
Grim black metal shrieks meeting heavy gopnik rap beats. A satirical, high-energy collision of Slavic street culture and Nordic darkness for the adventurous.
Imagine a group of guys in full corpse paint and three-stripe tracksuits squatting in a dark alleyway. That visual is exactly what Uratsakidogi sounds like: a jarring, hilarious, and surprisingly technical fusion of 'Black Hop.' It is the sound of grim, frostbitten black metal guitars and shrieks being forcibly married to the rhythmic swagger and heavy 808s of underground hip-hop.
What makes them truly distinctive is the commitment to the bit. This isn't just a mashup; it's a fully realized subculture they call 'Boyancore.' They take the tropes of Russian street life (the 'gopnik') and filter them through the lens of extreme metal and absurdist theater. The result is music that is simultaneously heavy enough to headbang to and funny enough to make you double-take at the lyrics.
Start with the album 'Black Hop' to get the full experience of their signature sound. It is the perfect entry point for anyone who appreciates the intersection of extreme music and high-concept satire, or for those who just want to hear what happens when a blast beat meets a boom-bap rhythm.
Shares abstract hip-hop, industrial metal, gravelly, nasal (signature)
Shares screaming, industrial metal, black metal, forest (signature)
Shares snowfall, industrial metal, black metal, forest (atmosphere)
Shares absurd, industrial metal, gravelly, screaming (signature)
Shares black metal, forest, gravelly, screaming (subgenre)
Shares snowfall, industrial metal, black metal, forest (atmosphere)
Cassette uses generative AI to enrich its catalog. How we use AI →