
Jack Antonoff just called AI music makers 'godless whores' and his profanity lands perfectly on Godless' new single Seduced By The Devil. I blast the opening chord and feel the room tilt under its weight. The track announces itself with a thunderous down-tuned chug that refuses any subtlety. Every note screams disdain for watered-down modern metal. This is a statement, not a compromise.
Riff Warfare
The main riff is a relentless cascade of tritone slides that bite into your skull. It rides on a palm muted groove that never lets up. The second half adds a squealing harmonic that pierces the mix like a siren. The guitar tone is raw, saturated with midrange aggression, no digital gloss. This riff outshines any mainstream metal anthem released this decade.
Vocal Vengeance
Lead singer snarls with a guttural ferocity that drips venom. The verses are delivered in a rapid fire cadence that leaves no room for breath. The chorus erupts with a melodic howl that feels like a battle cry. No auto tune, no polishing, just raw human rage. The vocal performance shreds the pretentious vocal trends choking the scene.
Rhythmic Onslaught
The drums hammer with a double kick barrage that never surrenders. The snare cracks like a gunshot, each hit precise and brutal. Bass follows the guitar with a thick, distorted growl that anchors the chaos. The rhythm section locks in with machine like precision while retaining human fury. This rhythm section makes most festival headliners sound like playground bands.
The production is unapologetically analog, rejecting any glossy AI sheen. The mix places the guitars front and center, demanding attention. Reverb is used sparingly, only to accent the cavernous atmosphere. The mastering pushes the loudness without sacrificing clarity. This production style proves that real metal can still sound massive without digital shortcuts.
The lyrics trade worship for blasphemy, inviting the devil as a lover. Lines like 'kiss the fire, taste the sin' mock the sanitized pop narratives. The chorus repeats a mantra that feels like a sacrificial chant. There is no metaphorical safety net; the words are blunt and confrontational. This lyrical assault fits the track’s sonic ferocity perfectly.
Seduced By The Devil redefines what heavy music can demand from its audience. It forces listeners to confront discomfort, not to be comforted. The track stands as a middle finger to any trend that dilutes metal’s edge. It will dominate the underground and scare the mainstream into silence. Anything less is a betrayal of the genre’s spirit.

