Description
Tracklisting:
Side A
1. Into Oblivion
2. Parasocial Christ
3. Sepsis
4. The Killing Floor
5. El Vacío
Side B
1. St. Catherine’s Wheel
2. Blunt Force Blues
3. Bully
4. A Thousand Years
5. Devise / Destroy
$70.99
Lamb Of God’s Into Oblivion landed on 13 March 2026, and the Translucent Olive variant is the transparent olive green and white splatter LP edition. Rough Trade lists it with alternate cover artwork, a 12-page booklet, and the bonus track “Wire.” The album is issued as a single LP, and retailer/distribution listings show both the main vinyl catalogue number and the variant-specific number in circulation.
As a record, Into Oblivion sounds like Lamb Of God leaning into experience rather than trying to pretend they are still the same band that kicked the door in twenty years ago. That works in its favour. The riffs still grind, the grooves still hit with real force, and Randy Blythe still sounds like he means every word, but there is a tighter, more measured feel to the writing here. This is not a band flailing for relevance. It sounds like a veteran metal band that knows exactly where its strengths are and is happy to make them count. A retailer description frames it as the band embracing its place as veterans while still doubling down on its signature groove, and that feels about right.
What makes Into Oblivion land is that it does not sound lazy or autopilot. Songs like “Parasocial Christ,” “Sepsis,” “The Killing Floor,” and “Devise/Destroy” have titles that already suggest the album’s mood before you even hear them, and the track sequence points to a record built around pressure, abrasion, and blunt impact rather than filler. The title track opens the album, and just from the running order and song lengths, this looks like a focused set rather than an overstuffed one.
For the vinyl buyer, the olive splatter version is the one with the most collector appeal. It is not just standard black wax with a colour tweak. The alternate art, booklet, and bonus cut give it a real reason to exist as a premium edition. If you are putting this on the Rue Morgue Records shelf, this is the version that looks the part and gives the listing a stronger hook.
Overall, Into Oblivion feels like a solid late-period Lamb Of God move. Not a reinvention, not some desperate relevance play, just a heavy, confident record from a band that still knows how to deliver weight with purpose. If you like Lamb Of God when they are sharp, punishing, and groove-driven without wasting your time, this one looks like it earns its place.
2 in stock
Purchase & earn 71 points!Tracklisting:
Side A
1. Into Oblivion
2. Parasocial Christ
3. Sepsis
4. The Killing Floor
5. El Vacío
Side B
1. St. Catherine’s Wheel
2. Blunt Force Blues
3. Bully
4. A Thousand Years
5. Devise / Destroy
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