You Will Bleed does not continue Handful of Hate’s development by simply becoming faster, denser, or more technically extreme. After the sharpened professionalism of ViceCrown and the sustained velocity of Gruesome Splendour, Nicola Bianchi deliberately turns backward, drawing upon the primitive force of early black metal without abandoning the discipline the band had acquired over the previous decade. The result is not a nostalgic imitation of the 1980s underground. It is a mature group placing older forms of ugliness inside a modern, controlled recording. The riffs are broader, the tempos more varied, and the songs allow themselves more breathing room than the preceding album, yet every element remains governed by Handful of Hate’s familiar concerns with bodily degradation, suffering, domination, exclusion, and hatred converted into structure.
The title track immediately establishes this balance between old instinct and developed technique. “You Will Bleed” is not phrased as possibility or metaphor. It is a promise addressed directly to an unnamed body. The guitars move between rapid tremolo patterns and heavier passages whose slower impact makes the threat feel physical rather than merely atmospheric. Andrea Bianchi’s drumming retains tremendous speed, but he does not keep the album permanently locked into blast beats. Rhythmic shifts allow Nicola Bianchi and Deimos to give individual riffs greater mass, while Nicholas’ bass thickens the underlying movement. The band sounds less interested in proving endurance than in controlling when pressure is applied.
That restraint distinguishes the album from many black metal records that confuse extremity with continuous maximum velocity. You Will Bleed understands that impact depends upon contrast. A rapid passage can create panic, but a slower riff can create inevitability. Handful of Hate use both. Their violence has become less frantic and more judicial, as though each song has already decided the listener’s sentence and is now selecting the appropriate instrument.
“The Pest’ Son” extends the album’s language of inherited corruption. Pestilence is granted offspring, suggesting that disease is not a temporary invasion but a lineage capable of continuing itself through new bodies. The song unfolds over more than five minutes, allowing a larger arrangement than the compact attacks of Hierarchy 1999. Melodic guitar lines appear within the abrasion, but they do not soften the atmosphere. They give the disease a recognizable shape, something capable of returning after the immediate outbreak appears to have ended.
Handful of Hate’s melodies have always functioned differently from the sorrowful or heroic leads common to melodic black metal. Nicola’s writing rarely treats melody as escape. It behaves more like a scar, a line whose repetition makes violence memorable. On this album, the production allows those shapes to emerge clearly without polishing away their bitterness. The guitar tone remains coarse, but each movement can be followed through the mix, revealing how carefully the riffs are arranged beneath the hostile surface.
“Bliss Between Thorns” contains one of the album’s defining contradictions. Bliss is discovered not beyond suffering but inside it, surrounded and possibly produced by pain. The title could describe religious martyrdom, erotic submission, self-punishment, or the psychological habit of converting injury into proof of meaning. The music carries both exhilaration and abrasion. Its faster sections feel almost triumphant, yet the surrounding riffs keep that triumph trapped inside a hostile enclosure. Pleasure exists, but it cannot be separated from the thing that wounds it.
This relationship between pleasure and injury has run through Handful of Hate’s work since Hierarchy 1999, but You Will Bleed presents it with less occult ornamentation. Earlier albums surrounded domination and bodily extremity with crowns, rituals, Qliphothic imagery, and inverted religious hierarchy. Here the language becomes plainer. Blood, scars, pests, crawling bodies, pain, fault, and disease replace the elaborate mystical vocabulary. The album turns away from the stars and returns to the ground, where bodies can be marked, infected, crushed, and blamed for existing.
“I Gave You Scars” is particularly revealing because it presents injury as a gift. The speaker does not merely admit responsibility. He claims authorship. A scar becomes a permanent signature placed upon another person’s body, evidence that the giver has altered the recipient beyond the moment of contact. The song’s longer construction supports this idea of lasting damage. Riffs return after intervals, no longer functioning only as repeated musical material but as marks that refuse to disappear. The title’s intimacy makes it more unsettling than generalized fantasies of war or destruction. One voice addresses one wounded subject and takes pride in having become part of their physical memory.
“Earthly and Crawling” lowers humanity to the level of exposed matter. To crawl is to move close to dirt, deprived of height, dignity, and distance from the ground. Yet the title may also contain a rejection of spiritual pretension. Human beings are earthly organisms regardless of the gods, hierarchies, or eternal destinies they invent. Handful of Hate’s contempt operates in both directions: the flesh is degraded, but religious promises of transcendence are also stripped away. What remains is the body moving through soil, hunger, pain, and eventual decomposition.
The song’s compact structure strengthens this materialism. There is little ceremonial atmosphere and no need for an extended invocation. The instruments enter, establish their pattern of motion, and grind forward. Even the melodic elements feel earthbound, repeating within a narrow range rather than reaching toward some celestial conclusion. The track’s violence is not cosmic. It is close enough to smell the dirt.
“The March of Hate” transforms emotion into collective movement. Hatred is no longer confined to one consciousness. It acquires rhythm, direction, and the capacity to organize bodies. The martial title might suggest rigid repetition, but the track moves through several forms of propulsion rather than relying upon a single marching beat. This creates the feeling of a force gathering participants as it advances. Individual resentment becomes procession, and procession becomes institution.
This is where You Will Bleed’s tribute to early black metal becomes more than a matter of sound. The formative records of Venom, Bathory, Celtic Frost, Sarcófago, and Blasphemy often possessed a raw declarative quality, as though the musicians were not simply composing songs but announcing the existence of a hostile culture. Handful of Hate recover some of that quality here. The production may be clearer and the execution more precise, but the album still feels like an assertion of allegiance to an underground tradition built from provocation, physicality, blasphemy, and refusal.
“Between Pain and Perdition” places the subject in a corridor between immediate suffering and eternal ruin. Pain belongs to the body and present time; perdition belongs to theology and imagined infinity. To exist between them is to be attacked from both directions. The song’s movement between faster and heavier sections mirrors this confinement. One passage drives the body forward, while another seems to close the route ahead. There is motion, but no genuine escape.
The title also demonstrates how thoroughly Catholic imagery remains embedded within Handful of Hate’s rebellion. Perdition only carries force within a universe where damnation has been taught as a real and terrifying possibility. Nicola’s work repeatedly rejects Christian authority while preserving its language of punishment, flesh, guilt, blood, abasement, and eternal consequence. The sacred structure is inverted but not forgotten. Its stones are reused to build an opposing chamber.
“The Fault to Exist” is the album’s shortest and most concentrated statement. Existence itself becomes an offense requiring no additional action. This is misanthropy stripped of romantic solitude or aristocratic pose. The condemned subject is guilty simply for having entered the world. The track’s brevity makes the judgment feel immediate, with no trial, explanation, or opportunity for defense. A few minutes are enough to pronounce and execute the sentence.
Yet the title can also be heard from inside the condemned consciousness. The belief that one’s existence is a fault may emerge from shame, exclusion, abuse, religious guilt, or prolonged exposure to another person’s contempt. Handful of Hate do not clarify whether the phrase is accusation or internal wound. That uncertainty gives the song a darker psychological dimension beneath its outward hostility. The voice declaring another life mistaken may also be repeating a judgment once directed at itself.
“Extremism Made Fire – Cholera!” closes the album by turning extremity into both element and epidemic. Fire spreads through contact, while cholera moves through contaminated systems. One destroys visibly; the other enters invisibly and erupts from within the body. Joined together, they form an image of violence capable of passing through populations rather than remaining an isolated act. The exclamation point gives the final word the quality of an invocation or alarm, but the band does not end in uncontrolled collapse. The performance remains exact, demonstrating once again that this album’s extremism has been trained.
The rebuilt lineup contributes greatly to that control. Deimos’ second guitar gives Nicola’s riffs additional thickness and allows melodic contours to remain audible through the fastest sections. Nicholas provides a firm lower foundation, while Andrea Bianchi’s drumming combines aggression with enough variation to prevent the record from flattening into one tempo. Nicola’s vocals are characteristically rasped and venomous, but the delivery feels more measured than on the earliest albums. He no longer sounds trapped inside forces he has summoned. He sounds like their administrator.
That change may reduce some of the dangerous instability of Qliphotic Supremacy, but it produces a different kind of menace. You Will Bleed is disturbing because the band never appears to lose control. Its blood, scars, punishment, hatred, and disease are not emotional spills. They are arranged, recorded, and presented with the cold confidence of practiced craft. The music knows exactly how much space to leave around each blow.
The album therefore functions as both a return and a consolidation. Its older black metal influences are plainly honored, but filtered through sixteen years of Handful of Hate’s development. The primitive impulse survives inside a professional framework, while the band’s recurring themes are reduced to their most physical vocabulary. There are fewer mystical stairways, cosmic bodies, or ornate crowns here. The listener encounters wounds, crawling matter, infected lineage, and organized hate.
You Will Bleed may initially seem less distinctive than ViceCrown’s tightly constructed regime or Qliphotic Supremacy’s feverish occult labyrinth, but its strength lies in this deliberate reduction. Handful of Hate remove some of their decorative symbolism to expose the mechanism beneath it. The mechanism is repetition, control, bodily vulnerability, and the transformation of private hostility into disciplined form. The album does not ask whether bleeding will occur. It speaks from a world where the wound has already been selected and the blade is simply moving toward it.