Unself by Conjurer

Conjurer Unself

79
ChoruScore
4 reviews
Consensus forming
Oct 24, 2025
Release Date
Nuclear Blast
Label
Consensus forming Broadly positive consensus

Consensus is still forming across 4 professional reviews. Conjurer's Unself announces a bolder, more inward-facing chapter that threads abrasive heft with fragile moments, and critics largely agree it marks a significant maturation. Across four professional reviews the record earned a 78.75/100 consensus score, with reviewers repeatedly citing the title track “Unself” and “Al

Reviews
4 reviews
Last Updated
Feb 21, 2026
Confidence
90%
Scale
0-100 critics
Primary Praise

Unself's core strengths are its blend of personal, vulnerable songwriting with unabashed heavy, post-metal heft and strong production.

Primary Criticism

Perspectives vary on the album's longer experiments - some reviewers found sprawling shifts rewarding, others felt certain passages overstay their welcome - producing a broadly pos

Who It Fits

Best for listeners looking for self-discovery and identity, starting with Unself and All Apart.

Standout Tracks
Unself All Apart This World Is Not My Home

Full consensus notes

Conjurer's Unself announces a bolder, more inward-facing chapter that threads abrasive heft with fragile moments, and critics largely agree it marks a significant maturation. Across four professional reviews the record earned a 78.75/100 consensus score, with reviewers repeatedly citing the title track “Unself” and “All Apart” as the album's clearest statements of purpose. Those opening moments - a sombre acoustic introduction giving way to wall-like riffing - set the tone for the collection's contrast between quiet and fury.

The critical consensus highlights atmospheric post-metal textures married to riff-first songwriting and technical prowess. Reviewers praised how “Unself” and “All Apart” marry brutality and melody, while “This World Is Not My Home” and “The Searing Glow” were singled out for their emotional depth and cunning dynamics. Critics note recurring themes of identity, religion deconstruction, and personal struggle, where moments of fragility swell into pulverising heaviness; professional reviews emphasize that the band balances emotional nuance with literal sonic force.

Perspectives vary on the album's longer experiments - some reviewers found sprawling shifts rewarding, others felt certain passages overstay their welcome - producing a broadly positive but measured reception. Taken together, the consensus suggests Unself is worth attention for fans seeking heavy, thoughtful metal and those curious about Conjurer's evolving sonic identity. Below, the full reviews unpack why these standout tracks emerge as the best songs on Unself and what critics mean by its shift toward maturity.

Critics' Top Tracks

The standout songs that made critics take notice

1

Unself

4 mentions

"The opening title track gives a strong indication that the band's third album will provide a more daunting challenge"
Blabbermouth
2

All Apart

4 mentions

"When a blastbeat kicks up a tornado and sucks you dizzyingly in one song later on All Apart"
Kerrang!
3

This World Is Not My Home

3 mentions

"the final song, "The World is Not My Home" seem to tie up the album into a thematic deconstruction of religion"
Angry Metal Guy
The opening title track gives a strong indication that the band's third album will provide a more daunting challenge
B
Blabbermouth
about "Unself"
Read full review
4 mentions
94% sentiment

Track Ratings

How critics rated each track, relative to this album (0-100). Only tracks that made critics feel something are rated.

View:
1

Unself

4 mentions
100
02:42
2

All Apart

4 mentions
82
06:30
3

There Is No Warmth

2 mentions
20
04:48
4

The Searing Glow

3 mentions
35
05:23
5

A Plea

2 mentions
10
02:24
6

Let Us Live

3 mentions
30
05:58
7

Hang Them In Your Head

3 mentions
23
04:36
8

Foreclosure

2 mentions
44
07:33
9

This World Is Not My Home

3 mentions
64
04:42

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What Critics Are Saying

Deep insights from 5 critics who reviewed this album

Critic's Take

In an intimate, inward-looking turn, Conjurer make Unself a record where the best songs - notably “Unself” and “This World Is Not My Home” - balance fragile clean moments with full-on heaviness, revealing a band renewed. The title track opens with sombre acoustic guitars and Dani Nightingale's fragile vocals before the eruption that defines their power, and the closer rings out as a defiant, sumptuous coda. Tracks like “All Apart” and “Hang Them In Your Head” supply crushing overtones and venomous rage, ensuring the best tracks on Unself land emotionally and sonically. This is a record that roars back to their very best while still letting listeners into the band’s renewed, personal world.

Key Points

  • The title track's transition from fragile acoustic opening to explosive riffs makes it the album's most affecting moment.
  • Unself's core strengths are its blend of personal, vulnerable songwriting with unabashed heavy, post-metal heft and strong production.

Themes

self-discovery identity personal struggle heaviness vs. melody

Bl

Blabbermouth

Unknown
Unknown date
85

Critic's Take

CONJURER's Unself stakes its claim with ruthless dynamics and composed menace, and the best songs - notably “Unself” and “The Searing Glow” - showcase that blend in spades. The title track sets the template, collapsing a folksy intro into abject horror, while “The Searing Glow” pairs interlocked riffs and a woozy gait that feels both massive and cunning. Other highlights like “All Apart” and “There Is No Warmth” deliver lurching riffs and brimstone vocals that make the album's heaviest moments truly exhilarating. Overall, the record's balance of subtlety and pulverising force makes these tracks the best on Unself for fans seeking heavy, thoughtful metal.

Key Points

  • The title track is best for how it collapses a gentle intro into abject horror, encapsulating the album's power.
  • The album's core strengths are its blend of brute heaviness and artful subtlety, with dynamic contrasts and sophisticated songwriting.

Themes

brutal heaviness atmospheric post-metal contrasts of quiet and fury maturation

Critic's Take

Conjurer return with Unself as a bigger, better, emotionally deeper record, and the best tracks prove it. The title-track “Unself” announces the shift with a fragile acoustic intro swallowed by a wall of ultra-heavy guitar, making it one of the best songs on Unself. Then “All Apart” follows with a tornado of blastbeats that underlines the album's renewed ferocity, marking it among the top tracks.

Key Points

  • The best song is the title-track "Unself" because its contrast of fragile intro and overwhelming heaviness announces the band's deeper, bigger sound.
  • The album's core strengths are emotional depth, huge riffs, technical twists, and a renewed ferocity that reconnects with listeners.

Themes

emotional depth heavy riffs contrast between fragility and heaviness technical prowess

An

Angry Metal Guy

Unknown
Oct 30, 2025
60

Critic's Take

The best songs on Unself are where Conjurer’s riffs do the storytelling, most notably “Unself” and “All Apart”, which marry brutal heft with unexpected melody in a way that actually feels honest. The reviewer’s eye is drawn to “Unself” for its shocking intro and thematic tie to the album’s religion-facing finale, and to “All Apart” for delivering post-metal weight that lands like a banger. There is praise for the yearning of “There Is No Warmth” and “Let Us Live” even as their late tonal shifts divide opinion, so the album’s highs are thrilling and its longer experiments sometimes overstay their welcome.

Key Points

  • The best song is the title track because it weaponizes riffing to embody the album’s thematic deconstruction of self.
  • The album’s core strengths are authentic riff-first songwriting, genre hybridity, and emotional honesty anchored by Dani Nightingale’s personal journey.

Themes

self-discovery religion deconstruction identity riff-first songwriting genre hybridity