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“Immobilism” finds ORGAN pushing their instrumental post metal doom into colder, more desolate ground

April 7, 2026
3 mins read
ORGAN
ORGAN< by @______redeye______

The first piece written for “Immobilism” takes its name from a way of painting—tenebrism, the heavy contrast of light and shadow associated with Caravaggio and Dürer. That same push and pull runs through the entire record, five instrumental suites built less like songs and more like enclosed spaces, each one tightening around a single idea until it starts to feel physical.

Organ have been working toward this kind of density since forming in Belluno in 2013, a town tucked into the north-eastern Italian Alps. The band pulls from very different histories—members also move through projects like Amia Venera Landscape, Gorrch, and In Torment I Die—but Organ has always been the place where those threads collapse into something slower, darker, and more suffocating.

Early on, that meant doom metal in its most hypnotic forms—Electric Wizard, Sleep, Om—and a clear fascination with horror film scores from the 70s and 80s, with Goblin and Jerry Goldsmith hanging over the edges. Their 2015 debut “Tetro,” self-recorded and produced by former member Luca Rizzardi, leaned into that mix: five tracks drifting between stoner haze, sludge weight, and psychedelic repetition.

 

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Post udostępniony przez ORGAN (@organ_666)

Three years later, “Eterno” stripped away a lot of that looseness. Recorded and mixed by Marcello Batelli and mastered by Giulio Ragno Favero, it pushed toward something more caustic, less tied to rock structure, more concerned with atmosphere than release. The band spent that period playing widely—sharing stages with Today Is The Day, Larsen, The Secret, Messa, Grime, Negative Approach, and Cripple Bastards—before stepping back into writing.

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ORGAN

“Immobilism” began taking shape in 2020, the first full work written with the current lineup: Alessandro Brun and Alessandro Scriminich on guitars, Alessandro De Pellegrin on bass, and Giulio Fabbro on drums. The intent was direct—move further into desolation, make the sound more unsettling, strip it down to repetition and pressure. Recording stretched from November 2023 through November 2025, handled entirely by Enrico Uliana, who also mixed and mastered the album.

ORGAN

The record frames itself as a state rather than a narrative. “Immobilism is a state of mind that consumes you, it’s somehow like a self induced sleep paralysis. Immobilism wants to be a kind of soundtrack to it.”

That idea runs through each piece, but never in the same way twice.

“Tenebrism” opens the album with that sense of contrast already locked in. The band treats visual art as a starting point—“it creates an ambience that somehow we try to reproduce, for how we perceive it”—and the track follows that logic, shaping tension through slow shifts rather than movement.

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ORGAN

From there, “Confessor” stretches the unease outward. It builds like a long, uneven incline, tightening as it goes, until it collapses into what the band describe as a “schyzophrenic, nightmarish mantra,” a loop that feels less like a climax and more like being stuck inside a single thought.

“Devouring” cuts differently. It’s the fastest piece they’ve recorded, more direct in structure, but it doesn’t break the mood—if anything, it sharpens it. The restlessness introduced in “Confessor” turns into something more immediate, less abstract, but no less suffocating.

“Dogma,” released ahead of the album, sits somewhere in between. Heavy riffs anchor it, but they’re constantly slipping into something more obscure, a kind of warped psychedelia that never fully resolves.

ORGAN

By the time “Inaccessible” closes the record, everything has narrowed. It’s the heaviest track here, built around a mantra-like riff that repeats with almost no relief, dragging itself through dissonance with only brief flashes of melody. Obsessive, circular, and resistant to release.

The album artwork comes from Stefan Thanneur, with layout by Alberto Merlin. “Immobilism” is released April 8, 2026 via Invisible Order Records, an independent label founded in 2023 in the Italian Alps. Total running time: 39:17.

 

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Post udostępniony przez Collettivo Belluno Hardcore (@belluno_hc)


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Tags:

  • doom
  • doom metal
  • exclusive
  • instrumental
  • instrumental metal
  • organ
  • post metal

Karol Kamiński

DIY rock music enthusiast and web-zine publisher from Warsaw, Poland. Supporting DIY ethics, local artists and promoting hardcore punk, rock, post rock and alternative music of all kinds via IDIOTEQ online channels.
Contact via [email protected]

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