It’s Saturday, and New York is in the grips of a repulsive humidity-wave. Fortunately, Vitus provides a cool, dark burrow for early attendees to hide from the heat and soak up ice-cold tall boys. Between bands’ merch stations are a staple of the modern underground death metal show: distro tables, where CDs are still king and fans can pick up releases by their favorite weirdo underground goremongers. The mini-distros are indicative of the fans in attendance, whose appetite for the sickest shit imaginable isn’t always represented in the modern climate of progressive doom, mathcore, and black and roll. Even the first-comers seem charged with excitement and ready to get fucked up.
Fort Worth, Texas’ Primordius are a good appetizer, playing solid chug-a-lug death metal that provides ample lubrication into the anus of the day. Frontman Weston Wylie is like a working man’s Frankenstein: tall and stone-faced, but also grateful in his stage banter and friendly when he’s milling around afterwards.
Slamentation, an international group hailing from Switzerland, Germany, and the UK, are a better representation of the fest’s tenor, playing kinetic, punishing slam-death that gets the crowd sweating. There’s mention of technical difficulties (guitar feedback, monitor issues, etc.) but it’s shrugged off as fest-world problems. Can’t be easy, organizing an event like this.
In fact, everyone has only good things to say about the fest’s promoter and sponsor, Gutter Christ Productions. Equal parts label, distro, and T-shirt company, Gutter Christ is run by one Anthony Gutter of New Jersey, and goes all-in on underground metal at its most confrontational and unapologetic. Not only do several bands give Gutter a shout-out onstage, they give him ample gratitude for supporting the kind of metal usually found in the sixth or seventh row of logos on a festival poster.
When I ask the dudes in New Jersey death metal crew Cognitive about what makes NY Deathfest special, it’s the first thing they bring up. “Gutter busts his ass,” says guitarist Rob Wharton. “Gutter’s booking great bands. He mixes it up a little bit more. He never gets stuck on one specific genre.”