Lorna Shore at Hovet: A Monumental Display of Deathcore Power

Fredrik Engström
Petri Niskanen (Archive image)
18 februari 2026
Hovet, Stockholm
3.5/5
REVIEW
Lorna Shore at Hovet: A Monumental Display of Deathcore Power
Petri Niskanen (Archive image)

Few acts within the modern metal sphere carry a reputation as fearsome as Lorna Shore. On February 19th, the American deathcore titans brought their brand of relentless sonic devastation to Hovet in Stockholm, delivering a performance that was less a conventional concert and more an unapologetic force of nature. From the opening moments, it was clear that this was not a night for the faint of heart: every note, every rhythm, reverberated with an intent to consume – body and spirit alike.

The soundscape Lorna Shore achieved at Hovet was nothing short of colossal. Layer after layer of thunderous guitars built an impenetrable wall of sound, while the drums battered the senses with rapid-fire blastbeats, their precision conjuring images of machine-gun salvos. This sense of overwhelming heaviness was made all the more remarkable by its underlying discipline—what could easily lapse into chaos instead remained tightly reined, each breakdown, tempo shift, and transition executed with surgical accuracy. That balancing act—brutality married to structure—became the bedrock of the night.

Will Ramos, the band’s charismatic and enigmatic frontman, stood central among the storm. His vocal delivery, often described as supernatural, defied conventional boundaries of human capability. Growls, shrieks, and guttural roars poured forth with a visceral energy that pushed even the most seasoned deathcore fans to the edge. Ramos’s ability to channel such extremity while retaining clarity and command further cemented his reputation as a singular presence in extreme metal.

The intensity on stage found its echo in the audience, whose response drove the night’s energy ever higher. From the first downbeat, the crowd was swept up in an unrelenting tide of motion and communal adrenaline. This was not a passive listening experience. Instead, fans became integral participants, meeting the band’s intensity with riffs of their own—moshing, headbanging, and shouting in time with every complex rhythmic passage. Hovet was transformed into a cauldron of shared catharsis, where music and movement blurred into a singular, explosive experience.

Yet, such high-octane energy came with demands. Lorna Shore do not offer respite: their set allowed virtually no space for pause or reflection. For attendees unaccustomed to the genre’s relentless power, this could feel overwhelming, as song after punishing song blurred the lines between exhilaration and sensory overload. Still, this uncompromising approach is core to the band’s identity. The endurance required—not just by the musicians, but also by the listeners—is part of the challenge and reward of witnessing Lorna Shore live.

Ultimately, as the last note faded and the crowds began to exit, the prevailing sensation was one of having endured something immense. What Lorna Shore achieved at Hovet was not subtle or delicate; it was a stunning, physical demonstration of their formidable command over heaviness and technicality. For deathcore devotees and newcomers willing to be swept away, the concert offered a hard-won euphoria—a testament to Lorna Shore’s status as one of the genre’s most awe-inspiring live acts.

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