DIMMU BORGIR RETURN WITH “GRAND SERPENT RISING” AFTER EIGHT YEAR SILENCE Friday May 22 2026, 12:38 PM
THE BEAST
PLATINUM
DIMMU BORGIR RETURN WITH “GRAND SERPENT RISING” AFTER EIGHT YEAR SILENCE

Norwegian extreme metal titans Dimmu Borgir are officially back today with the release of their long awaited new studio album Grand Serpent Rising , marking their first full length record in eight years since Eonian .

And true to form, they did not come back quietly. They came back with a storm.

A long wait, a heavier impact


Formed in 1993 by guitarist Sven “Silenoz” Kopperud and vocalist Stian “Shagrath” Thoresen during Norway’s second wave black metal rise, Dimmu Borgir have always played the long game. No rush, no shortcuts, just carefully built sonic architecture designed to hit like a collapsing cathedral.

Grand Serpent Rising is the result of that patience. Thirteen tracks deep, it pushes their symphonic black metal foundation into something even more cinematic, more dynamic, and more violently expressive than before.

Gothenburg sessions with a familiar hand


The album was recorded in Gothenburg with renowned producer Fredrik Nordström , a key figure behind some of the band’s most iconic earlier work including Puritanical Euphoric Misanthropia and Death Cult Armageddon .

That connection matters. The sound here is massive but intentional, layered but never chaotic for the sake of it. Orchestration is used like a weapon instead of a blanket, giving the record both weight and clarity.

New video unleashes the vision


Alongside the album release, the band has dropped a cinematic new video for As Seen In The Unseen , doubling down on the album’s bleak atmosphere and theatrical scale.

Watch here:

Listen here:
https://dimmuborgir.bfan.link/grandserpentrising

Band statements


Shagrath calls the album a full spectrum reflection of everything Dimmu Borgir has been and evolved into. He highlights its balance of brutality, melody, and diversity, noting how it pulls from their early years while still pushing forward into new territory.

Silenoz frames it as a journey through ruin, rebirth, and transcendence, emphasizing a return to the atmosphere that defined their identity while still evolving the sound. According to him, the fire is still burning stronger than ever.

The verdict


Eight years is a long silence in modern metal. Most bands struggle to justify it.

Dimmu Borgir just used it to sharpen the blade.

Grand Serpent Rising is not nostalgia. It is not a comeback attempt. It is a statement of intent from a band that still knows exactly how to build something massive, cinematic, and unapologetically extreme.

Screenshot 20260522 at 124044 d23edf19cd2bdb544750da3313e84698.jpg JPEG Image 3685  3685 pixels  Scaled 24.png


Reviews - Interviews - Promo - Radio Play

Contact zach@metaldevastationradio.com

271209516_3021552291399196_3582258409243799658_n.jpg

462305913_3806939179527166_4095576644688041910_n.png

comments powered by Disqus

Sitemap