The ever-shadowed halls of House of Ygra have opened once again, this time to usher in a new name from the Northern region: Dạ Xoa. Their debut demo, “Ác Ma Đông Kinh,” arrives without ceremony, but with clear intent.
Across three tracks: “Oán tự,” “Huyết tang,” and “Cố vũ”, Dạ Xoa leans into a strain of black metal that favors atmosphere over polish. The riffs feel cold and unembellished, the drums relentless but not overproduced, and the vocals hover between distant invocation and sharp-edged snarl. There is little here designed for comfort. The demo instead thrives on repetition, tension, and a rawness that feels deliberate.
The title “Ác Ma Đông Kinh” evokes old spirits and older cities, drawing from imagery tied to Northern lore and lingering resentment. Rather than theatrical bombast, Dạ Xoa opts for a stripped, almost primitive approach, letting tremolo lines and steady blasts carry the mood forward. The result is a recording that feels immediate, almost live, as if captured in a single breath somewhere far from daylight.
For House of Ygra, known for documenting and supporting Vietnam’s more obscure metal corners, this release continues a steady commitment to physical formats. The demo is available digitally and on cassette, limited to just 30 copies, a format that suits its lo-fi abrasion and underground ethos.
With “Ác Ma Đông Kinh,” Dạ Xoa steps forward not with spectacle, but with a clear sense of identity. Three tracks, no excess, and a sound rooted firmly in frostbitten minimalism.

