted to make sure we had our own spin on it. Weâve always been adding to the conversation, adding to the genre, giving our point of view. A huge part of what makes a Temple of Void record is the non-death-doom influences that make up our DNA. And on album five we never once asked ourselves, âDo we have enough death metal? Do we have enough doom metal?â We simply wrote a heavy-ass recordâlet the chips fall where they may.â
For lyrics, Erdody built on the psychology and fear themes of Summoning the Slayer. The overarching theme of The Crawl is, put rather simply, an âallegory about life, choices, and consequences.â Itâs a qualitative view on the horrors of the human condition and the contemplation of our monstrous capabilities. âThe Twin Stranger,â for example, is about being stalked by a personâs doppelganger; âGodless Cynicâ draws on a short story by sci-fi author Harlan Ellison; and âPoison Iconâ tackles the crushing effects of mankindâs intrinsic nature to deceive and control.
The Crawl was tracked in a single âcolder-than-hellâ week in January, etched into proverbial obsidian at Kurt Ballouâs GodCity Studio (Gatecreeper, High On Fire) in Salem, MA. Ballou was assisted by engineer Zach Weeks (Deafheaven, Fuming Mouth). Both studio mavens were enlisted by TEMPLE OF VOID because they wanted a âhumanâ-sounding, spontaneous record. This is evident from the heavy-as-fuck, raw-edged guitar and bass tones, as well as Pearceâs in-the-room drum sound. Ace Brad Boatright, whoâs handled everyone from Sleep to Michael Stein and Kyle Dixon (aka Stranger Things), was brought on to master at his Audiosiege Mastering Studio in Portland, OR.
TEMPLE OF VOID are evolving, rolling their 20-sided die yet again. This time, itâs raw, in-your-face, dissonant, heavy, and absolutely human. Featuring the captivating âreferentialâ cover art by Travis Smith (Opeth, Death), The Crawl burrows into bone, flays minds, and leaves metalheads wanting more. Venture into the deepest, darkest dungeons, fellow Templars!Â
- Label: Relapse Records
- Format Type: 12"
- Genre: metal
- Year: 2026











