For the past year, KINH have been steadily tightening their grip on Vietnam’s underground. Months of momentum building, singles trickling out without overblown announcements, culminated in a no-frills debut full-length drop, “NGHIỆM.” No countdown spectacle, no industry theatrics, just music.
Recorded throughout 2025 in Nha Trang, “NGHIỆM” feels like the result of a band that chose focus over flash. Known for doing relentless circles around the country, KINH have built a dedicated fanbase not only within metal circles but also among hardcore crowds, and even listeners coming from hip hop spaces. That crossover appeal is not accidental. While firmly rooted in technical death metal, the trio’s rhythmic sharpness, groove awareness, and vocal phrasing occasionally hint at influences beyond blast beats and tremolo picking.
Still, strip it down, and the formula is brutally simple: aggressive, precise, and uncompromising.
Building “NGHIỆM”: Precision, Roadwork, and Identity
KINH’s writing process reflects the same discipline they bring to the stage. As a trio, every instrument has to carry weight; there is nowhere to hide. Guitar lines are dense but intentional, drums are technically demanding yet never indulgent for the sake of showing off, and the bass is far from decorative. The minimal lineup forces clarity.
Some listeners have already dubbed them “the Vietnamese Dying Fetus,” likely due to the trio format, guttural vocal tone, and highly technical execution. The comparison is understandable, but ultimately reductive. Yes, there are common overlaps across the genre. But pitting a debuting Vietnamese act against a world-famous institution misses the point. KINH is not attempting to replicate a Western blueprint. Their phrasing, groove patterns, and tonal shifts carry their own regional and scene-based imprint.
“NGHIỆM” sounds like a band confident enough to define itself early.
Relentless Momentum: From “Hiểm” to “Vô”
The album opens with “Hiểm,” arguably the “slowest” entry on the record, though that’s relative. A gradual fade-in of guitars and vocals gives a brief moment to brace yourself before the crushing beats and serrated riffs hit in full force. From there until mid-album, there is virtually no breathing room.
For newcomers to technical death metal, the sheer speed and density may feel overwhelming. For genre devotees, it’s a playground. Drum sections shift BPM with calculated sharpness, guitars squeal and slice through intricate riff sequences, and transitions arrive without warning yet never feel chaotic.
“Nguyệt” introduces the closest thing to calm the album allows. It leans hardest into hardcore territory, built on groove-driven rhythms while still punctuated by sudden double-bass eruptions and piercing pinch harmonics. Arrangement-wise, it is one of the most versatile tracks, moving between groovy foundations and rapid-fire transitions with control.
Then comes “Vô,” short and direct. An efficient strike. No extended buildup, no atmosphere, just impact.
Cementing the Statement: “Kết” and “Tận”
The final stretch of “NGHIỆM” serves two purposes.
“Kết” acts as a thesis statement. It cements KINH’s identity: unapologetically heavy, structurally complex, technically sharp. The track reinforces the idea that this is measured aggression.
“Tận,” however, feels like the true showcase. It opens at full throttle, fast, technical, relentless, before gradually unfolding into a more melodic riff layered over rich drum textures. From there, the band pivots into groove territory, with bouncy bass and guitar passages that will undoubtedly trigger synchronized headbanging in live settings.
Just when the groove locks in, KINH shifts again. The tempo drops, the double bass remains punishing, and a darker atmosphere creeps in, bordering on black-metal gloom. A dominant bass line, tortured screams, and a church bell sample close the experience with a theatrical but controlled flourish.
It is the album’s most dynamic piece, and our clear standout.
A Debut That Sets Expectations
“NGHIỆM” is a strong opening chapter. It does not attempt to reinvent technical death metal, but it executes its vision with precision and confidence. The production captures something many studio debuts fail to translate: live energy. The record feels immediate, volatile, and physical. Mirroring the intensity KINH is known for on stage.
For a debut, this is impressive not only in ambition but in delivery. The album stands comfortably alongside global releases in the genre while maintaining a distinct identity shaped by Vietnam’s evolving underground.
KINH is not chasing comparisons. They are building their own lane.
Rating: 8/10

