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#numetal

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The Bloodywood album we have on The List was only very briefly touched on in a #MontageMonday post a few weeks ago. So, today let's put the spotlight back on them and listen to their newest album, just released on Friday! Features a collab with BABYMETAL ("Bekhauf"), and also a fun song about cooking ("Tadka"). This band is an absolute delight.

Bloodywood - Nu Delhi (2025, India)

bloodywood.bandcamp.com/album/

Bloodywood – Nu Delhi Review

By Kenstrosity

Indian nu-metal upstarts Bloodywood deserve every ounce of success they’ve garnered since their early days as a cover band. 2022’s Rakshak was a resounding proof of concept for the band’s original material, effortless and enthusiastic in its uplifting and wholesome messaging delivered through a smooth blend of Indian folk instrumentation and nu-metal aggression. Since then, Bloodywood rapidly gained recognition worldwide, acquiring a contract with Fearless Records, and even earning the distinction of first Indian metal act to hit Billboard charts. For many of our readers, that might spell an ill omen. But it leaves me overjoyed to experience what follow-up Nu Delhi has to offer.

Thankfully, Bloodywood hasn’t touched their core approach. Nostalgic nu metal reigns supreme just as before, bolstered by the region’s traditional instrumentation, which is represented most in the percussion, string, woodwind, brass, and vocal sections. Gruff, rapid-fire raps constitute the rhythmic backbone of Bloodywood’s trademark dueling vocals, while soaring, gravelly cleans and caustic screams provide the melodic and metallic sinew that connects verse to chorus. A renewed focus on pervasive hooks, swaggering riffs, and tight songwriting allows many, if not all, of Nu Delhi’s eight songs to stick even as its 33 minutes fly by. Above all, Nu Delhi is fun, and that’s all I needed from Bloodywood’s follow-up to a breakout record like Rakshak.

Against the established convention, lead single “Nu Delhi” closes this record, encapsulating everything Bloodywood does well, with a satisfying wiggle and groove personifying its almost djenty riffsets. The song may be simple and straightforward, but it gets stuck in my head for days at a time. Such is my affliction with all of Nu Delhi’s best cuts, the highest watermarks of which are the center one-two punch of “Bekauf (ft. BABYMETAL”) and “Kismat.” I did not have “enjoying a song with a BABYMETAL feature” on my bingo card this year, but here we are; the song simply rocks. Furthermore, hearing how much more mature BABYMETAL’s vocalist(s) sounds here is a breath of fresh air. “Kismat” takes the hype “Bekhauf” generates and doubles down with incredible confidence. Serious bars trade blows with one of the album’s best choruses, supported by the album’s strongest guitar, synth, and drum work. Delivered with tons of passion, these cooperative contributions culminate in an exciting bout of aggro fun that carries through Nu Delhi’s conclusion. As an added note, I appreciate the uplifting, empowering message Nu Delhi delivers. Without a sheet to help me through the Hindi lyrics, I can still confidently say Nu Delhi is an album about believing in yourself, not giving in to hate or hatred, fighting corruption, supporting your community, and pushing forward to leave those who would rather see you fail back at the starting line. I need messages like this one in my music, now more than ever, so I extend my thanks to Bloodywood for bringing it.

All that said, Nu Delhi lacks a true showstopper. Rakshak has the inimitable “Yaad,” an unqualified triumph of a song that easily snagged my Song o’ the Year in 2022. No such ultra-banger exists here, much to my chagrin. Nu Delhi is more consistent in overall song quality in a valiant attempt to offset that shortcoming, but other small nitpicks conspire to bring the end product down just a smidge from its predecessor. An example, opening duo “Halla Bol” and “Hutt” are the most “forgettable” selections of the set, their hooks and riffs not quite as sharp as those of its stronger album-mates. Elsewhere, all of Nu Delhi’s traditional instrumentation finds better integration with metallic elements, indicating improvements in mixing. However, the album still sounds compressed to bits (though it is hard to be certain when evaluating a stream promo). As a final nitpick, I would like to see these English lyrics massaged a bit further. Rap and hip-hop live and die by the verse, and there are moments where Bloodywood toe that line too closely with some awkward phrasing (“Tadka”).

In accordance with my mission statement of “destroying AMG’s metal cred from within,” I award Bloodywood another positive score. Largely circumventing the dreaded “sophomore slump,” Nu Delhi is a worthy successor to the addicting Rakshak. It may not have that list-topping song that would push Nu Delhi to the next level, but its high fun factor and consistent quality make a compelling value statement for 33 minutes of your time. Nu metal detractors need not venture here, but I invite everyone else to gather ‘neath the Bloodywood tree, for we rejoice in the rise of Nu Delhi!

Rating: Good!
DR: Streaming Bastards Get No DRs | Format Reviewed: Stream (BAD LABEL! BAD!)
Label: Fearless Records
Websites: bloodywood.bandcamp.com | bloodywood.net
Releases Worldwide: March 21st, 2025

#2025 #30 #Bloodywood #FearlessRecords #FolkMetal #GrooveMetal #IndianMetalMetal #Mar25 #NuDelhi #NuMetal #RapMetal #Review #Reviews

Montage Monday | Bloodywood – Rakshak (2022, India) / Prophets of Rage – s/t (2017, US) / Manic Street Preachers – The Holy Bible (1994, Wales) / Rage Against The Machine – s/t (1992, US)

Today’s spotlight is the second in our new series called “Montage Monday”, where the spotlight may be brief but is packed with a lot of music. And for no particular reason, this Montage Monday we’re going to spotlight albums spanning 30 years that have some (very well-justified) anger issues, working backward in case doing so can turn back time. One key song per album is highlighted, but titrate additional tunes/anger in as needed.

Want to read more? See the full spotlight: 1001otheralbums.com/2025/03/03

Want to skip straight to the music? Here are the listening links for the key songs (links for full albums in blog post):

Bloodywood – “Dana Dan” youtube.com/watch?v=a65A626Ed2
Prophets of Rage – “Unfuck the World” prophetsofrage.bandcamp.com/tr
Manic Street Preachers – “Ifwhiteamericatoldthetruthforonedayit’sworldwouldfallapart” song.link/ca/i/942562497
Rage Against The Machine – “Killing in the Name” song.link/ca/i/191450927

Happy listening!

1001 Other Albums · Montage Monday | Bloodywood/Prophets of Rage/Manic Street Preachers/Rage Against The Machine
More from 1001 Other Albums

Review: Disturbed – Liberate (Rock)

This review covers the nu metal track Disturbed - Liberate.

This track was released in 2002 on the album Believe.

The track starts with a chopped voice sample. After that, the drum kit and lead guitars join the track. The vocals then join the track shortly after. The guitars hit shorter notes after the vocals join the tra

freezenet.ca/review-disturbed-

#nowPlaying this entire month.
It's always funny when my own band makes it on here.
Disclaimer: I didn't get to scrobble everything I
listened to.

Top artists:
Forever Still, MC Frontalot, Deez Nuts

Top albums:
Unquiet Grave - The Ultimate Goth Collection, Eating From The Orchard of The Heart, Evanescence (Deluxe Version)

Top tracks:
Girls Pants, Seed of Doubt, Discord

(via Pano Scrobbler)