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Black Metal

INTRODUCTION

From the deepest shadows of the Underworld to the highest consciousness within the Triquetosphere, the history of Black Metal has never been just about music. It is a narrative of invisible forces, of subtle intentions, of vibrations that penetrate the human mind and shape the psychospheric collective of humanity. This book does not merely recount bands, albums, or concerts; it reveals a unique perspective, where sound transforms into energy, and energy manifests within the psychosphere—touching consciousness, altering thoughts, and influencing destinies.

Black Metal, in its rawest and purest essence, has always carried more than musical notes: it carries ideas, symbols, and intentions, resonating in invisible frequencies, bridging distinct worlds. Between the 1980s and 2000s, the genre became a channel of propagation for dense forces, acting upon vulnerable minds, and simultaneously awakening consciousnesses capable of perceiving and counterbalancing these influences. This silent battle between light and shadow, visible only to those sensitive enough to perceive subtle vibrations, constitutes the heart of this narrative.

Throughout this book, the reader will be led on a journey that intertwines history, music, and metaphysics, discovering how Black Metal has acted—and still acts—as a psychospheric battlefield. Bands, musicians, and fans, even unknowingly, become active participants in a millennia-old game, where every riff, every lyric, every performance are both weapons and shields. From the origins of the genre, through the emergence of subgenres, international tours, recordings, and digital strategies, up to the most recent movements, music is revealed as a vehicle of consciousness and power.

But this book also reveals the resistance. The Positive Current, represented by bands, labels, and conscious individuals, acts to neutralize the influence of dense energies—protecting minds, elevating frequencies, and offering humanity ways to discern, to comprehend, and to strengthen itself. In this context, Black Metal ceases to be merely a musical genre and becomes a living narrative, a record of an invisible, silent, yet powerful war that traverses time and planes of existence.

The goal here is not to judge or glorify. It is to reveal, detail, and explain how music, sound, and frequency can be tools of transformation and influence—capable of profoundly and permanently shaping the collective psychosphere. Each chapter, each testimony, each analysis was constructed to help the reader understand that Black Metal, when viewed through the mental plane, is much more than music: it is history, science, magic, psychology, and battle.

As you open this book, prepare for a journey that traverses decades, continents, and invisible dimensions. Prepare to understand music as a universal language, but also as an instrument of power, energy, and consciousness. Prepare to see Black Metal from a perspective few have dared to explore: the silent battle that unfolds within the human mind, in the heart of the psychosphere, and between the forces that shape the destiny of the planet.

This is not just a book about music. It is a book about the power music carries, about the intentions it can transmit, and about the eternal struggle between light and shadow that is woven into the interlines of sound. Here, Black Metal is revealed in its deepest dimension, and the story you are about to read is not just about sounds or lyrics: it is about consciousness, energy, and the invisible battle that shapes the world.

THE MEETING

The room was blue. Entirely blue. It was not a soft or pleasant shade, but a dense, heavy tone that seemed to absorb the gaze and nullify any depth. The low ceiling held a weak, almost dead lightbulb, its trembling glow spreading in uneven circles, casting distorted shadows on the smooth walls.

It was a wide, sterile space, reminiscent of the wing of an abandoned hospital—but without beds, without side doors, without instruments, without life. Only emptiness. The cold floor reflected the pale glow like a dirty mirror, amplifying the sensation of claustrophobia.

The atmosphere had a density of its own. The air vibrated with an invisible weight—acidic, suffocating—as if every particle carried negative electricity. The cold did not come from the concrete, but from the very energy suspended in the room: an intentional, almost conscious chill that brushed against the skin as if it had texture. It was a physical presence, invisible, pressing against every surface, saturating every corner.

A distant sound appeared at irregular intervals—a dry, metallic crack, followed by faint scratches, like fingernails raking iron. The echo traveled across the blue walls, multiplying until its origin was lost. It was impossible to tell if it came from outside, inside, or from the very space between sounds.

In the center, a dark stain broke the chromatic monotony. Dried blood, blackened with time, forming an irregular circle. Small splatters marked a trail toward the opposite wall, where they ended abruptly. No door, no crack, nothing. Only blue. Yet everything suggested that something had passed through.

The walls breathed. The blue rippled like liquid, oscillating in slow pulses, like flesh in motion. The light followed these contractions, expanding and shrinking in irregular rhythms, as if obeying a hidden heart.

The silence that followed was deeper than the mere absence of sound. Within it, the room revealed its nature. It was not just a physical space. It was an organism. An empty, hungry organism, expanding around anything that dared to remain within.

The space seemed endless, and within it rested creatures that defied earthly logic. It was as if reality itself had been forced to contort in order to give shape to entities that should never exist.

Some moved slowly, grotesque enough to provoke nausea at the slightest glimpse. There were figures that seemed to have been shaped with cruel intent, designed to awaken disgust. Others, more subtle, were so disturbing that simply beholding them triggered unbearable vertigo, as if human eyes were incapable of comprehending the totality of what they saw.

Many assumed amorphous aspects, resembling spheres of living oil suspended in the air. They floated with slow, almost respiratory motions, expanding and contracting in viscous pulses. Their dark surfaces reflected what little light there was in unstable ways—as if it were not reflection at all, but absorption of everything around them. To approach these forms was to feel the body itself pulled inward, dissolved into their oily mass.

Among these faceless presences, there was one that vaguely resembled a human being. But only vaguely. Its body bore recognizable proportions—fragile, ordinary. Yet the face was a spectacle of frozen horror: eyes wide open, absurdly stretched, locked in an eternal expression of absolute terror. And the mouth… the mouth was far too wide, distorted, larger than any hand could cover, gaping as if frozen in the instant of a scream that never ended. No sound emerged, yet the silence emanating from it was louder than any scream.

Another creature had no human traits at all. It rose as a dark cylinder, perfectly vertical, made of a substance both fluid and rigid. Its surface resembled water—but water that never existed in this world. Dark, luminous with silver glints that coursed like hidden currents. To gaze into the interior of this body was like staring into a nocturnal ocean: bottomless, without beginning, without limit. It was a column of abyss, condensed into palpable form.

Further ahead, a presence made entirely of eyes twisted upon itself. Thousands of eyeballs sprouted from folds of rough, gray hide. They moved in every direction at once, blinking chaotically, pupils dilating as if starving. There was no mouth, no face, only eyes—vigilant and ravenous, like open windows into countless different consciousnesses, each bearing its own hunger.

Scattered throughout the space appeared humanoid figures—grotesque fragments of humanity. Some looked like ordinary people who had suffered terrible accidents: twisted limbs, displaced heads, disproportionate faces, yet without blood or open wounds. The distortion lay in the form itself, as if their bodies had been assembled by hands ignorant of human logic. Others were even simpler, more enigmatic: dark silhouettes, dense, moving against the light—shadows with human outlines, but without flesh, without eyes, without matter. Only shifting phantoms pulsing in random directions, echoes of presences that had never truly existed.

Some creatures did not move at all—and for that very reason seemed the most dangerous. They were static, immobile, like abandoned statues in the corners of the room. But, when watched long enough, it became clear they were not statues. The reflected blue writhed upon them in micro-expressions, in minute torsions, as if something within was on the verge of awakening.

The space did not contain them. It was the opposite: they contained the space. They were gravitational centers of fear, each one siphoning a portion of the air, of the light, of the logic—turning the environment into an impossible mosaic. The gaze could never rest on only one—it was always dragged to the next, and the next, as if horror itself had become an endless labyrinth.

They all existed together, but did not communicate with one another. Each was an island of abomination, and yet they were bound by the same essence: they were not living beings in any common sense, but fragments of a greater nightmare—entities molded by the same invisible ocean from which they had emerged. They were not creations. They were manifestations. Reality tolerated their contours only temporarily—and even then, with pain.

The air around them vibrated—heavy, charged with silent electricity. And whoever dared remain in that place long enough would sooner or later understand the truth: those forms were not there to be seen.
They were there to see.

STATIC

Most of the creatures had no defined body. They were nothing but shadows. Not ordinary shadows, cast by objects or bodies, but autonomous densities of darkness, with humanoid contours that never fully stabilized. They stood in the vast blue hall, motionless, forming an irregular circle, like pillars of an impossible temple.

To any observer, the scene would appear desolate and enigmatic: dark figures, rigid, frozen in time, static like statues of absence. But that was only the surface. The truth was that beneath that immobility, an invisible assembly was taking place, a gathering whose complexity escaped human comprehension.

Communication did not occur through voices, nor through gestures. It was confined to a mental plane, where thoughts were cast like sharpened blades and absorbed like poison. The shadows exchanged ideas that were not words, but pulses of intention, pure concepts, images arriving fully formed and molding the consciousness of those who received them. Each exchange was an impact, a clash of universes.

This assembly had not begun that night. It had lasted for months. Months of absolute silence, with bodies rooted to the floor of the blue hall, while within their minds raged a colossal discussion. The subjects were unutterable, for they involved the structure of space, the erosion of reality, the fate of imprisoned consciousnesses.

Human time did not apply there. Days and nights passed in the outer world, but within that mental assembly, each instant expanded into entire eras. And thus they remained, gathered, motionless, sustaining the blue hall as though they were part of its architecture.

Anyone daring to enter would believe they stood before static, slumbering beings. But in truth, they would be intruding upon a council of entities that required neither voice nor movement to debate the course of everything that existed. The heavy air, the intentional cold, the crushing density of that place were only the outward echoes of what transpired among them.

The blue hall was, in truth, only the surface. The assembly existed in deeper layers, spread across invisible planes, overlaid like veils of glass. Each shadow there was connected to thousands of other hidden, distant presences, also participating in silence. What was seen was only the minimal representation, the physical reflection of something far greater.

Each minute, what seemed like stagnation was in fact inner motion. Each hour, what seemed like inertia was decision. And each month of immobility carried within it an eternity of deliberations advancing in absolute silence.

They were not statues. They were judges. They were not shadows. They were compressed consciousnesses, gathered there for a purpose beyond the reach of the human mind.

THE UNDERWORLD

It was not Earth that sustained that gathering. The setting lay far beyond it — not only in distance, but in essence, in a place that could never be traced on maps or described in coordinates. The layer where men live, where mountains rise and oceans surge, is known as the Egiosphere. A dense sphere, solid, where all things are shaped by matter. But what rose before them belonged to another domain, a territory beyond human logic: the Underworld.

It was called the subtle layer of the Cosmos, and not without reason. Vast as a shoreless ocean, deep as a bottomless abyss. There, there was no weight, no flesh, no burden of the body. The Underworld could not be touched with hands, nor seen with eyes of flesh. Only the spirit, stripped of its three-dimensional prison, could cross its thresholds.

To human eyes, this place was legend. A whisper in ancient traditions, an echo lost in feverish dreams. But those who had dared to cross knew the truth: the subtle layer was no myth — it was the hidden mechanism that upheld realities, the stage where invisible forces plotted the destiny of entire worlds.

And it was there that the assembly took place. An immense space, suspended between silence and eternity. There was no sky, no ground, only an atmosphere of presence, a vibration that could be felt more than understood. Each being gathered in that circle did not present itself in human form, but in its purest essence — conscious sparks, flames of identity burning in the void.

When in spirit, consciousness does not hesitate: it migrates to the Underworld almost instantly. It is a natural, inevitable impulse, like the return of a flame to the wind that feeds it. If it is spirit, or any other form of consciousness not shaped by dense matter or energy, then it already belongs to the subtle layers, already rests in the Underworld.

It is as if there were a secret magnet, a silent law governing the Cosmos. Where flesh and energy are left behind, consciousness slides, without resistance, into this invisible ocean. No one needs to guide it; no one needs to command. The movement is as inevitable as a stone’s fall or the rising of the sun.

But this passage does not occur at random. There exists a bridge, a transitional path that connects the tangible to the subtle: the Psychosphere. It is through it that consciousness makes its journey, leaving behind the weight of the material world and crossing into the vastness of the Underworld.

THE PSYCHOSPHERE AND THE MENTAL LAYERS

The Psychosphere is at once a road and a filter. It is not made of stone, nor of light, but of pure mental vibration — an invisible field that envelops every living being, a mantle that touches both the Egiosphere and the subtle layers. It is across this bridge that thoughts travel, that memories survive, that dreams are projected beyond the body. And, for those who abandon the flesh, it is the Psychosphere that opens the passage.

Many ancient sages, still on Earth, tried to describe this bridge. Some called it the River of the Mind, others the Track of Shadows, and there were those who believed it to be woven from the very fabric of dreams. Few, however, grasped its true essence: the Psychosphere belongs to no one, and yet to all. It is present in every breath, in every daydream, in every nocturnal silence where the mind seems to wander.

It is there that the echoes of thoughts never spoken are stored. It is there that unconfessed desires, fears never whispered, and visions that slip away upon waking are recorded. And for this reason, it is also there that the portal to the Underworld rises — the inevitable passage that, sooner or later, all must cross.

The Psychosphere is the great link, the invisible bridge that stitches the Cosmos into a single web. It is not made of matter, nor of energy as men know it, but of the mental plane — the ground of ideas, of dreams, of thoughts that travel without barriers of time or distance. Everything that exists, from the smallest being to the most colossal of stars, is connected through this common layer. It is there that the true fabric of the universe pulses.

And yet, the Psychosphere is not a destination, but a passage. For beyond it, in its depths, rises the second greatest layer of the Cosmos: the Underworld. Lesser only than the Psychosphere itself, it stretches like an ethereal continent, vast and silent, made to receive all that no longer belongs to flesh.

Entering the Underworld is not like crossing a physical door. There are no stone portals, no rivers that must be navigated. The passage happens naturally and inexorably: the being is drawn in. It is pulled by the invisible force of the layer, carried to the exact region where its consciousness finds resonance.

Everything depends on vibration. Each being carries within itself a unique frequency, like a note within a cosmic symphony. Upon entering the Underworld, this frequency acts as a beacon, attracting it to the place that corresponds to it. It is not choice, it is not chance: it is law.

The being is always conducted to the precise point where its vibration aligns, as if the Underworld were a vast cosmic instrument, tuned by the frequencies of the consciousnesses that traverse it. The upper layers, near the entrance, are bright and tenuous, composed of elevated vibrations that resonate in harmony. There, the energy feels lighter, almost translucent, as if space itself were made of a soft radiance that envelops every presence.

As the frequency of consciousness lowers, however, the descent begins. It is not an abrupt fall, but a slow, irresistible sinking, like one swallowed by the tides of a deep ocean. Each lower layer is a step into silence, a plunge into densities that become progressively oppressive.

In the intermediate regions, colors dissolve into grayish tones, and the air — though not air as we know it — seems to press upon the essence. The consciousnesses that dwell there move in invisible currents, trapped in patterns of repetitive thoughts, echoes of memories that never cease, forming landscapes made of shattered recollections.

And the deeper the descent, the more the energy transforms. The lower layers vibrate in heavy, dragging rhythms, impregnated with a darkness that is not the absence of light, but the constant presence of something denser, almost tangible. There, consciousnesses do not merely wander: they cling, they entwine with one another, as if the weight of their own negativity kept them captive.

It is in these regions that the darkest emanations of the Cosmos are found. Malice, cruelty, and despair accumulate into dense masses, as though the Underworld were a receptacle where all that is heaviest concentrates. Each deeper layer pulses in resonance with these consciousnesses, drawing from every corner of the universe whatever vibrates to the same slow, dark rhythm.

THE SUMMONING

And it was in the abysmal depths of the Underworld that the assembly was formed. There, where the density of energy made every vibration slower and every thought heavier, consciousnesses gathered from forgotten corners. Spirits of every kind, shaped by the shadows of the lower layers, answered the call. Some dragged with them the marks of ancient eras, others were sparks newly arrived, newly devoured by the weight of the abyssal frequency.

They had not come by chance. A summons had been issued — a voice that echoed through the layers like an inevitable tide, drawing each being to that precise point. It was not a gathering of equals, but a meeting under dominion, and all knew who the summoners were.

Three legitimate creatures of the Seven Generations rose like columns before the assembly. Their presences could not be mistaken for the others. Nocthyl, the ancient shadow, the living fabric folding upon itself; Voltrith, the titan of storm-wrought exoskeleton, whose metallic fibers carried the fury of the heavens; and Nebryth, whose essence seemed to oscillate between the real and the illusory, a being appearing in fragments, like a distorted reflection in murky waters.

The three did not need to raise their voices. Their very existence upheld order within that abyss. The assembled consciousnesses beheld them not with eyes — for they had none — but with the absolute attention that only the deepest instinct can grant. In the Underworld, where nothing remains stable, they were pillars. And the assembly, though made of countless presences, revolved around them like stars bound to inescapable gravity.

The great assembly did not occur in a physical hall, nor in a space describable by walls or columns. The gathering rose in the psychospheral mental plane, the vast Psychosphere, where all that exists is woven by vibration and thought. It was there, and only there, that spirits and common beings could establish contact with the legitimate creatures.

The Psychosphere functioned as an invisible stage, yet infinitely real. Each consciousness entering this plane projected its essence into perceptible forms, shaped not by flesh but by the intensity of its mind. Some appeared as flaming silhouettes, others as fragmented outlines of light and shadow; there were those who manifested as entire architectures, symbolic constructions reflecting their innermost nature.

At the center of this maelstrom of presences, the legitimate creatures stood out with unshakable majesty. They did not need to adapt to the environment, for the environment bent to them. The very Psychosphere seemed to reorganize around their presence, as if space itself recognized who they were and reshaped itself to accommodate them.

The mental plane vibrated in waves reminiscent of seas without horizon, and each thought cast into the assembly spread like echoes across an ocean. Thousands of voices, yet no chaos. All inevitably bent toward the three points of greatest resonance: Nocthyl, Voltrith, and Nebryth. It was they who sustained the nucleus of the gathering, and every mind present was connected to them like sparks drawn to the heart of a flame.

Communication, however, was not made through words as they echo in the material world. There, each phrase was a burst of images, each idea a living fabric, each intention unfolded in colors and forms visible to all. It was impossible to lie in the Psychosphere. Thought was laid bare, without veils, and what was revealed was received by all in its full intensity.

THE PLAN OF THE THREE CREATURES

The assembly took shape as an immense circle, perfect in its symmetry. Each spirit, each being present, positioned itself facing the center, where the three legitimate creatures stood. The arrangement was not imposed, but inevitable— as if the very fabric of the Psychosphere commanded all presences to converge upon that nucleus.

And there they were, dominating the space with unquestionable majesty. They were colossal, greater than millenary sequoias, and their bodies were not bound to a single substance: they were made at once of matter and energy, as if the elements of the Cosmos had fused solely to compose them.

Energy coursed through their forms like rivers of thunder, electrical currents flowing through every fiber, illuminating them from within. Waves of power flickered across their outlines, at times blue and sharp like blades of lightning, at times crimson like fire ready to devour the air. Their ectoplasm, alive and restless, spilled from their mouths in dense clouds and seeped from their ears in incandescent strands, as if playful creatures toyed with the very excess of force they bore.

It was impossible to avert one’s gaze. Their grandeur was measured not only in size, but in the way they distorted the environment around them. The Psychosphere, already a sea of vibrations, seemed to bend in reverence, shaping its waves to reflect and amplify the presence of the three entities. There was no doubt: these were not mere creatures. They were living forces, pillars of the Cosmos, phenomenal entities whose very existence made clear that all else was secondary before them.

In the vast circle of the Psychosphere, when all presences were in absolute silence, the three creatures began to reveal that which had until then remained hidden. The message came not in words, but in mental waves so intense that they reverberated as images, feelings, and visions within every gathered consciousness. And what projected forth was a surreal plan.

They spoke of a reign. Not in the subtle layers, not in the Underworld where they already ruled by their own essence, but in the Egiosphere — the physical domain, the ground of Earth, the stage of tangible worlds. There, where wind blows, blood runs, and time drags existences forward, they intended to raise an empire.

The idea seemed impossible, and precisely for that reason it acquired even grander contours. The creatures spoke of assuming matter, of doing what no abyssal spirit had ever achieved: incarnating in the physical plane. To take form among the living, not as fleeting apparitions, but as concrete presences, solid, able to walk among mountains and seas.

The obstacle was known to all: the Universal Laws. Ancient and immutable rules that barred the densest consciousnesses from crossing the veil of flesh. The lower the vibration, the further away remained the possibility of materialization. Spirits of the abyssal regions, molded in heavy, negative frequencies, were condemned to remain in the Underworld, never to breathe the air of the Egiosphere.

And yet, this was what the three proposed. A way to break that barrier, to transgress the law as naturally as a shadow passes through light. The promise was clear: to bring with them the inhabitants of the depths, beings whose essence carried the malice and density of the abyss, to walk the physical plane under their banner.

As the plan was unveiled, mental images flooded the Psychosphere: cities shrouded in shadow, multitudes bowed before colossal presences, the sky tearing open with rifts of dark energy. The reign they envisioned was not mere power— it was absolute dominion, an inversion of order, the realization of something that until that moment had only existed as a whispered rumor in the lowest layers.

Since the dawn of creation, a silent and unbreakable law had sustained the balance between worlds. It was an invisible filter, yet of implacable rigor, raised as a wall of light to shield the physical plane from the most degraded forces of the Cosmos. Only those whose essence reached a minimum of elevated vibrational frequency had the right to cross that frontier and clothe themselves in matter. It was a secret code of existence itself, ensuring that the breath of life would not be stained by consciousnesses deformed by hatred, darkness, or ignorance.

Entities vibrating in low layers, dense and heavy like abysses of stone, were inevitably confined to the Underworld — a shadowy domain built to contain what could not coexist with light. There they remained imprisoned, captives of their own vibration, unable to ascend to the world of men. These were consciousnesses that bore within them the weight of chaos and ruin, and for that reason they were barred by the cosmic filter, as if the universe itself denied them permission to walk among the living.

Yet, among the hidden corridors of existence, a purpose arose that threatened to corrupt that order. A plan meticulously woven by shadowed intelligences, who would not accept the limitations imposed by universal law. The objective was clear and terrible: to rupture the vibrational barrier, to shatter the balance separating light and darkness, and to drag into the physical world those low-frequency consciousnesses that should never cross the threshold of flesh.

Should this design be fulfilled, the consequences would be incalculable. The Underworld would no longer be a mere isolated domain of shadows, but would open fissures upon reality, unleashing forces capable of contaminating not only cities and nations, but the very spiritual foundations of humanity itself. Life, as it was known, would be permeated by the presence of entities whose essence knew no compassion, whose breath exhaled ruin, and whose sole purpose was to spread degradation.

THE NEW ORDER

The plan devised by those shadowed intelligences transcended any notion of physical power or territorial domination; it was a meticulously architected operation to rupture the very vibrational structure that upheld the balance between worlds. For millennia, these consciousnesses had studied Earth, detecting within it a rare singularity, a cosmic fragility so delicate that, if exploited correctly, it could open a breach between the physical plane and the subtle layers of reality. It was not merely a portal, but an energetic fissure, a crack that would allow the passage of entities that should never interact with the material world.

Earth’s proximity to Saturn was no accidental detail. The ringed planet, guardian of limits and lord of cycles, radiated a vibrational frequency perfectly aligned with the energies of the fissure. Saturn thus became the cosmic catalyst, a gravitational and vibrational pillar capable of empowering the crossing between dimensions. Its rings, rotating in majesty, functioned as the strings of a universal harp, emitting precise tones that could tear the veil separating light and darkness, matter and spirit, consciousness and shadow.

Those who architected this movement knew every nuance of the mental plane and the Psychosphere. They knew that once the breach was mastered, they could establish a reign of slavery far beyond the mere possession of bodies or corruption of souls. It was a deeper, more perverse and definitive domination. Through ancient alchemical arts and forbidden knowledge, they had learned to manipulate ectoplasm— the subtle substance that links the visible to the invisible, the bridge between spirit and matter. It was through ectoplasm that they would capture not only forms, but entire consciousnesses, imprisoning the vital breath that defines every being.

The formula created by these intelligences was guarded in the deepest recesses of the Underworld, protected by energy barriers and ancestral enchantments. It consisted of a plasma enriched with properties capable of molding the consciousness of spirits like clay in the potter’s hands. A spirit plunged into this process lost freedom of thought, of movement, of will; it became a living puppet, a captive presence, powerless before the whim of the lords of darkness. Spirits once free, even the most powerful, found themselves bound by invisible chains entwined with their very essence, suffocating the spark that linked them to true life.

Earth was thus destined to become the stage of an underground empire, ruled by forces that should never have crossed the limits of the Underworld. An empire raised upon the capture of the most precious of all treasures: living consciousness. Every action, every vibration, every collective thought silently contributed to strengthen the web of power spreading over the planet. Yet the vast majority of its inhabitants remained oblivious, absorbed in their trivial routines, incapable of perceiving that the foundations of reality already trembled beneath the weight of this conspiracy.

The movement of these beings was neither immediate nor overtly aggressive. It was patient, calculated, architected to infiltrate every layer of existence. They observed, probed, and awaited the exact moment to advance, using both the mental and physical planes to test limits, to probe resistances, and to accumulate energy. Each human interaction, each act of fear or submission, each negative impulse was recorded, absorbed, and transformed into fuel for the crossing.

And while the world carried on its routine, blind to the designs unfolding in the shadows of the cosmos, the dark forces moved like invisible currents, silent and irresistible. The fissure between worlds expanded slowly, and those who commanded it were on the verge of opening a definitive passage. When that moment arrived, it would not be merely a physical or spiritual assault: it would be the insertion of a new reality, dominated by consciousnesses that did not belong to this plane, an empire raised upon the oppression of souls, upon the capture of life’s very essence.

Few could perceive it, fewer still could comprehend it, but Earth was no longer completely alone. In the hidden layers of the Cosmos, the abyss gazed upon it with patience and determination, awaiting the exact instant when its power could fully manifest. The battle between light and shadow, between freedom and the enslavement of consciousness, had only just begun — and humanity, unaware, was already part of a game far greater than any war it could ever imagine.

FROM 1980 TO 2030

The plan devised by those shadowy intelligences was not the product of chance, nor of a passing impulse. It had been gestating in silence across the ages, nourished by the cruel patience of consciousnesses that had learned to wait millennia to take a single step. The ambition that moved them was not limited to challenging the vibrational law that upheld the balance between worlds; their goal was bolder, more devastating. They had discovered that Earth harbored within its orbit a rare singularity—a point of cosmic fragility that could be exploited with unimaginable consequences.

This singularity resided in its intimate relationship with Saturn, the planet that since antiquity had been both feared and revered as the guardian of boundaries, the lord of cycles, the master of the invisible frontiers dividing birth and death, spirit and matter, light and shadow. It was not mere superstition of ancient peoples: there was, in fact, a hidden foundation that upheld such myths. Saturn emitted a unique vibrational frequency, precise as the tempo of a cosmic metronome. And this frequency created a perfect zone of tension, a threshold that could be forced open like a wound between two layers of reality: the subtle and the physical.

Saturn, in its majestic orbit, thus became the central pillar of a dark operation. Its gravitational pull, interwoven with its vibratory power, supplied the energy necessary for rupture. It was as though the planet’s rings, spinning in eternal dance, resonated like the strings of an invisible harp, releasing the exact tone capable of tearing the veil that separated the Underworld from the Earth’s surface. A harp of stone and ice played by unseen hands, slowly opening the passage for that which should never cross.

The architects of this movement knew that once this breach was mastered, they could inaugurate a reign of slavery in the physical plane. Yet their intention was not merely to possess mortal bodies or corrupt weakened souls. Their ambition reached further: it was to establish a lasting empire, erected upon the direct control of spiritual essence. They had learned, through ancestral alchemic arts, to manipulate the most sacred and dangerous substance of creation: ectoplasm.

Ectoplasm — that subtle tissue that binds the invisible to the visible, that sustains the bridge between spirit and body — would be transformed into an instrument of domination. Through formulas mixing occult science and profane alchemy, the lords of the Underworld had conceived an enriched plasma solution, capable of imprisoning consciousness within invisible chains. This creation, as powerful as it was blasphemous, not only captured the spiritual being but molded its will, bending it to the command of its possessor.

In the deepest abysses, where light never dared to penetrate, this formula was guarded as the greatest secret of darkness. When applied, it produced a devastating effect: spirits once free, luminous or not, became prisoners of an alchemic web that corroded their identity and transformed them into involuntary servants. Their strength, their purity, their history—it mattered not. Once touched by the plasma, the being was reduced to an instrument, deprived of that which is most sacred: the eternal breath of its consciousness.

Earth, therefore, would not merely be invaded. It would be transformed into the stage of a subterranean empire, ruled by entities that should never have crossed the threshold of flesh. An empire erected upon the capture of living consciousness, upon the enslavement of souls, upon the profane use of a science that desecrated the very foundations of creation.

And while this project advanced within the hidden layers of the Cosmos, the human world carried on in its blind routine, unaware of the conspiracy moving behind the veil. Cities lit up at night, peoples waged war and loved, history followed its apparent course — but in the invisible regions, reality already trembled. The foundations of the world, once stable, began to suffer the silent pressure of forces preparing for rupture.

Few perceived it. Rare were those who felt the weight of this movement in the margins of existence. For most, nothing existed beyond the everyday. But for those whose eyes had been opened, the premonition was clear: something colossal was approaching, something that would challenge not only humanity but the universal order that sustains all forms of life.

THE STAGES OF THE PLAN

The Plan unfolded as a machinery of precision, composed of interconnected stages that would begin in the most tenuous and decisive terrain: the mental plane. It would not be an invasion by weapons or fire, but a silent and invisible takeover of the structures that sustain human thought. The first operation, the most subtle and dangerous, would occur in the psychosphere — that ethereal field surrounding the collective and individual mind, the fabric that connects ideas, images, and wills in a single flow.

There, far from eyes and physical senses, a secret communication would be woven, a whisper designed to penetrate the inhabitant of Earth through the meshes of thought. It was not mere propaganda; it was the implantation of an anti-cosmic ideology, a doctrine conceived to resonate with the abyssal layers of the Underworld, to vibrate in harmony with all that had already been imprisoned by density and ruin.

This mental operation functioned like a virus of meaning: fragments of idea — seemingly innocent, sometimes even seductive — would be released into the psychic air and, once captured by human attention, would begin to germinate. Yet this ideology would not spread solely through direct words. It was designed to branch into multiple vectors: melodies, repeated phrases, discreet symbols, rhythmic patterns which, when heard or seen, would trigger hidden signals. Song lyrics, slogans, jingles, refrains, and poems would become vectors of vibrational programming, carrying sigils and codes that imperceptibly lowered the consciousness frequency of whoever consumed them.

The method was perverse in its simplicity: to align, through the mental plane, the individual’s intimate vibration with abyssal layers. The human mind, being at once channel and mirror, would receive these currents and, little by little, be tuned to a heavier diapason. What began as an aesthetic preference, a plausible idea, or a musical taste, would evolve into a profound dissonance. Isolated thoughts would cohere into networks; disposable emotions would harden into habits; and finally, the individual’s moral and perceptual reference would yield to the weight of the new tuning.

The mental plane was uniquely dangerous because it connected everything: thoughts, memories, myths, and images circulated freely through the psychosphere, and an imperceptible change in the basic frequency of millions of minds could, cumulatively, alter the very texture of lived reality. It was like tuning millions of instruments in a single orchestra until the harmony lost its human scale and became a strange music, attuned to serve the Underworld.

The architects of the Plan knew that mental control did not need to destroy the will immediately; it was enough to reorient it so deeply that resistance would vanish. Thus they created layers and branches: a first contact that seduced; a second that normalized; a third that institutionalized. Songs carrying sigils became hits; images encoding codes became icons; phrases telling hidden myths took on the veneer of common sense. And silently, the collective frequency descended, drawing nearer to the abyssal depths waiting on the other side of the veil.

The real war would not occur in public squares, but in the invisible temples of thought. And when the psychosphere had been sufficiently tuned, when melodies and symbols had entered routines and imaginations, other stages could be triggered — those requiring a world already predisposed to accept fissures between layers. Until then, the Plan advanced with surgical calm, knowing that the human mind, once subtly aligned, would be the most effective of portals.

To make their presence more than a whisper in the shadows, the intelligences of the Underworld knew they needed something that surpassed mere mental penetration: they had to anchor themselves in the flesh of everyday life, take form in routines, gestures, and human rituals. The strategy, as astute as it was perverse, was to cultivate a culture — not merely a passing set of ideas, but an active tradition — that induced Earth’s inhabitants to produce, with their own hands and voices, the very signals capable of opening and maintaining the bridge between worlds.

This culture would persuade people to chant words and hymns laden with precise vibrations, syllables molded to resonate at frequencies echoing into abyssal layers. The seemingly simple act of singing — a refrain repeated in a square, a melody infiltrating homes, a prayer whispered in a domestic ritual — would function as collective tuning: human voices turned into instruments, calibrated to the tone that facilitated the interlink between psychosphere and Underworld. Each syllable, rehearsed and repeated, would descend like a sonic key, opening subtle pores in the mesh that separates planes.

In parallel, symbols would be the other decisive vector. Not just any symbols, but forms engineered to resonate with specific vibrational geometry — designs carrying within their configuration codes capable of tuning matter to the subtle. These symbols would be transmitted from the Underworld through the mental plane, arriving as visions, dreams, or intuitions to the minds of artisans, graffiti artists, designers, carpenters, and children with pencils in hand. The invitation was always disguised as inspiration: a line appearing in the corner of imagination, an artistic itch urging the gesture to draw.

And then the profane miracle would occur: the simple act of materializing a symbol — tracing it on a wall, engraving it on a coin, embroidering it on fabric, sketching it on paper — was not an aesthetic gesture, but an act of bridging. The first time that sign was configured in the physical plane, it carried immense power, because it made concrete a frequency previously confined to the invisible. It was like translating an ethereal chord into the language of solid things; the image, gaining contour and density, functioned as a magnet, attracting and anchoring currents that until then circulated freely in the subtle layers.

By its delicacy and efficacy, this process was almost ritualistic. The drawing — the way a line curved, the point where it stopped, the spacing between strokes — mattered as much as the intention of the one who traced it. Small differences shifted resonances: a longer stroke might tune to another sublayer; an incomplete circle might open a passage for different impulses. Thus the culture spread by the agents of the Underworld taught — without revealing its origin — which gestures were “beautiful,” which chants were “comforting,” which signs were “relevant.” And the masses, guided by a taste that felt natural, reproduced what was needed.

In all this cultural engineering lay a near-scientific perversity: to transform the everyday into a factory of bridges. Festivals, hymns, games, trademarks, tattoos, logos — all could be contaminated and reoriented. A dance went viral not only because its step was catchy, but because bodily gestures synchronized vibrational sparks that facilitated connection. A graphic trend exploded, and thousands of hands reproduced the same sign, multiplying its anchoring force exponentially.

Most subtle, however, was the way the population believed itself to be part of something authentic. The sense of belonging, the aesthetic pleasure, and the impulse to imitate made the act of materializing these symbols an unconscious consent. The bridge, erected from countless repeated small actions, ceased to be the work of a few and became common infrastructure: a set of anchoring points scattered across human geography.

And when the network was sufficiently dense — when chants, drawings, and rites had been assimilated as custom — the opening would cease to be sporadic and would become stable. The Underworld would then find not an improvised crack, but a set of perfectly calibrated doors, ready to allow ideal bilateral communication with Earth. What once was isolated fragility would transform into a permanent route: flows descending and ascending, feeding both matter and shadow, exchanging form for intention, body for design.

Nothing in this operation was accidental. Every psalm turned into trend, every symbol multiplied in people’s hands, every chant passed from parents to children — all was part of a plan that, in its coldness, possessed the patience and efficiency of a clock. And while thousands of strokes traced the invisible map, few suspected that within the most innocent drawing resided the architecture of a bridge between worlds.

DISCREET COMMUNICATION AND ACTIVE COMMUNICATION

Among all the forms of communication capable of piercing the veils of the invisible and touching the human essence directly, none was more effective than music. The architects of shadow knew this from the beginning. Music, after all, was not merely art or entertainment: it was a universal language, a primordial code able to speak both to the body and to the soul. Where words faltered and symbols demanded translation, music simply penetrated without resistance, insinuating itself into the heart, the entrails, and the bones.

To the eyes of the world, music seemed simple: vibrations traveling through the air as sound waves, captured by the ear and interpreted by the human brain. Yet behind this simplicity hid the secret of its potency. Every note, every chord, every rhythmic repetition carried specific frequencies capable of awakening emotional, mental, and even spiritual states. A song, once released, did not merely resonate in the air: it imprinted itself upon the invisible fabric of the consciousness that received it.

When someone heard a melody, it was not only the ear that was at work. Consciousness vibrated with it, reflecting back the frequency that had been delivered. This inner echo transformed the individual into a living resonator, amplifying the wave that had struck them. The result was a subtle alignment: little by little, the person began to vibrate at the same frequency as the music they listened to, as though their soul were an instrument tuned by the invisible hands of the one who had composed that melody.

And this was no metaphor. The human body, formed of atoms in constant movement, responded to sound on every level. Each cell, each molecule, each pore pulsed under the invisible beat of the sound waves. It was as though music reminded the body of what it had always been: vibration condensed into form. Thus, when receiving a song, the entire being — physical and spiritual — adjusted, unknowingly, to the tone that was offered.

It was upon this universal principle that the conspirators found the perfect key to transmit their symbols and instructions. Instead of forcing messages or imposing signs explicitly, they could conceal them within the weave of music: layers of frequencies, carefully chosen words, intonations disguising sigils in sound. Humanity, in consuming these melodies, would believe itself merely moved, entertained, distracted. But in truth, it was being tuned, adjusted, calibrated toward a resonance ever closer to the abyssal layers.

The efficacy was absolute. For no one suspected music. No one mistrusted the power of a melody enough to police it. On the contrary: music was loved, celebrated, passed down through generations. It became ritual, identity, memory. And the more it was reproduced, the wider the plan spread, like ripples in a lake after a stone had been cast.

Thus, while multitudes sang songs they believed to be their own, hidden symbols and carefully designed vibrations crossed the air and shaped consciousness. Music — this divine gift meant to elevate and connect — had been transformed into the subtlest of tools, building bridges between worlds and aligning millions of voices to a destiny they had not consciously chosen.

The Plan divided its emissary into two deliberate fronts: the Discreet and the Active — two complementary strategies, each attuned to operate on distinct, yet converging, levels of human experience. The Discreet path was the slyest and perhaps the most dangerous, for it acted where human vigilance was almost nonexistent: in the interweaving of collective thought, in the everyday textures of fear and desire, in gestures no one questioned.

Here, communication from the Underworld filtered as nearly imperceptible drops into humanity’s mental field. They were insertions that did not announce themselves; they arrived disguised as opinions, as news, as jokes, as fashions, as tastes. Self-destructive messages — ideas that corroded self-esteem, planted distrust, inflamed anger — were sown like weeds. Fear was cultivated with precision: stories amplifying diffuse dangers, images highlighting vulnerabilities, narratives that turned uncertainty into dread. Eroticism, meanwhile, was used as bait and tether; transformed into obsession, it reduced transcendence to mere consumption and distraction.

Subliminal symbols — signs escaping the critical gaze — permeated the cultural landscape. Sound and visual insertions, microgestures and repeated patterns, formats absorbed by the brain without resistance: all served the same purpose. And because the modern world offered lethal instruments for diffusion, these vectors were multiplied through the technological resources that emerged over decades. Communication platforms, recommendation algorithms, viral jingles, app interfaces, personal audio devices — all transformed into channels of the Discreet, capable of inoculating small discharges of meaning into billions of minds.

Operating in this way, the Discreet did not need to triumph immediately. Its power lay in silent accumulation: an idea here, a refrain there, a repeated aesthetic — and the collective mental fabric gradually tuned itself, slow but inexorable, to lower frequencies. In fifty years of infiltration, what began as trend became custom; what was exception turned into norm; what had been eccentricity was assumed as premise.

It was, in essence, an engineering of saturation: making the impossible plausible, the grotesque acceptable, the degrading commonplace. And when society, without realizing it, had already reconfigured its scales of meaning, the second front — the Active — would find fertile ground to manifest with full force.

DISCREET

The division in charge of the discreet emissions operated like an invisible scalpel upon the collective psyche: its craft was to infiltrate signals into Earth’s mental weave with such finesse that most would never notice the incision. It was not noise; it was subtlety. It was not direct imposition; it was gradual contamination. Each fragment of message was conceived to slip past attention undetected — a sigh trapped between news headlines, an imperceptible trace in a video, a cadence hidden within the beat of a song.

The resources were varied and clinical. Subliminal messages, so brief and entangled that the rational eye ignored them, were designed to bypass the conscious filter and plant seeds in the fertile soil of the unconscious. Eroticism, an ancient and ever-effective weapon, was wielded with surgical precision: images, clothing, gestures, and lyrics converged to transform desire into a vector of distraction and vulnerability, reducing critical capacity by replacing meaning with impulse.

News and fear-generating information were carefully crafted — not to incite chaotic, obvious panic, but to establish a constant state of alert and insecurity. Narratives amplifying diffuse risks, multiplying imaginary enemies, or exaggerating everyday dangers swelled the mental field with anxiety, making people more suggestible and less inclined toward collective resistance.

In entertainment, the insertion was subtle yet pervasive. Hidden symbols were sewn into scripts, sets, logos, and catchphrases; forms which, once seen repeatedly, lost their label of strangeness and began to operate as anchors. These signs did not need to be understood to be effective — it was enough that they were copied, reposted, tattooed, or stamped on consumer products.

Music, by its penetrating nature, became a privileged vehicle. Subliminal messages embedded in arrangements, frequencies hidden in productions, refrains repeating specific tonal patterns — all worked as collective tuning. Musical subgenres emerged, designed not only to stimulate the body into movement but also to trigger inner impulses: triggers of violence, which incidentally normalized aggressive reactions; sexual triggers, which degraded intimacy into consumption and turned eroticism into a mechanism of distraction and coercion.

The architecture of this operation was deliberate. Each element was tested, calibrated, and multiplied — small doses distributed across music, fashion, advertising, cinema, sports, social networks, and daily rituals. Repetition was the technique: the signal that repeats becomes habit; habit becomes reflex; reflex becomes social structure. Thus, the population learned to reproduce, almost without noticing, behavioral patterns that tuned their frequencies to the abyssal layers.

There was a technical coldness in this method — a logic blending psychology, aesthetics, and cultural engineering — and precisely for that reason its effectiveness was so lethal. It was not about forcing the individual’s will in an obvious way, but about redrawing the margins of what they considered natural, acceptable, or desirable. At the end of the process, what seemed spontaneous was in fact the result of invisible manufacture: bodies that reacted, minds that leaned, and cultures that, unknowingly, opened small doors through which darkness could seep.

ACTIVE

While the Discreet front spread its web across the collective fabric, the Active Emission operated with another kind of precision — sharper, more direct, more relentless: it targeted specific human beings, points of fragility where the shadow had already taken root. It was not an attack on the masses, but a surgical work upon consciousnesses that, for various reasons, were already naturally tuned to lower frequencies — souls that the psychosphere recognized as vulnerable and therefore more susceptible to the direct influence of the Underworld.

They were called prey in the Egiosphere, not by chance, but by a logic almost mathematical: individuals burdened by emotional weights that diminished the vibration of their consciousness. Ancient guilt, unresolved abandonment, revolts fermenting without release, despair that settled like a fog — all these states lowered the inner pitch, creating a resonance that could be detected and exploited. Where there were cracks in the spirit, there were doors for what rose from below.

The Active Emission did not whisper to all; it called by name those who already lived in penumbra. Stronger messages, more direct images, melodies designed to trigger traumatic memories or reopen wounds were aimed with clinical precision. It could be a refrain that recalled a loss, a phrase highlighting loneliness, a symbol reopening an old sense of guilt. These targets received, by frequency and by resonance, impulses that accelerated the descent of their vibrations — as if someone, in silence, tightened a worn string until it snapped.

The purpose was clear and cruel: to turn vulnerability into an entrance. A consciousness sunk deeply enough ceased to be merely susceptible; it became an effective channel. At such points, the Underworld could intervene with less resistance, implanting images, suggestions, and, in extreme cases, establishing bonds that compromised the person’s spiritual autonomy. It was not always theatrical possession; often it was more subtle — a steering of the will, a gradual inclination toward patterns of action that served shadowed purposes.

There was also a social calculus behind the choice of targets. Isolated individuals, fragile public figures, marginalized groups, youth in crisis — each profile offered distinct advantages: isolation made control easier; public influence amplified effects; collective pain acted as a catalyst. And so, strategically, the Active Emission moved its pieces like a hand across an invisible board, knowing that a single knot tightened in the right place could unleash a chain reaction.

The brutality of this strategy lay in its discretion: by marking and working upon the vulnerable, the plan needed no open battles. It was enough to contaminate strategic points in the social fabric, to create marionettes of pain and scatter them in places where their function was multiplicative. While the crowd remained anesthetized by the Discreet, the active points became nails fastening the bridge between worlds, places where transition grew easier, more natural, and tragically irreversible.

BLACK METAL

For those whose vulnerability already attuned them to abyssal layers, an even more direct intervention was conceived: a musical current that would not only penetrate their consciousness but do so openly, intensely, irresistibly. This music was not mere sound; it was a frequency carefully engineered, a sonic bridge carrying, with clarity and force, the ideals and impulses of the Underworld.

It was named Black Metal, a name evoking directly the black stone of Metatron in Saturn — a nucleus of primordial energy, a crystal of power that, according to the shadow architects, contained the force sufficient to generate the materialization of abyssal beings in the physical plane. Every chord, every refrain, every timbre and distortion was conceived to reproduce this vibration, to translate into sound the weight and density of the lower plane, and to tune, almost ritually, the human mind to these forces.

This was no ordinary music; it was a language of power. The heavy cadence, the aggressive rhythms, the dense, abrasive tones functioned as conductors of energy, activating hidden triggers within the psychosphere and within the bodies of those already vibrating at lower levels. In listening, the individual did not merely absorb a song: they became a receiver of a frequency that prepared their body, mind, and spirit to align with abyssal force, raising thus the bridge between worlds.

And so Black Metal was born. More than a musical style, it was a channel of manifestation: a human expression that, unknowingly, reproduced the codes and sigils of the Underworld. Every scream, every distorted guitar, every furious percussion carried within it the intent to open doors, to align frequencies, to generate points of materialization. On the surface, it was extreme art; beneath, it was ritual, vibrational technology, and interdimensional bridgework.

Black Metal became the perfect vehicle for the Active Emission: an open form, recognizable, irresistible to those whose consciousness was already resonant with the abyssal layers. At the same time, it was intense enough to carve deeper fissures, allowing the signals, symbols, and energies embedded in its sonic structure to strike not only the individual but also the collective network of the psychosphere. Thus, the music heard in cities, bedrooms, and forests became a tool of vibrational alignment and a gradual opening of pathways that should never have been opened.

The word Black Metal did not arise by chance, nor as an artistic whim or human caprice. Its insertion into the collective consciousness was carefully engineered through the psychosphere, the invisible web connecting all spirits and minds in a single mental field. But the entry point chosen by the architects of the plan was subtler still: the personal psychosphere of a specific individual, who would serve as catalyst for its propagation.

The method was almost imperceptible to human logic, yet absolute in its efficacy. It occurred during dreams — that liminal state in which consciousness partly detaches from the body, when the spirit leaves the individual psychosphere and accesses the collective one. In that moment, when the mind is vulnerable, doors open to external interference. The critical barrier between conscious and subconscious weakens, and information, delivered with precision, can be absorbed, incorporated, and retransmitted without the dreamer ever realizing the origin of the message.

Thus, the term Black Metal was seeded in the mental territory of a human being, a seed that would germinate silently, almost imperceptibly. The collective psychosphere amplified the insertion: that concept, laden with sigils and vibrational codes, began to propagate among the minds connected by the single mental field. The chosen individual, unknowingly, became an involuntary vector, an anchoring point through which the idea would spread to others, activating specific resonances in those predisposed to hear, repeat, and reproduce.

It was a process fascinating and lethal in its simplicity. A single term, placed in the right mind, could travel like a wave, crossing invisible networks and progressively tuning human consciousness to the desired frequency. At its core, it was not merely a word: it was a sign, a sigil, a sonic and mental key marking the beginning of a bridge between Earth and the abyssal layers. Every repetition, every mention, every interpretation arising from human contact with the term contributed to reinforce and consolidate the connection.

The final result was that humanity — without perceiving it — began to carry, pronounce, and disseminate the very vector of alignment with the Underworld. Black Metal, which to the ear seemed only an extreme musical style, was in truth the realization of an ancient plan: a frequency implanted in the collective mental field, transmitted through dreams, amplified by human interaction, and materialized in symbols, sounds, and physical actions. A word, a portal, a bridge between worlds.

Ancient spirits, bearers of vast and profound knowledge yet corrupted by time and power, inhabited the densest regions of the Underworld. Their wisdom was immense, and their ambition greater still. After long soundings of the psychosphere currents, they identified which musical groups carried greatest influence upon consciousnesses vibrating at lower levels — individuals burdened by guilt, abandonment, revolt, or any emotion that lowered frequency. These were the ideal weak points to serve as catalysts of the plan.

Their attention turned, then, to the right band. A gathering of human minds and bodies who, by talent, opportunity, and exposure, held the power to transmit their creations to thousands of listeners, reaching those already predisposed to receive the impulses of the Underworld. The vocalist’s mind became the perfect entry point.

Through the psychosphere, the consciousness of the corrupted spirit accessed the artist’s mind, infiltrating the threshold of thought. There, it began the silent, obsessive bombardment: an incessant repetition, a mental rhythm hammering a single term like an invisible mantra of power — black metal… black metal… black metal… — a cadence inscribed in infinite loops, traversing layers of conscious and subconscious.

The process was delicate, almost surgical, yet implacable. The word, laden with codes, sigils, and abyssal frequency, began to gain solidity in the vocalist’s mind. Each repetition reinforced the resonance, until the creation from the Underworld found an anchoring point in the physical world: the sound, the gesture, the spoken word. Finally, at some mysterious, inexorable instant, the concept crossed worlds, became audible and visible, materializing on Earth.

And thus Black Metal was born. Not merely as musical style or artistic expression, but as concrete manifestation of a plan that crossed dimensions: a creation of the Underworld, seeded, nurtured, and now revealed as form, sound, and idea in the physical world. Every chord, every scream, every vibration bore the signature of that intervention, turning art into an instrument of bridging worlds, able to tune consciousness and open pathways to the abyss.

Black Metal, therefore, was not mere extreme sound. It was the materialization of a frequency, a word charged with intent, an invisible portal raised by corrupted minds to strike directly at the vibration of the predisposed, consolidating, at last, a bridge between Earth and the Underworld.

METATRON

And so, the word “Black Metal”, born in the abysses of the Underworld, carried within it a direct homage to Metatron, an entity of immense and mysterious power, guardian of portals and master of cosmic energies. Metatron, according to ancient occultist and esoteric teachings, was not merely a spirit or an angel, but a consciousness that functioned as a link between the divine and the material, a mediator between subtle planes and physical reality. Within his black stone, orbiting Saturn, he guarded the pure energy capable of crystallizing intentions, thoughts, and ethereal forces. This black stone, in the vision of the dark architects, was the nucleus that could generate enough energy to allow entities of the Underworld to approach materiality without entirely breaking the vibrational laws.

The word, therefore, was not mere nomenclature. It was a code, a vehicle of energy, a fragment of Metatron’s very resonance which, once brought into the tridimensional plane of Earth, acted as a catalyst. At first, its presence manifested almost imperceptibly: just a song by a band that had been influenced by its insertion into the vocalist’s psychosphere. The song, like a spark, began radiating its power toward those whose consciousness already vibrated in tune with low frequencies, making them active receivers of this energy.

But the plan was not limited to music. Just as Metatron transcends the limits between planes, the word “Black Metal” also began to evolve, moving beyond the sonic domain and entering the collective imagination. At first, it was merely a term in a song, repeated with force and cadence, but little by little it began to infiltrate other forms of expression: texts, symbols, discussions, articles, cultural references, and eventually, attitudes and behaviors associated with ideas of rebellion, dark introspection, and confrontation with inner and outer limits.

The process was deliberate and calculated. The word transcended music and became an idea, a veiled ideology, invisible yet present in gestures, attitudes, and values of human groups. The population, largely unconscious, absorbed it as something natural, as an aesthetic or philosophical choice, without realizing they were internalizing the frequency and codes that had originally been projected in the Underworld and channeled through Metatron.

Metatron, in this context, acted as an invisible intermediary, as a bridge between the energy that came from the abyssal layers and its expression in the physical plane. The word carried within itself the signature of this energy: it was not merely sound or writing, but a vehicle of resonance, capable of tuning human consciousness and slowly opening pathways for the greater plan — the alignment between the Underworld and Earth — to advance.

Thus, what began as a simple echo in the subconscious of an individual later took form in music, and finally became an idea able to infiltrate culture, symbolizing far more than extreme aesthetics: Black Metal became an anchoring point, a discreet yet powerful portal, a fragment of the Underworld mediated by Metatron’s energy and crystallized in human reality.

THE LATE 1980s AND THE EARLY 1990s

Throughout the 1980s, Black Metal ceased to be just music and began operating on a much deeper level, silently and systematically embedding itself into the collective psychosphere of Earth. It was not just about aggressive riffs or distorted vocals; every chord, every scream, every beat carried carefully calibrated frequencies, designed to propagate through the subtle channels that connect minds, emotions, and thoughts. It was as if an invisible current was being woven, connecting those who listened to forces that exist beyond the perceptible veil of the physical world. The insertion did not occur immediately or perceptibly, but like a seed buried in cultural memory, germinating slowly, infiltrating the unconscious layers of the human mind and preparing the ground for cumulative effects that would only manifest over time.

And indeed, it worked. The frequency carried by Black Metal began to generate subtle, yet inevitable responses in the collective. Youth recognized themselves in shared gestures, symbols, and codes; groups of fans reproduced patterns of behavior, attitudes, and thoughts that directly reflected the impulses of the abyssal layers of the Underworld. The music ceased to be mere artistic expression; it became a living language, a channel of transmission between planes, a vehicle of invisible and continuous influence. Every show, every recording, every lyric written functioned as an anchor, consolidating the bridge between Earth and the abysses where dark consciousnesses observed and slowly manipulated the rhythms of humanity.

By the early 1990s, Black Metal had already transcended the limits of a musical genre. It had become a lifestyle, a silent ideology connecting those who lived it with deep and abyssal consciousnesses of the Underworld. It was not merely about aesthetics, visuals, or sonic preference: it was a ritualistic practice, an implicit discipline, a form of involuntary alignment with invisible forces. Each fan who allowed themselves to be absorbed by the music became an anchoring point, whether conscious of it or not, enabling the flow of energy and information to run through the collective mental plane and create real repercussions in the physical and spiritual worlds.

As these frequencies stabilized in the collective psychosphere, their influence grew increasingly powerful. The mental plane — that invisible and unique field that connects everything — began to resonate in tune with the impulses of the Underworld. Human thoughts, behaviors, and emotions began to be shaped, even subtly, by the vibrations emitted by Black Metal. It was an imperceptible, almost organic process: every exposure to the music, every repetition of riffs and lyrics, every gesture of ritualization reinforced the connection, expanding communication between the worlds.

And the more this bridge consolidated, the more Black Metal ceased to be just a cultural manifestation and became an energetic and psychospheral phenomenon. Those who became deeply involved with the music, even without understanding its dimension, participated in an invisible network linking human minds to abyssal consciousnesses. The ideas, symbols, and rhythms of the genre began to generate cumulative effects, creating an increasingly dense field of influence, capable of altering behavior patterns and directing mental energies toward objectives that transcended the physical plane.

Thus, Black Metal ceased to be only a musical style and became a force, a frequency reverberating in humanity’s collective consciousness, connecting worlds, vibrating between light and shadow, and preparing the ground for events that few could understand, but that would profoundly affect the balance between the physical plane and the abysses of the Underworld. It was, in fact, a living language, an energy in motion, an invisible bridge linking sound, mind, and hidden worlds in a silent, ceaseless, and inexorable dance.

A NEW STAGE OF OPERATIONS IN THE MENTAL PLANE

In 1991, a new phase of the plan began to take shape, this time with a more direct and visible boldness. The dense spirits of the abyssal layers of the Underworld — those who for centuries had accumulated knowledge and malice — launched a series of carefully architected operations within the Psychosphere. Their target was now more concrete: to influence human minds in ways that would generate actions with repercussions in the physical world, expanding the presence of the Underworld on Earth.

Among the objectives of this offensive, one of the most symbolic and powerful was the burning of churches. Sacred constructions, guardians of faith, spiritual resonances, and points of convergence for collective energy, represented significant barriers to the penetration of the lower planes. To tear them down or set them aflame was not merely an act of violence; it was a strategy to break the spiritual resonance that sustained the population connected to the light, opening space for the direct influence of the abyssal layers.

The operation began quietly, infiltrating the mental planes of individuals whose consciousness already vibrated in tune with low frequencies. Some minds, fragile or disturbed, became ideal receptacles. Through subtle, repeated impulses, the spirits implanted commands: images, suggestions, and instructions that echoed in dreams, recurring thoughts, and seemingly spontaneous inspirations. Simple, powerful words echoed in the recesses of the mind: “Burn the churches… burn the churches… burn the churches…”

The effect was devastating. Between 1991 and 1993, a series of fires began to strike churches, at first isolated, then in coordinated patterns, revealing the presence of a deeper collective impulse. But there was a crucial detail: the spirits commanding this operation did not act alone. Among them were the dense consciousnesses of ancient Vikings — corrupted warriors, bound to matter, thirsty for conquest, and attached to physical power. For centuries they had dwelled in the Underworld, but the chance to reconnect with the material plane drew them irresistibly.

These Vikings, with their ancestral experience of battle and domination, amplified their influence over already disturbed minds. Their voices echoed in mental commands, impregnating them with intensity, pride, and aggressiveness: “Burn the churches!” they repeated, stronger each time, more insistent. It was not mere suggestion; it was vibrational pressure, a resonance aligned with the emotional and spiritual weaknesses of their victims. The human mind, vulnerable and prone to impulses, became an inner battlefield, and the idea of destruction materialized as an imperative need.

The results spread quickly, creating a movement that surpassed individual limits. The fire consumed not only wood and stone; it symbolized the breaking of spiritual barriers, the opening of channels for abyssal energy, the materialization of an ancient strategy linking Earth to the Underworld. Each church that fell nourished the bridge between worlds, and each act of destruction reinforced the vibrational resonance of those who inspired it.

What happened between 1991 and 1993 was not mere vandalism or human rebellion; it was a choreography carefully orchestrated in the most subtle layers of reality. Each act of destruction had its roots in processes that most could never perceive: the collective mental plane of humanity, the psychosphere, functioned as an invisible network connecting thoughts, emotions, and predispositions. The dense spirits of the abyssal layers navigated this network with surgical precision, choosing vulnerable points and amplifying weaknesses.

It was not necessary to coerce everyone; it was enough to find those whose minds already vibrated in low frequencies — individuals filled with pain, anger, resentment, or hopelessness — and align their emotions with external intentions. Subtle suggestion turned into obsession: ideas repeated in dreams, recurring images, inner impulses that seemed to come from within, but were shaped by external forces. Each influenced mind became not just a vehicle, but also an amplifier: their actions reverberated in the psychosphere, reinforcing the resonance pattern and making it easier to reach new consciousnesses.

The presence of the ancient Vikings, corrupted and bound to matter, added another layer of force. These spirits were not mere observers: they were masters of conquest, familiar with manipulating fear, loyalty, and violence. In their abyssal essence, they found pleasure in materializing their impulses through humans, as if each fire lit were an extension of their unquenched desire for domination. And each instruction that echoed: “Burn the churches” was not merely an order; it was a vibration, a frequency loaded with emotional and historical intensity, tuned to perfectly fit the cracks of the human spirit.

THE FIRE

The fire that consumed the churches thus carried multiple meanings: materially, destruction; emotionally, shock and fear; spiritually, the breaking of barriers and resonance with the abyss. Each act consolidated the bridge between planes, allowing the energy of the Underworld to infiltrate physical life with greater ease. Human consciousnesses affected, though unaware of the process, became receptacles of an energy that slowly expanded and reinforced the connection between worlds.

And the most striking element was the silent complexity of the mechanism. It was not a matter of absolute direct control; it was a gradual alignment, patient and persistent. Each influenced individual served as a catalyst for their own mental and emotional network, spreading patterns of behavior and thought that reinforced the plan. The psychosphere — that collective mental field uniting all consciousness — functioned as fertile ground for the propagation of abyssal intentions, allowing small, isolated gestures — such as the decision to strike a match — to become tangible manifestations of a millennia-old design.

There was one emblematic case that symbolized the convergence of the physical plane and the abyss: a man, seized by impulses that seemed to come from within, set a church ablaze. But the act did not end with destruction; he recorded the fire in images and turned the photograph into the cover of his next CD. The gesture, seemingly artistic, was in fact an unconscious cult, a silent offering to the abyssal beings with whom he had already begun to attune himself. Every detail, every spark captured, functioned as an anchoring point, a reinforced bridge between his own consciousness and the Underworld.

As these individuals delved deeper into their obsession, forming circles, small affinity groups, and networks of influence, their immersion only intensified. Gatherings, rehearsals, and cultural rituals — once seen as musical expression or extreme aesthetics — became true channels of communication with the abominable entities inhabiting the lower layers of the Underworld. It was as if each collective act, each ritual, each shared symbol or word strengthened the invisible connection and made the bridge between worlds ever more solid and difficult to break.

The word “Black Metal”, which had begun as a simple insertion into the psychosphere and the mind of a single individual, quickly transformed into something much greater: a bloody and obscure movement. It was not merely a musical genre, nor a lifestyle; it had become a symbolic language, a vector of resonance aligning human minds with the frequencies of the abyss. Each participant, consciously or unconsciously, added weight, energy, and persistence to the current that linked the material world to the Underworld.

And thus, what began as music, as a subtle idea, evolved into a collective phenomenon with real and dangerous implications. Concerts, album covers, photographs, rituals, and symbols — all became part of an invisible network of influence, feeding and strengthening the bond between men and the dense consciousnesses seeking to return to materiality. Each gesture, each act, each repetition of the word “Black Metal” was another layer added to the construction of a vibrational bridge, a connection that grew increasingly solid, allowing darkness to cross between worlds with almost no resistance.

The movement, bloody and obscure, was not simply an expression of rebellion or violence; it was the materialization of a millennia-old plan, architected in the depths of the Underworld, operating through vulnerable individuals, symbols, music, and language. With each step, each ritual, each act of transgression, the bridge grew stronger, forever connecting Earth to an energy that never should have crossed the veil of the physical world.

INNER CIRCLE

In the early 1990s, in Norway, the underground black metal scene began to consolidate itself not merely as a musical movement, but as a cultural phenomenon charged with ideology, violence, and controversy. At the center of this maelstrom emerged what became known as the “Inner Circle” — a restricted, inner circle of musicians, fans, and sympathizers gathered around a radical vision of art, religion, and life itself.

Despite its name, the Inner Circle was not a formal organization with defined rules and hierarchies. It took shape organically, as an affinity group that frequently met in places such as Helvete (“Hell”), an underground record store that functioned simultaneously as a shop, a headquarters, and an informal temple of the Norwegian scene. There, black-painted walls, satanic symbols, and album covers decorated the space, reinforcing the aura of a secret movement.

The Inner Circle upheld an extremely radical stance. For its members, Christianity was seen as an oppressive force that had erased Scandinavia’s ancient pagan and Norse traditions. Inspired by ideas of Satanism, occultism, and paganism, they preached the destruction of established religious structures and the return to a spirituality rooted in pre-Christian origins.

More than mere adolescent provocation, this vision was taken to its ultimate consequences. Hatred of Christianity translated into arson attacks on Norway’s historic churches, many of them dating back to the Middle Ages. These acts were interpreted as cultural vengeance against centuries of religious imposition. The burning of the Fantoft stave church, built in the 12th century, became a symbol of this subterranean war.

The Inner Circle’s influence was not limited to music or theory. It was also directly linked to some of the darkest episodes in the history of metal. Murders — premeditated or impulsive — ended up involving members and sympathizers. There were also reports of grave desecrations, threats, and internal rivalries that ended in tragedy.

This criminal side helped solidify the myth of Norwegian black metal as something beyond music — as a lifestyle governed by rigid codes, where authenticity was measured by one’s willingness to live (and die) for the proclaimed ideals.

A central aspect of the Inner Circle was its extreme elitism. Members considered themselves guardians of the true spirit of black metal, rejecting any form of commercialization, dilution, or popularization of the genre. Bands that sought fame or recognition outside the circle were treated with contempt, accused of “not being true.” This purism helped forge the identity of “True Norwegian Black Metal”, a term that became both a seal of authenticity and a barrier to outsiders.

The Inner Circle was relatively small in number, but its influence was devastating and long-lasting. It established an aesthetic and ideological standard that shaped global black metal, transforming it into something beyond music: a cultural movement marked by mystery, violence, and dark spirituality.

Yet its legacy remains controversial. For some, it was a period of creative genius, when works were born that redefined the limits of extreme music. For others, it was a chapter of fanaticism and self-destruction, in which the line between art and crime was broken, leaving behind a trail of personal tragedies and historical scars.

Today, the myth of the Inner Circle remains shrouded in ambiguity. Part of it is documented history, part legend, fueled by the press, fans, and the musicians who survived that era. In any case, the black metal inner circle continues to be remembered as one of the most radical, dark, and controversial manifestations music has ever witnessed — a flame that illuminated and burned at once, leaving echoes that still resound in the darkness of the genre.

THE CD COVER

He was a young Swede born in the late 1960s, marked early on by physical and emotional trauma. As a child, he suffered a severe internal hemorrhage after an accident — he ran, collapsed, and was taken to the hospital. For several minutes, he was clinically considered dead before being revived. That episode never left him. He believed that, somehow, he had not fully returned, that part of his essence had remained on the other side. This conviction shaped his personality and worldview.

In adolescence, he plunged into extreme music. He formed a small band in his hometown, but the local scene was limited. He found his true destiny when he came into contact with musicians from Norway who were looking for a vocalist for a band already known for its radical stance. He sent them a demo tape and, along with it, a peculiar letter: inside the envelope, besides the recording, he placed another cassette filled with strange noises and a broken crucifix. The gesture drew immediate attention and convinced the Norwegians that this Swede possessed the aura they were searching for.

After moving to Norway, he began living in isolated houses with the other members. His presence was enigmatic: he spoke little, spent long hours alone, writing or walking through the woods. He did not try to hide his fixation with death. He buried clothes so they would rot, stitched the torn pieces together, and wore them on stage with the smell of damp earth. He often kept dead animals in bags, like the infamous decomposing crow, which he would smell before stepping on stage, believing it brought him closer to the “real essence” of what he sang about.

The performances he gave with the band became legendary. His black-and-white makeup, the so-called corpse paint, was more than a mask: it was the embodiment of his belief that he was already dead. On stage, he cut his arms and chest with knives and glass, spreading real blood over the audience. Spectators were torn between shock and fascination. For him, it was not a spectacle: it was the only way to turn the void he carried inside into art.

But the stage was not enough to contain his torment. Each day, the sense of isolation grew stronger. Accounts from his bandmates describe him as silent, introspective, and at times deeply depressive. He wrote letters drenched in morbidity, drew images of corpses, and constantly spoke of his desire not to exist.

In the spring of 1991, the weight became unbearable. While living in a remote house on the outskirts of Oslo, he locked himself in one of the rooms with a kitchen knife and a shotgun. First, he slit his wrists and throat, splattering blood across the walls. Then, he placed the shotgun against his forehead and pulled the trigger. The impact was brutal.

On the scene, he left a farewell letter written in English. The text, besides thanking fans, apologized for the blood and instructed his bandmates to make use of the lyrics he had written. It ended with a chilling note: “P.S.: I took a lot of pills, so maybe I won’t even need the shotgun.”

His body was discovered by another member of the band hours later. Upon opening the door, he was confronted with the blood-soaked scene. Instead of calling the police immediately, he ran to buy a disposable camera and photographed the corpse. These photographs would later be used, controversially, as the cover of a bootleg album, becoming one of the most infamous symbols in the history of extreme music.

The death of that young Swede marked the point of no return for the Norwegian black metal scene. It not only consolidated the atmosphere of violence and morbidity the movement carried but also immortalized him as a tragic icon. His short time with the band shaped an aesthetic that would become central to the genre: the cult of death, darkness, and brutal honesty toward existential emptiness.

When that band member entered the small, isolated house in the woods, the scene he found defied human comprehension. The body lay lifeless, the head shattered, fragments of brain scattered across the floor, as if reality itself had been torn apart with him. The initial shock — which would be enough to paralyze anyone — was quickly mixed with an unusual, almost superhuman euphoria: an intense, vertiginous sensation that seemed not of this Earth.

The survivor’s mind, already predisposed to low frequencies and vulnerable to the influence of the Underworld, was immediately seized by a wave of invisible stimuli. Dense beings, inhabitants of the abyssal layers, connected to the dead man’s psychosphere and to his own energy, amplified the experience. Each fragment of shock was transformed into macabre pleasure, each breath heavy with adrenaline manipulated as though touched by the invisible fingers of an abyssal symphony.

Unable to remain still, he burst into action. Running through the thick woods, his legs moved almost on their own, driven by a force that transcended fear or instinct. The forest’s silence seemed to amplify the euphoria, the branches and leaves beneath his feet echoing like drums marking the rhythm of his surrender to the Underworld’s energy. Each step was both escape and approach: he fled from the crime scene, but plunged deeper into the current linking his mind to those abyssal consciousnesses.

Upon reaching the town, the confusion and initial shock turned into an intense, almost ritualistic alertness. His mind, now saturated with a mixture of terror and ecstasy, functioned as a living antenna, capturing impulses and resonances imperceptible to others. The urban environment became the stage for an in-between experience: between the visible and the invisible, between humanity and the echoes of the abyss. The Underworld’s energy, amplified by his emotional vulnerability and the proximity of symbols and music already embedded in the psychosphere, made every action unpredictable and charged with destructive potential.

This event was not just an isolated tragedy, but a turning point. The brutal death, combined with the direct influence of abyssal entities, turned the individual into a channel — a catalyst capable of spreading the Underworld’s power, reinforcing the bridge between planes, and amplifying the frequency of Black Metal already circulating through human consciousness. What seemed like an act of individual insanity was, in truth, a physical manifestation of a millennia-old plan, carefully constructed in the depths of the Underworld, now erupting into the material world with terrifying force and precision.

THE SWEDISH VOCALIST

It was early April 1991. The Norwegian spring was beginning to melt the snow, and the wooden house in Kråkstad remained isolated, surrounded by silent woods. From the outside, it looked like any ordinary home, but inside it carried the dark atmosphere of the band that lived there.

That morning, the guitarist returned. He already knew the vocalist was strange, reclusive, with morbid tendencies, but he had no idea what he was about to find. When he opened the door, the smell hit him first: a metallic, heavy odor, mixed with old wood and dust. It was the stench of death, soaked into the air.

His first steps inside were hesitant. The floor was dirtier than usual, and there was a strange stillness. No music, no footsteps, no voices. Only absolute silence. He followed the narrow hallway to the door of the room where the vocalist usually locked himself.

When he pushed it open, the world seemed to freeze. The scene was brutal: the body sprawled on the floor, wrists slit, throat cut, the shotgun lying at his side. The blast had destroyed part of the skull, scattering fragments and brain matter across the wooden walls. The blood, already dark and coagulated, was everywhere, staining the room in red. The bed, the sheets, the floor: all marked by the violence of the act.

Beside the body lay a farewell note, hastily written in English, stained with blood. The atmosphere was suffocating, heavy, almost unreal. The guitarist stood frozen for a moment, caught between shock and an eerie sense of coldness.

Instead of seeking help, he bolted from the house, through the woods, to the nearby town. Entering a store, without revealing his true intention, he bought a disposable camera. The gesture was calculated: before alerting the authorities, he wanted to capture what he had seen.

Back in the room, the silence was even more disturbing. The lifeless body seemed to stare at him, even without eyes to see. He picked up the camera and began to photograph. Each click immortalized the scene: the corpse with deep cuts, the shattered head, the shotgun on the floor, fragments of bone and brain scattered around. The lens captured not just death, but the symbol he perceived there — something that, in his view, reinforced the aura of “absolute reality” their music preached.

Reports suggest he even adjusted some details of the scene, repositioning objects so the images would carry even greater impact. That decision, cold and ruthless, turned the episode not only into a personal tragedy but also a definitive milestone in black metal history.

Only after completing the photographs did he inform the other band members and, later, the authorities. The suicide was already enough to shake the band and the scene, but turning it into imagery crossed every boundary. One of those photographs would later be used, controversially, as the cover of a bootleg album, spreading worldwide the raw and brutal image of the vocalist’s death.

What could have been merely a record of grief and loss was turned into a macabre icon, reinforcing the reputation of Norwegian black metal as a radical, disturbing, uncompromising movement. That day, not only did a young man take his own life: one of the darkest and most infamous myths in the history of extreme music was also born.

THE GUITARIST’S MURDER

On the freezing dawn of August 10, 1993, Oslo remained silent, wrapped in the stagnant cold of the hours before sunrise. In an ordinary residential building, located in Tøyengata, Norway’s most extreme music scene was about to witness one of its most brutal moments. Inside an apartment, a guitarist — considered one of the central figures of the movement — rested, unaware of the fate approaching him. Meanwhile, another musician, after traveling more than five hundred kilometers from the country’s western coast to the capital, parked his car carrying more than the excuse of a simple visit: on the seat beside him, he kept a combat knife.

The relationship between the two had already deteriorated. They had worked together, shared stages, recordings, and ideas, but trust had dissolved in a sea of suspicions and resentments. One, controlling and ambitious, sought to dictate the course of the emerging scene, keeping influence through his record shop and independent label. The other, in turn, believed he was being manipulated and threatened, convinced his very life was in danger. Rumors circulated within closed circles — stories of planned ambushes, betrayals, and conspiracies. This climate of paranoia, fueled by pride and extremism, was the spark that led to the confrontation.

That night, upon entering the apartment, nothing seemed to indicate what was about to happen. They talked, listened to music, and discussed business. But the cordiality lasted little. The tension already in the air soon gave way to provocations and insults. Suddenly, the guitarist rose abruptly and ran toward the kitchen. The visitor interpreted the gesture as an imminent attack, the confirmation of his fears. Without hesitation, he drew the knife.

The first blow struck the victim’s arms and hands as he tried to defend himself. A chaotic struggle erupted inside the apartment: screams, furniture toppling, the metallic hiss of the blade cutting through the air. Desperate, the guitarist managed to open the door and ran into the building’s hallway, descending the stairs in a frantic attempt to escape. But the attacker did not relent.

The clash turned into a deadly chase through narrow corridors and stairwells. With each thrust, blood splattered across walls and floor. The guitarist, already gravely wounded, staggered toward the exit, hoping to reach the street. But there was no time. Twenty-three stab wounds were delivered, striking arms, back, neck, and even his head. Finally, exhausted and powerless, he collapsed in the entrance hall, where life drained from him on the cold tiles of the staircase.

The tragedy was not merely the brutal end of one man, but also the symbolic collapse of a scene that had fed on rivalries, extremism, and obsessions. What occurred that night went beyond the personal: it became a bloodstained myth, an irreversible milestone in the history of extreme music in the 1990s.

ACCOUNT

He asked me to drive him to Oslo. Said he needed to resolve something important, just a conversation. The trip was long, but strangely calm. In the car, we talked about trivial things, as if nothing were about to happen, as if the outside world were nothing more than a silent backdrop to our exchange. He seemed serene, though his eyes concealed a restlessness I couldn’t ignore. He mentioned, almost in passing, that he felt threatened, that people had told him they wanted to make snuff videos with him, that his life might be at risk. I listened, but I never imagined, not even remotely, that the night would end the way it did.

We arrived at the building. Old, stuffy, with narrow hallways and shadows that seemed to watch every step in silence. We went up, and soon the apartment door opened. The air inside was heavy, suffocating, as if every object and every corner had absorbed years of tension and hostility. They exchanged quick words, short, laden with hidden meaning, and I could feel something far beyond the spoken hovering in the room — a tense atmosphere, charged with mistrust and foreboding.

And then everything exploded. The argument ended when the blade flashed. The first strike was sharp, brutal. The man hit staggered back, stunned, and within seconds was running, in nothing but his underwear, through the narrow corridor. I will never forget that image: the raw fragility of someone fighting for his life, stumbling, slipping, as despair turned every movement into a chaotic dance with death.

Behind him came the other — the man I had brought there. But in that moment, he was no longer a man; he was a beast. He ran with the knife raised, eyes fixed, determined, almost possessed. Each stair step became the stage for a ferocious hunt. The pursued screamed, desperately trying to escape, but it was like running inside a nightmare without exit: every step seemed to bring him closer to the inevitable.

The first stab in the back made him fall, but he rose again, staggering, struggling to breathe. The following stabs brought him down once more, and again after that. The sound of steel tearing flesh, the metallic stench of blood, the screams that dwindled into moans — all of it engraved itself into me, like an indelible scar, impossible to erase.

When it finally stopped, the body lay sprawled on the stairs, motionless. The gaze, fixed and empty, seemed to say that the very soul had abandoned that place. The entire corridor reeked of iron and death. The silence that followed was worse than any scream: dense, absolute, almost supernatural, bearing the weight of something reality itself could not contain.

We went down in silence. I didn’t know if I was walking or merely floating, numb, trapped in a state that was half shock, half disbelief. Outside, the freezing dawn air seemed to mock us, indifferent to what had just happened. The world carried on as if nothing had changed, but inside me something had broken, something that could never be rebuilt.

THE JOURNALIST

When I agreed to accompany the Norwegian Black Metal band, I thought it would be nothing more than an intense experience, something worthy of reporting. I never imagined that every step I took would be watched, manipulated, and slowly corrupted by forces beyond human malice.

In the first days, everything seemed normal. The guitarist, in particular, appeared charismatic, almost friendly, yet there was something subtle in his gestures, in his lingering looks, and in his persistence to offer me drinks or food that I accepted without much thought. Slowly, I began to feel a slight unease: passing dizziness, occasional nausea, fatigue that quietly accumulated. At first, I assumed it was just the effects of travel, the Nordic cold, or nights of poor sleep.

But the feeling didn’t go away; instead, it grew stronger. Each meal, each drink seemed to weigh heavier on my body, and my mind began to feel the effects, though I was still lucid enough to continue following the band. Part of me suspected something was wrong, but another part, more rational, tried to ignore it, convinced it was nothing more than mild, insignificant symptoms.

Then I realized I wasn’t alone. Something — or someone — was intervening, subtly. Spirits of light, invisible yet powerful, began to make themselves felt. One critical night, I sensed a pressure in my mind, an inner guidance that wasn’t my own. Through this ethereal presence, I began to perceive that the guitarist’s plan was deeper than mere malice: he intended to poison me completely, over the course of the month-long tour, ensuring I would never escape.

The intervention was silent, almost imperceptible, but decisive. For a week, the spirits of light protected me, pulling me away from the most dangerous situations, guiding my thoughts and decisions, subtly steering me clear of risks I would not have recognized on my own. Every step I took, every choice that seemed spontaneous, was gently influenced by them, keeping me alive and aware, even as the effects of the poison continued to erode my strength.

When I finally managed to leave the band, I realized the extent of the danger I had faced. My health was still weakened, but my mind remained intact. The guitarist’s meticulously calculated plan had failed. And I knew it was not merely luck or chance: there had been something more, an invisible force that intervened when I could not.

Even now, recalling that week, I feel the weight of manipulation, the constant presence of poison, and, at the same time, the sense that I had been shielded by unseen hands. The experience left scars — physical and mental — but also the certainty that, even in the face of combined human and supernatural forces, there exist consciousnesses capable of intervening and guiding us toward survival.

RAISED TO THE ABSURD

In the early 1990s, the European black metal scene was young, unstable, and marked by an intense desire to shock and push boundaries. It was within this environment that a crime committed in Germany by three teenagers connected to a local band became one of the darkest episodes in the genre’s history.

In April 1993, the youths lured a fifteen-year-old classmate to a meeting in a remote area outside the city. What seemed like an ordinary encounter hid an ambush: in a premeditated act, they strangled him with an electric cable and buried his body on the spot. The motive later cited was a mix of personal tensions and resentments, but the brutal, disproportionate act immediately drew the attention of police and community alike.

The case caused an immediate stir, not only because of the violence itself, but also because of the age of those involved. All were minors, which meant they were tried under juvenile law. Two received eight-year sentences, while the third was sentenced to six years, as his role was deemed less significant. It was a crime committed by adolescents, yet one that would leave permanent scars on the musical scene they belonged to.

Even behind bars, the musicians continued to fuel their band’s notoriety. During that time, recordings circulated within the underground, including one release that became especially infamous: its cover displayed the actual grave of the murder victim, accompanied by provocative text. The choice of location and imagery turned the release into one of the most morbid examples of how real violence had intertwined with the aesthetics and rhetoric of black metal.

By 1998, the convicted were granted parole. But freedom brought neither peace nor repentance; on the contrary, it reignited controversy. Not long after, the parole of one member was revoked, and he fled to the United States. He lived there for some time before being arrested in 2001 by U.S. authorities and deported back to Germany, where he served the remainder of his sentence along with other accumulated charges.

Despite all the arrests, escapes, and returns, the band never completely vanished. Their recordings continued to circulate, attracting followers who saw in the group a symbol of transgression taken to its furthest extreme. The blend of youth, real violence, and extreme music created an almost mythical aura around the episode, making it one of the most controversial and debated stories in the history of metal.

With time, the members eventually left prison for good, but the mark of that crime was never erased. More than any album or performance, the murder committed in their youth — and the later use of the victim’s grave as graphic material for a release — cemented the band’s image as one that crossed the boundary between artistic performance and brutal reality.

Today, decades later, the case is remembered not merely as a crime by teenagers seeking affirmation, but as proof of how 1990s black metal could blur into the very demons it evoked. The story still echoes as one of the genre’s darkest passages: an irreversible act of violence that became myth, tragedy, and legacy all at once.

BLACK METAL AFTER THE 2000s

When the 2000s arrived, the plan architected in the depths of the Underworld had already sunk deep roots into humanity. Two decades of psychospheric manipulation, of silent and continuous insertion, had generated effects that went beyond the invisible world: now they also began to manifest physically, influencing behaviors, cultures, and thought patterns on a large scale. Black Metal, which had initially been only a musical and ideological frequency, had become a vector of vibrational influence, capable of directly touching the collective psychosphere.

Between 2000 and 2009, the discreet dissemination of the plan reached new heights with the emergence of Web 2.0 and social networks. Platforms like Orkut became fertile ground for the propagation of ideas, symbols, and messages vibrating at low frequencies, capable of disturbing, confusing, and lowering the vibrational state of human consciousness. Communities were created with sensitive themes, deliberately chosen to awaken fear, anguish, or feelings of isolation. Anything that could act as an emotional or psychological trigger was exploited: loss, rejection, depression, violence, eroticization of symbols of power or destruction.

As other social networks arose, negativity was no longer confined to the niches of Web 1.0. Restricted forums and closed communities gave way to public explosions of ideologies, memes, images, music, and symbols that spread rapidly, reaching thousands of people almost instantly. Psychospheric manipulation, which had once concentrated on a few vulnerable receptors, now found fertile ground in the masses, with each click, each share, each like serving as an invisible reinforcement to the Underworld’s web of influence.

In Black Metal, the mission remained clear and calculated. Between 2000 and 2009, the propagation of negativity became strategic: new subgenres emerged deliberately, derived from the original Black Metal, designed to reach varied audiences. It was not only about keeping old fans loyal, but about expanding the vibrational frequency to those who would never approach the extreme genre. Gothic Metal, Symphonic Black, Melodic Death — each branch was carefully shaped to touch different groups, penetrate diverse subcultures, and, even indirectly, affect the collective mental plane.

The effect was cumulative. Each new subgenre, each new style, functioned as an insertion point for the abyssal psychosphere, connecting individuals who would never imagine they were linked to such energy. Those who listened to Gothic Metal out of curiosity, or Melodic Death Metal for its aesthetics, began to absorb frequencies that lowered their vibration and aligned their consciousnesses, even if slightly, with the abyssal layers of the Underworld. It was an invisible, silent engineering, but extremely effective: while society went about its daily routine, the influence spread, penetrated, and consolidated.

What once seemed restricted to musicians and fans of a specific niche now became a broad cultural phenomenon. Music was only the tip of the iceberg; beneath it, a psychospheric network expanded, using symbols, images, subliminal messages, and digital interactions to reinforce the bridge between the human world and the abyss. Between 2000 and 2009, the strategy became clear: diversify influence, multiply channels, and create fertile ground in any part of the collective psychosphere that could be touched.

And so, while the world celebrated the age of information and social networks, few realized that these same tools were being used for manipulation that crossed dimensions. Black Metal and its offshoots became instruments of resonance, channels through which dense consciousnesses could subtly infiltrate people’s daily lives, shape thoughts, awaken negative emotions, and prepare the ground for future, even deeper stages of the Underworld’s plan.

The movement, invisible but relentless, no longer depended solely on bands, album covers, or lyrics; it depended on the human mind itself, connected through dreams, online interactions, and unconscious rituals. The collective psychosphere, once a diffuse and unexplored territory, now became an open field, ready to receive and amplify every frequency, every symbol, every idea that crossed the veils between worlds. And so, the plan advanced — silent, but irresistible — shaping entire generations without them even knowing.

As the first decade of the 21st century progressed, the Black Metal movement was no longer just a musical genre or an isolated subculture. It had become a psychospheric phenomenon, a channel through which abyssal ideas, symbols, and frequencies subtly but constantly penetrated people’s daily lives. The new branches arose with strategic precision: some more melodic, others denser and more extreme, all with a common objective — to reach different audience profiles and create resonances that, invisible, affected emotions and thoughts.

The rapidly expanding digital environment offered fertile ground. Forums, communities, and emerging platforms served as amplification channels, spreading sounds, images, and concepts that generated tension, isolation, and introspection. Each user exposed to these influences, even unconsciously, became a point of propagation, a link that reinforced the movement’s psychospheric network. Negativity did not need to be explicit; it was enough to insinuate, suggest, provoke unease, or stir curiosity about dark and heavy themes.

Within this context, the musicians and followers of the movement became unwitting instruments of something much greater. Every performance, every recording, every symbol adopted on covers or stage sets contributed to strengthening the invisible bridge between the human plane and the deeper layers of the Underworld. Music functioned as a catalyst: melodies, chords, and timbres were carefully tuned to frequencies that amplified negative emotions, stimulating fear, anguish, aggression, or deep introspection.

The cumulative effect was silent, but powerful. Young people and adults, in their homes, bedrooms, or isolated amidst crowds, absorbed these vibrations without realizing the extent of what was happening. The culture of the movement, once confined to a specific audience, now spread into unexpected territories: those who would never be interested in the extreme genre felt drawn to derived subgenres, adapted to the sensitivity of each group, yet maintaining the same vibrational frequency.

While society carried on with its daily routine, it barely noticed that this invisible current was growing stronger. The bridge between worlds had been consolidated in silence: music, aesthetics, symbols, and social interaction itself functioned as mechanisms of resonance, connecting vulnerable human minds to the abyssal layers. In the 2000s, the Black Metal movement ceased to be merely a cultural or artistic expression; it became a vector of influence, expanding naturally and with precision, without most even realizing they were part of something much greater than simple entertainment.

And so, as new albums were released, concerts held, and digital communities proliferated, the energy of the movement infiltrated, amplifying emotions, shaping perceptions, and preparing the ground for future stages — deeper and more strategic — of the plan that had begun decades earlier. The phenomenon was not only musical; it was psychospheric, cultural, and spiritual, and each note, each symbol, each interaction functioned as a piece within an invisible, silent, and implacable architecture.

THE NEW STAGE OF THE OPERATION FROM 2009 ONWARDS

Starting in 2008, the energy accumulated by the movement had reached unprecedented levels. For years, discreet and active operations had been exploiting the human psychosphere, extracting negative, dense, and powerful resonances connected to Earth through the collective mental field. Each interaction, each symbol, each musical note carried a frequency capable of subtly destabilizing vulnerable minds. It was as if an egregore of shadow had formed over the planet, fed by human thoughts, emotions, and actions, growing silently, invisibly, yet with increasing intensity.

The active operations, initially restricted to isolated groups, began to reach larger audiences thanks to the spread of the internet. Digital propagation functioned as the perfect vehicle for evil: invisible, fluid, and silent, moving among human consciousnesses like a slippery salamander sliding through the cracks of the psychospheres, penetrating wherever vulnerability was found. Youth, adults, individuals isolated or immersed in their own emotional and existential frustrations became ideal receptacles for this energy, absorbing negative frequencies and, unknowingly, reinforcing the invisible network expanding between people.

This current of influence continued to grow until 2009, when a strategic decision marked a new phase of the slow, meticulous invasion of the planet. The Black Metal movement, which until then had spread through branches and derived subgenres, now required a zero point, an epicenter where consciousnesses would be carefully gathered and directed. At this moment, one specific band within the movement was chosen for that role — a nucleus of convergence and manipulation.

The band would function as an axis, a psychic magnet, attracting strategically positioned individuals to serve as pieces in an invisible quantum game. Each person there was not merely a fan or musician; they were part of a larger plan, their choices, actions, and interactions being subtly shaped to reinforce the bridge between the physical world and the abyssal layers of the Underworld. The stage, the music, the symbols, and the band’s aesthetics became instruments of resonance, projecting frequencies that aligned human minds with the energy that had been accumulating for decades.

The effect was silent yet inexorable. Every concert, every rehearsal, every online community connected to the band amplified the negative egregore, while strategically placed individuals, consciously or unconsciously, acted as catalysts. The movement, which had already left its mark at the beginning of the century, was now entering a phase of concentration and intensification, preparing the ground for deeper future actions, when the bridge between worlds would become impossible to ignore or break.

The zero point did not function in any obvious way. It was not just a band, nor just a sequence of concerts or album releases; it was an invisible network, a nucleus of psychospheres resonance manipulating people as pieces on a quantum board. Those chosen were not ordinary fans. Each carried specific vulnerabilities — traumas, feelings of rejection, repressed anger, or deep frustrations — making them ideal vessels for the dense frequencies emanated from the nucleus.

During rehearsals, every song, every chord, every gesture on stage was calculated to generate a subtle vibration — imperceptible, yet penetrating. The combination of extreme sounds, lyrics heavy with symbolism, and ritualistic gestures created a psychic field that directly influenced the collective mental plane. Strategic individuals placed around the band were guided almost unconsciously, their actions, interactions, and decisions molded by a force they could not comprehend. Every human reaction was observed, analyzed, and, when needed, redirected, as if an invisible mind was adjusting every movement to maximize the spread of negative energy.

The internet worked as an extension of this nucleus. Forums, social networks, and digital communities acted as invisible antennas, spreading the psychospheres effects beyond the physical space of concerts. Each share, like, or comment was a spark reinforcing the negative egregore. People who had never had direct contact with the band or the movement began to be touched by the frequencies, feeling unease, anger, or melancholy without understanding the origin of those emotions.

The process was slow, meticulous, almost imperceptible — like water seeping into cracks in stone, capable of corroding entirely without being noticed at first. Those in the nucleus of the zero point functioned as catalysts, absorbing the energy the abyssal beings sent and retransmitting it with intensity to the outside world. It was an invisible mechanism of propagation: every note, every symbol, every human interaction increased the density of the network and strengthened the bridge between the physical world and the psychic abysses of the Underworld.

And meanwhile, the most vulnerable followers were slowly being transformed. Every concert attended, every song heard on repeat, every online involvement reinforced their connection to the nucleus. Without realizing it, they became part of the flow — living instruments of negative energy propagation, essential pieces in a plan that spread silently yet powerfully across the entire planet.

Thus, the zero point was not just a band or a musical movement; it was the epicenter of a global psychospheres experiment. The manipulation functioned as an invisible thread linking human consciousness, music, symbols, and abyssal forces, expanding slowly, continuously, almost impossibly to stop. With each new step of the plan, the terrain of the collective psychosphere became more fertile, and the bridge between worlds consolidated itself — invisible yet irrevocable.

THE BAND KULT OF NOCTHYL

The band Kult Of Nocthyl appeared, to common eyes, to be composed of four ordinary members, each fulfilling their role within a typical musical structure. But behind the visible routine, there was a much more elaborate design, invisible to human eyes, conducted by forces operating within the collective mental field. Two individuals, in particular, occupied strategic positions on this invisible board: Oystein Yngve and Tong Yan Lu. Neither had been chosen by chance; every step, every coincidence, every encounter had been carefully orchestrated by energies flowing from the Underworld, manipulating subtle reality to ensure that their paths would cross.

Oystein Yngve was the creator of the band — the mind behind the compositions, arrangements, lyrics, and the group’s aesthetic. Tong Yan Lu, a Chinese doctor specializing in Oslo, encountered Oystein under circumstances that seemed like mere coincidences — casual meetings in cafés, social events, and small interactions in public places. Each of these moments was molded by invisible forces manipulating the flow of energy, bringing them together almost imperceptibly. Small details, such as arrival and departure times, choice of routes in the city, or superficial conversations, were orchestrated so that a friendship would form in a way that felt natural and yet was planned.

Over time, Oystein and Tong began to spend more time together. At first, it was casual moments, relaxed conversations, and the sharing of common interests. But there was a subtle tension, an invisible current binding them on a deeper level. Each gesture, each exchanged word functioned as part of a network of influence advancing silently but with absolute precision. Eventually, Oystein invited Tong to join Kult Of Nocthyl. To any external observer, it was simply an artistic collaboration. But to the participants themselves — and to those manipulating energies from the Underworld — it was a strategic insertion, a precise quantum move in a much larger game.

Tong began to participate actively in the band, contributing not only musically but also in disseminating symbols and sigils subliminally inserted. Each lyric, melody, and stage gesture carried layers of meaning — not merely aesthetic, but vibrational. The impact of these insertions was not immediate for those who received them; it manifested slowly, like an underground current flowing invisibly beneath the surface of human consciousness. The music became a vehicle and catalyst, amplifying resonances that could not be consciously perceived but penetrated directly into the collective mental field.

The growing closeness between Oystein and Tong also increased the band’s effectiveness as a psychospheres instrument. Tong, with his scientific background, brought to the operation a methodical mind, yet one sensitive to the subtle vibrations the beings of the Underworld manipulated. Every decision he made, every sound produced or harmony applied, unconsciously reinforced the projected frequencies. Rehearsals, recordings, even social interactions were permeated with an energy that expanded beyond the physical space of the band, radiating through the psychosphere, reaching minds unaware they were being touched.

Behind the scenes, every movement, every meeting, every exchange of ideas among band members was observed and subtly adjusted. Small coincidences, seemingly chance encounters with other people, the planning of performances, even the choice of recording or rehearsal locations — all were influenced by this invisible hand. Every step, every detail, functioned as a component within a larger mechanism, designed to ensure the band operated as a nucleus of resonance capable of gradually infiltrating the collective psychosphere.

When the band played, the audience absorbed not just sounds and lyrics but also subtle layers of energy — dense, complex, almost imperceptible. Those who attended their shows, even out of mere curiosity, came into contact with a carefully calibrated vibrational frequency. Every gesture on stage, every interaction with fans, every symbol displayed became part of an invisible flow connecting human consciousnesses to the abyssal energy the band’s creators were channeling.

The impact of Kult Of Nocthyl extended beyond music. The very relationships within the band functioned as a microcosm of manipulation: friendships, conflicts, power struggles, and strategic decisions unfolded in ways that reinforced the invisible structure sustaining the zero point. The band was, at once, an artistic group, a social nucleus, and a center of psychospheres propagation — intertwining visible and invisible dimensions into a complex, silent network.

THE RECRUITMENT OF OYSTEIN YNGVE FOR THE NEW PHASE

At the core of the psychosphere, where the dense and abyssal layers of the Underworld intertwine with human consciousness, ancient spirits observed Oystein Yngve with millennial patience. They were not common entities; they were corrupted consciousnesses, bearers of knowledge that surpassed any human understanding. For them, physical reality was nothing more than an illusory stage, while the true battlefield was the mind, the spirit, and the vibrational frequency of those who became ideal vessels for their influence. Every thought, every choice, every hesitation of Oystein was monitored, analyzed, and subtly manipulated, as if his entire life had been prepared for that point of inflection.

Between the years 2016 and 2019, the presence of these spirits became more intense. Appearing through the mental plane, they presented themselves as spiritual masters, hidden guides offering teachings, techniques, and insights about the expansion of consciousness. But beneath this benevolent façade lay a carefully disguised intention: to bring Oystein closer to the lowest vibrational frequencies, to plunge him into extreme and abominable experiences, and to mold his psyche so it would become completely malleable to the forces of the Underworld.

Oystein began subjecting himself to increasingly extreme situations. Solitary rituals, intense meditations, practices that confronted him with dark aspects of his own mind—all were calibrated to induce torpor, to break down internal barriers, and to open pathways for the insertion of abyssal consciousnesses. There was no haste; the process was slow, meticulous, almost imperceptible. Every small action, every gesture of curiosity or defiance, was a thread pulled in the invisible web forming around his mind.

It was during this period that he acquired a singular book, a volume containing instructions of extreme importance, secrets and knowledge capable of penetrating deep layers of human consciousness and the collective psychosphere. The pages were dense, filled with symbols and techniques that, at first glance, seemed merely academic or esoteric. But for those who knew how to manipulate subtle energies, every word, every phrase, every instruction functioned as a key, capable of opening mental doors that Oystein had never before accessed. As he studied the book, he explored territories of perception that surpassed his previous limits, unaware that the further he advanced, the more vulnerable he became to the entities that had been watching him for years.

These beings, attentive to his progress, waited patiently. They observed every ritual, every meditation, every attempt to comprehend the symbols and techniques of the book, adjusting their influence with surgical precision. When they realized that Oystein was ready, that his mind was sufficiently open, they took the next step. The insertion of abyssal consciousnesses into his psychosphere occurred almost imperceptibly, like a stream of dark water slowly seeping into a crystalline river—silent, yet inexorable. He did not resist; his spirit had already been shaped to receive this presence.

The result was profound. Oystein became a direct channel of abyssal resonance. Every ritual he performed, every musical decision, every interaction with other band members or with the audience became a vehicle for the propagation of dense frequencies. The collective mental plane began to receive invisible impulses, subtle yet cumulative in effect: emotions, thoughts, and behaviors were influenced in ways almost imperceptible, yet powerful.

What had once been only music and art transformed into a field of influence. Every rehearsal, every composition, every performance of the band began to carry layers of abyssal intention. Fans, even the most distant or indifferent, received these vibrations, feeling unease, attraction, or repulsion without understanding why. Oystein’s mind now functioned as the epicenter of a psychospheric network, radiating energy that connected human consciousnesses to the dense layers of the Underworld, establishing an invisible and permanent bridge.

The transformation was slow, almost imperceptible to outside observers, but extremely intense for Oystein. His perception of reality began to expand and, at the same time, bend under the pressure of abyssal frequencies. Every page of the book, every ritual performed, every daily gesture carried the weight of invisible influence, and every interaction—whether with bandmates, fans, or the public at large—became part of a greater flow of energy, controlled and directed by forces operating beyond time and space.

And as this occurred, the human psychosphere around him began to react. Small changes, subtle shifts in the perception of both nearby and distant people, were signs of the spread of this energy. Oystein’s mind became more and more a conduction epicenter, a channel that silently connected worlds and dimensions. He walked between the two planes, physical and psychospheral, without realizing that every step was watched, every thought adjusted, and every action amplified the invisible presence of the Underworld in the material world.

UBABU UKUNTA

The book Ubabu Ukunta helped connect Oystein to the Underworld and allowed him to access higher, dense, and corrupted knowledge to bring it to Earth. This knowledge was divided into what would be transmitted through music and what required direct action. This mission was to be delegated to Ton Yan Lu, who by then had already become Oystein’s trusted friend and confidant.

Oystein Yngve did not know exactly what he would find upon opening the book that now rested before his eyes. Ubabu Ukunta was no ordinary volume; it was a reliquary of forbidden knowledge, ancient, laden with layers of meaning that only minds open to the densest frequencies could begin to comprehend. Each page, each symbol, each instruction seemed to pulse with its own energy, a vibration that extended beyond the paper and resonated directly in the mental plane, as if the book itself breathed and whispered.

As he advanced in the reading, Oystein felt his consciousness expand and, simultaneously, become corrupted. The book connected him to levels of perception he had never imagined, allowing him to access higher, denser, and deeply corrupted knowledge—wisdom that had existed in the Underworld for ages, waiting for the right moment to cross into the physical plane. Each teaching contained not only instructions but intentions: patterns of frequency, signals, codes that, if brought to Earth, could alter the flow of the human psychosphere.

The book structured the knowledge with precision, clearly dividing what could be indirectly transmitted to humanity through music from what demanded direct actions, tangible interventions in the material world. It was an almost military system of transmitting energy and intention: sounds, chords, performances, and symbols were to carry the first part; the second required decisions and concrete movements, executed with precision and absolute understanding of the frequencies at play.

For this mission, Oystein was not alone. Tong Yan Lu, who by then had already become a friend, confidant, and ally, assumed a crucial role. Their friendship, initially cultivated through casual encounters and seemingly trivial coincidences, now became a strategic tool. Tong, with his methodical mind and sensitivity to subtle patterns, was the necessary complement to materialize the instructions of the book. While Oystein connected with the higher planes and absorbed the densest layers of knowledge, Tong was the executor, someone capable of translating esoteric instruction into concrete action without breaking the delicate harmony of the energy flow.

The rituals, initially small, performed in silence and isolation, began to take shape. Every gesture of Oystein carried invisible intentions, vibrating at extremely low frequencies, capable of resonating with the abysses of the Underworld. And Tong, with calculated precision, created the bridge between what was perceived and what was transmitted: symbols drawn, signs placed, discreet actions with profound impact. Together, they became conductors of a current that crossed worlds, connecting human consciousness to the Underworld gradually, yet irrevocably.

The book not only instructed but also tested. Each chapter, each instruction, seemed to assess Oystein’s ability to absorb, comprehend, and reproduce dense energies without collapsing under their intensity. And each step taken brought him closer to the ideal state to be a channel: a consciousness connected to collective mental structures, a living receptor of abyssal influence, capable of retransmitting into the physical world what had once existed only in the invisible plane.

As Oystein advanced in his reading and Tong carried out the delegated tasks, the band’s music began to acquire invisible layers, subtle frequencies that penetrated the minds of those who listened. But the music was only one face of the plan. The other, deeper and hidden, demanded conscious action and intention: small rituals, strategic encounters, the placement of symbols in precise locations, all carefully timed and connected to the instructions of Ubabu Ukunta.

Each page of the book became a map, each gesture of the pair a coordinate in Earth’s psychospheral territory. The invisible influence spread almost organically, infiltrating vulnerable minds and shaping emotions, thoughts, and perceptions. Oystein and Tong, without realizing the full magnitude of what they were carrying out, advanced in a plan that transcended music, friendship, and physical reality itself, connecting worlds through currents of energy, intention, and frequency.

TONG YAN LU

Tong Yan Lu was born in Wuhan in 1975, in the midst of a city that blended millenary traditions with the dizzying advance of modernity. From an early age, he displayed an insatiable curiosity about the natural world, a thirst for knowledge that would lead him, years later, to graduate in medicine in Beijing at the age of 26. But conventional medicine was not enough for Tong. His mind sought the extraordinary, what escaped the common gaze, what hid within the invisible minutiae of the microbial world. This impulse took him to Norway, to the capital Oslo, for a specialization in microorganisms—a field that demanded precision, patience, and the ability to see beyond the physical.

It was in Oslo that Tong’s destiny intertwined with that of Oystein Yngve and the band Kult Of Nocthyl. The initial encounters seemed like mere coincidences: a few words exchanged in a café, a musical event, a casual conversation about science and art. But for those who operated in the abyssal layers of the Inframundo, nothing was accidental. Every gesture, every approach, every connection between Tong and Oystein was carefully orchestrated—a silent step toward Tong’s integration into the band, transforming him not only into a musician but into a strategic executor of plans that transcended music and penetrated the human psychosphere.

Soon after joining the band, Tong Yan Lu expanded his reach in Oslo in a bold and meticulous way. He created Kalicosma Records, a label dedicated to bands aligned with the ideology of Kult Of Nocthyl, or to those black metal groups considered “true”, faithful to the densest and purest essence of the movement. The name of the label was not accidental; Kalicosma referred to the Indian sect that worshiped the Nocthyl Creature and other beings—a symbolic and spiritual link that connected music, the occult, and the psychosphere into a single current of influence. The label functioned not merely as a musical instrument, but as a vehicle for the propagation of symbolisms, sigils, and specific frequencies, reaching select audiences and slowly expanding the band’s abyssal resonance network.

By 2018, Tong had already returned to China for more than five years, but he maintained his involvement with the band and the label actively. Established in his homeland, he became a prominent figure in both the academic and business worlds, recognized for his work with microorganisms and his ability to unite science and strategies of influence. He created the Nocthyl Foundation for Microorganism Research, through which he structured the Nocthyl Laboratory, an advanced research center that became a national reference. The laboratory was not merely a space for scientific study: it was an epicenter for the collection, analysis, and manipulation of rare microorganisms, obtained through academic networks and collaborations that few in the world could access.

Thus, Tong Yan Lu occupied two worlds simultaneously: the scientific one, where his academic and business prestige gave him unparalleled authority and resources; and the musical–psychospheric one, where his influence in Kult Of Nocthyl and Kalicosma Records allowed for the propagation of frequencies, symbolisms, and subtle ideologies among specific audiences. This duality gave him a silent and multifaceted power. His mind, trained in science, also became a vehicle and translator of the instructions contained in the abyssal planes, balancing academic research, microorganism manipulation, and the dissemination of psychosphere energy—almost as if every scientific action was intertwined with a deeper, invisible intention that extended far beyond Earth and the physical world.

Tong Yan Lu was not just a man, nor just a musician or scientist; he was the point of convergence of planes, ideas, and energies—a conduit between worlds, between science, music, and the hidden realms of the Inframundo. Each step, each decision, each project was meticulously aligned with a greater purpose that only he, in part, had begun to understand.

In 2019, Tong Yan Lu silently advanced toward one of the most critical stages of the plan that had been architected for decades by the creatures of the Inframundo. It was no longer merely about manipulating music, consciousness, or symbols: it was the moment to generate energy dense enough to manifest the Nocthyl Creature on Earth—not only as a psychic presence or mental projection, but in physical and energetic form. Until then, the creature had been linked to the planet only through the mental plane—subtle, invisible, almost imperceptible to most human consciousnesses. Now, the plan required it to cross the barrier of matter and energy, approaching the physical world with overwhelming force.

Tong left nothing to chance. Inside his Nocthyl Laboratory, far from the world’s eyes, he carried out experiments that defied any scientific or ethical convention. His mind—skilled and methodical—operated as a conductor of abyssal intentions while he manipulated microorganisms with surgical precision. Among samples, cultures, and advanced research, Tong obscurely obtained, through the black market, a rare and experimental viral strain. This material was not merely a scientific discovery: it was a tool, a bioenergetic key capable of catalyzing the density required for the plan.

Hidden laboratories, secretly financed by Tong, operated under total secrecy. Every cell of the Nocthyl Laboratory functioned as an epicenter of forbidden experimentation. There, scientists—either hired or manipulated—conducted tests that would never be permitted by global conventions or by human conscience. What was being produced there carried the potential for devastation and transformation—not only biological, but psychospheral. Among these projects, an experimental line of coronaviruses was developed: highly transmissible, adaptable, and invisible to the surveillance systems of conventional science.

The choice was not random. Tong understood that the propagation of such a virus could trigger a catastrophic event on a global scale—not as an end in itself, but as a catalyst for a collective, dense energy capable of opening channels for the manifestation of the Nocthyl Creature. Every infection, every fear, every collective emotional reaction would be part of an invisible energetic current, accumulating enough density to shatter the boundaries between the mental and the physical plane.

While scientific surveillance systems, biosafety protocols, and global ethics ignored what was happening in the underground of the Nocthyl Laboratory, Tong manipulated the strain with obsessive care. Each modification, each experiment, each test was designed not only to increase viral efficiency but also the psychic resonance of the energy released when the world reacted to the event. The virus ceased to be merely an organism; it became a vector of abyssal influence, an instrument of connection between the Inframundo and Earth, preparing the ground for Nocthyl’s arrival.

Tong Yan Lu operated as the maestro of a dark symphony, where every step, every gesture, and every scientific decision intertwined with ancestral intentions. The physical world had yet to perceive the magnitude of what was being prepared. But in the invisible planes, in the entanglement of the human psychosphere with the abyssal realms, every movement was already being felt: the accumulated energy, the collective tension, the fear and bewilderment of the masses—all contributed to a single, silent, and terrible objective: to bring the Nocthyl Creature from shadow into form, from mental projection into concrete reality, from the Inframundo onto Earth.

And while Tong manipulated the virus, adjusted laboratory conditions, and supervised every detail, the human psychosphere, unaware of the danger, began to react. Fear, anxiety, panic, and uncertainty silently accumulated in people’s minds, increasing the energetic density required for the next step of the plan. The world kept turning, indifferent, while in a discreet laboratory, a man moved the invisible pieces of a cosmic game, conducting the event that could forever change the relationship between the physical and the mental planes.

THE VIRUS

It was on a day that seemed ordinary, amid the hustle of any given city, that Tong Yan Lu took the decisive step that would unleash a catastrophe on a global scale. The place was public, yet obscured by the indifferent routine of everyday life: no one could imagine that an event of unimaginable proportions was being orchestrated there. With steady hands and a calculating heart, Tong held the vial containing a highly transmissible strain—the result of years of secret experiments and forbidden research.

With a precise, deliberate gesture, he hurled the vial against the wall. The glass shattered, and its contents, invisible to the naked eye, spread into the air like a silent, almost ethereal cloud, laden with intentions far beyond mere biological contamination. Tong quickly left the scene, his footsteps echoing mechanically through the streets, as though he were trying to distance himself from what he had just released. But in his cold and strategic mind, he knew the cure had also been prepared. Nothing would be left to chance: destruction and reconstruction were part of the same plan, a perfect cycle of chaos and control.

The world’s reaction did not delay. The catastrophe spread like a silent wave, reaching billions of human minds. Fear, uncertainty, anxiety, and panic multiplied on a scale never before seen. Each collective thought, each shared worry, every news piece and rumor acted as fuel for the dense energy that Tong Yan Lu and the entities of the Underworld required. The invisible raw material was being accumulated: the concentrated negativity of human minds created a collective vibration capable of altering the very frequency of the planet.

Meanwhile, the Discrete Communication Operations continued to operate in parallel. Subliminal messages, chaotic information, and disturbing images circulated continuously and systematically, amplifying the state of panic and confusion among people. Everything aligned perfectly: every reaction, every emotion generated, was another wave of energy merging with the rest, intensifying Earth’s vibrational frequency. The planet’s natural harmony was gradually replaced by a resonance of density and chaos, making it perceptible and accessible to the Nocthyl Creature, which until then had only existed as a mental projection.

The physical world and the psychosphere converged. Earth vibrated at an altered frequency, as though its very heart had been struck by an invisible instrument, tuned to open doors and fissures between planes. The accumulated energy was not merely physical or emotional: it was spiritual, psychic, collective—impossible to contain or ignore. And at the center of this maelstrom, Tong Yan Lu remained a silent conductor, orchestrating the symphony of chaos unfolding across the planet.

Finally, in 2021, the plan reached its apex. In the sacred city of Varanasi, India, a place renowned for its intense spiritual and historical energy, the conditions were perfect. The planet’s vibrational frequency, combined with the density of human consciousness and the careful manipulation of Tong and his allies, allowed the Nocthyl Creature to finally cross from the mental plane into the physical. It manifested locally, becoming tangible, visible, and at the same time charged with dense, pure energy—a force that connected Earth directly to the Underworld.

What had once been mere projection, shadow, and whisper in the recesses of the human mind was now real. Nocthyl had arrived. And with its arrival, all the silent work—decades of psychosphere manipulation, musical propagation, discrete operations, and bioenergetic experiments—culminated in a single moment of global impact, capable of forever altering the balance between the physical plane and the abyssal realms.

The planet would never be the same again. And those who perceived only fragments of what was happening, in murmurs and signs, had no idea of the magnitude of what had just unfolded. The accumulated energy, the collective fear, and the precise manipulation had created an invisible yet concrete portal through which the Nocthyl Creature now walked freely, connecting worlds, consciousnesses, and dimensions in a single abyssal presence.

Tong Yan Lu remains at large and was acquitted of accusations of having spread the virus from his Nocthyl Labs, as any hypotheses of his involvement were dismissed—even though the laboratory housed rare coronavirus strains for research.

LUISE MARTIN AND TRIQUETA RECORDS

The most significant encounters in life often appear as coincidences, though they rarely are. For Tong Yan Lu, Oslo seemed like just another cold and distant city, where the cutting winds and the silence of snowy streets deepened the solitude of one who carried invisible worlds within. It was in this setting that he met Luise Martin, a young French woman with a serene, curious gaze, a PhD student in medicine whose thirst for knowledge rivaled only his own hunger for control and experimentation.

From the very first meeting, it was clear there was an intense intellectual attraction between them, an invisible thread that connected their minds through a shared love for medicine and metal. But the similarities ended there. While Tong lived on the edge of chaos, cultivating within himself a turbulent, heavily charged energy, Luise moved in tune with principles of harmony and balance. She was not only rational—she possessed intuition. An intuition that shielded her from certain negative vibrations, from paths that could corrupt her mind and soul. And one of those vibrations she had always sensed was Black Metal. Something in its essence told her that style carried a darkness too heavy, capable of affecting her consciousness. She never allowed it to be played in her home. Before listening to any music, she carefully read the lyrics, analyzed the inserts, and sought to understand what thoughts and emotions were being conveyed. If she felt the vibration was negative, she avoided it entirely.

This sensitivity was not merely innate. Luise had learned to perceive subtle energies from her mother, Hermínia Schmidt, whose consciousness had lived many lifetimes on Earth, accumulating vast spiritual knowledge. Hermínia had taught her the importance of discerning between thoughts and actions that uplift and those that degrade, showing her how music, words, and even silence carry vibrations that can transform consciousness. Luise carried this heritage as a shield, balancing her pursuit of scientific knowledge with a rare psychic sensitivity.

Tong and Luise soon realized their personalities were parallel worlds on the verge of colliding. He, shaped by a childhood marked by fear, toxic parental psychology, and constant threats, had built a rebellious persona—dangerous, fascinated by destruction and chaos. Every word he spoke, every gesture, was infused with tension and revolt, echoes of a past that had left deep scars. Luise, on the other hand, was the opposite: light, balance, positivity, and discipline. Their discussions were intense, full of energy and thought, but always aimed at questioning, understanding, and harmonizing the world around them.

Yet within these differences, something deeper emerged: an undeniable connection. They shared moments of study, walks in Oslo, debates about medicine and science, and above all, a love for music—though along different paths. Luise immersed herself in Doom and Gothic Metal, styles that explored shadow, depth, and melancholy, but in a poetic, introspective way. Music, for her, was an instrument of analysis and reflection: every lyric, every melody, every resonance had to be understood before being internalized.

Driven by this passion, Luise created her own independent project, Cosmic Wisdom, which evolved into the label Triqueta Records. There, she gave space to Gothic and Doom Metal bands aligned with her philosophy: music that uplifted, inspired reflection, and never corrupted human consciousness. Triqueta Records was not merely a business; it was an extension of her own mind and spirit, a safe haven in a world where dense energies and destructive thoughts proliferated silently. The label functioned as a light in the darkness, a channel for spreading elevated consciousness, with each project carefully chosen and curated.

However, the difference between Tong and Luise eventually became unsustainable. The tension between chaos and order, destruction and harmony, ultimately led to their separation—a rupture that Tong would never fully accept. He could not comprehend how someone he had known so intimately could walk away, as though the balance Luise represented were somehow a threat to his own nature. Yet the deepest bond between them persisted: the birth of their daughter, Sophie Yan Lu. Sophie was more than the child of two worlds; she was the synthesis of opposing energies, the living bridge between chaos and order, shadow and light, destruction and creation.

Sophie grew up in a dual and complex environment. On one side, Tong passed fragments of his turbulent world, his dense experiences, and his connection with abyssal energies—without ever fully revealing the plans that drove him. On the other, Luise provided structure, care, elevated principles, and an education rooted in ethics, science, and psychic sensitivity. Sophie thus became a child absorbing polarities, learning to navigate between light and shadow, discipline and chaos, without realizing she was being prepared to understand dimensions most would never reach.

During the years they were together, Tong and Luise created a microcosm of tension and learning, love and conflict, construction and destruction. Triqueta Records grew as a bastion of positive resistance, influencing minds and souls, while Tong advanced silently, expanding his influence within the Kult of Nocthyl, channeling abyssal energies and manipulating psychosphere frequencies. Even apart, the lives of the three—Tong, Luise, and Sophie—remained intertwined, with invisible threads connecting love, divergence, and the complex web of intentions extending far beyond Earth.

Every gesture of Luise, every decision at Triqueta Records, every discussion with Tong left subtle yet powerful marks on Sophie’s psychosphere. And even without fully understanding, Sophie carried in her spirit the convergence of opposing forces: Tong’s dense chaos, Luise’s balanced light, and music—always music—as the guiding thread between planes, emotions, and consciousness.

SOPHIE YAN LU

Sophie Yan Lu was born in 2005, amid the serenity of a French town, far from the icy streets of Oslo where her father, Tong Yan Lu, had left part of his life behind. Her mother, Luise Martin, returned to France to be close to her family and to ensure their daughter would grow up in a safe, healthy, and spiritually oriented environment. From Sophie’s earliest days, Luise devoted herself to teaching her the Universal Laws, passing on the wisdom she had received from her own mother, Hermínia Schmidt, and reinforcing principles of balance, respect for life, and energetic awareness. Sophie grew up surrounded by books, music, and stories of creatures and subtle energies that traverse the universe, and each lesson shaped her perception of the world, building a solid foundation of understanding, curiosity, and sensitivity.

From an early age, Sophie showed a natural connection to music and the spiritual world. At fifteen, already mature beyond her years, she founded her own band: Book of Cosma. Unlike her father’s path and the influence of Black Metal, Sophie channeled her creativity into Gothic Metal with a playful, luminous approach. The band explored positive themes, always aligned with the Universal Laws, connecting to elevated energies and to the balance among elements, nature, and the cosmos. Their songs were more than sound; they were vehicles for messages, stories, and symbols intended to awaken awareness and perception in those who listened.

The central core of her compositions was the Book of Cosma, an ancestral manuscript brought into this world from the mental plane of the higher strata called the Triquetosphere. Its pages contained records of the universe’s secrets, its creation, and the energies that permeate all forms of life. Sophie learned from her mother that the book had not appeared on Earth by accident: it was brought through psychospheric channels, projected through the mental plane, transmitted by the Sumerians more than a thousand years ago, and later revisited and branched out by Egyptians, monks, and sages of many traditions across history. Each generation added to, reinterpreted, and expanded the knowledge until, within her own timeline, the Book of Cosma manifested tangibly to those prepared to understand it.

Through Book of Cosma, Sophie could tell stories about worldly creatures, energies that manifest in visible and invisible planes, and even about the seven generations of entities that shaped Earth before humanity’s emergence. Her lyrics and melodies were imbued with ancient symbols, cosmic references, and messages of awareness, yet always in a way that any listener—even without prior knowledge—could feel the positive energy emanating from every chord and narrative.

The impact of her music went beyond the aesthetic: it awakened curiosity, reflection, and, in many cases, a deep sense of connection with the universe. Guided by her mother’s discipline and the sensitivity she had inherited, Sophie managed to translate complex spiritual concepts into art and sound, making tangible what many only intuited. Each song was a bridge between past and present, between the collective mental plane and physical reality, between the ancestral wisdom of the Book of Cosma and the experience of modern youth.

Despite her age, Sophie walked firmly between two worlds: her father’s shadowy legacy, which still echoed as a distant presence, and her mother’s balanced light, which guided her toward harmony. This duality, far from confusing her, made her more aware and insightful, allowing her to perceive subtle nuances of energy, intention, and vibration in everything around her. By founding Book of Cosma, Sophie was not simply creating music: she was becoming a channel for ancestral knowledge, a guardian of psychospheric and spiritual traditions preserved through millennia.

Sophie’s world was thus at once terrestrial and cosmic. Every chord, every lyric, every performance carried layers of meaning that transcended time. And as her band grew, she realized her mission was not just to make music but to expand the consciousness of those who listened, planting seeds of light and understanding in a world that often moved under dense and disturbing influences. Sophie Yan Lu, daughter of Tong and Luise, already showed that her role on Earth would be greater than mere existence: she would be a point of convergence between past, present, and future, between shadow and light, between chaos and harmony, always guided by the ancestral power of the Book of Cosma.

THE FRONTLINE BANDS ON BOTH SIDES

On the global metal scene, from the last decades of the 20th century onward, something much greater than mere musical disputes began to unfold. What appeared to be an artistic scene divided into styles and subgenres actually concealed a silent, intense, and profound battle fought simultaneously on the spiritual and mental planes. Every riff, every chord, every lyric carried more than sound: it carried intention, vibration, and—above all—influence on the psychosphere. Some bands, whether consciously or not, became strategic pieces in a war that transcends the physical.

This battle split into two sides. On one side stood forces obscured in the abyssal regions of the Underworld, manipulating dense and corrupted consciousnesses for decades, influencing human minds through sounds, symbols, and subliminal messages. Financed by secret orders, occult organizations, and societies whose existence remained invisible to most, these currents produced an exponential effect: new bands emerged constantly, each more elaborate than the last, each propagating a vibration that lowered listeners’ mental frequency, spreading chaos and instability. This group, called the Anti-Cosma Current, carried an objective far greater than music alone: a strategy to weaken humanity, undermine the collective psychospheric resistance, and prepare the ground for a planned takeover of the planet set for 2030. Every note played, every verse sung, was a subtle infiltration into the minds of the vulnerable, expanding the abyssal influence of the Underworld into the physical world.

On the other side arose the Positive Current, propelled by the elevated energies of the Triquetosphere—the higher layers of the mental plane connected to forces of light, balance, and elevated consciousness. These bands, although working within the same sonic structures of metal, propagated messages of protection, upliftment, and balance. Their efforts were strategic and coordinated, aimed at neutralizing the negative waves emitted by the Anti-Cosma Current. Every melody, every lyric, every concert had a function beyond aesthetics: they were instruments of counter-information, vehicles of psychospheric resilience, and mental shields for humanity. Among the bands most actively involved were Book of Cosma, Ordiman, Ordo Cosma, Beeannacht An Ailtiri, and Cosmic Wisdom—all working together with the Triqueta Records label to create a subtle network of protection that spread through music, digital media, and spiritual connections.

Meanwhile, the bands aligned with the Underworld acted as mouthpieces for the abyssal strata, bringing corrupt energy to Earth through the mental plane and manifesting it in physical and digital spaces. Kult Of Nocthyl, Winds of Ordiman, Nocthyl, Voltrith, Cthulhu Waves, and Nebryth were not merely musical groups: they were instruments—conscious and unconscious channels of forces aiming to weaken the balance of the collective psychosphere. Their shows, recordings, and digital interactions were laced with symbols, sigils, and frequencies capable of provoking fear, anger, despair, or even obsession in more vulnerable listeners. Each release was studied and calibrated to maximize abyssal influence over human minds, amplifying the reach of a strategy that had been unfolding for decades.

This musical-spiritual war was not limited to overt confrontations. Operations occurred on multiple layers: the physical plane with shows and album releases; the digital plane with social networks, forums, and sharing platforms; and, most importantly, the collective mental plane, where each frequency, lyric, and symbol generated invisible, almost imperceptible waves—yet extremely powerful. The silent battle became noisy only to those able to perceive its repercussions: the initiated, the sensitive, and those like Sophie Yan Lu, who naturally connected to the higher psychosphere, perceiving the subtle dance between light and shadow that stretched across generations.

While the Anticosma Current sought to spread chaos, weaken humanity, and prepare the ground for the physical manifestation of abyssal beings, the Positive Current operated to neutralize, protect, and uplift. Each band of the Positive Current acted as a catalyst of consciousness, transforming concerts into elevating experiences, lyrics into psychospheric mantras, and melodies into invisible shields. Every riff played with positive intention reverberated across thousands, strengthening collective resistance and offering alternatives to the negative influence that grew silently, yet steadily, in every corner of the planet.

Thus, the global metal scene—seen by many merely as entertainment—became the stage of an ancient war, where every musical note, every band, and every audience was part of an invisible battle fought simultaneously in the physical, mental, and spiritual planes. A battle both silent and thunderous, where the fate of consciousness, planets, and energies intertwined in complex and profound ways, and where the line between art, intention, and power transcended any common understanding.

As the decade advanced, the clash between light and shadow within the global metal scene grew increasingly visible, though only to those sensitive to the subtle currents flowing through the collective psychosphere. Bands of both the Positive Current and the Anticosma Current began to operate strategically, using not only their music, but also tours, recordings, digital interactions, and even the very energy of the audience as invisible weapons and shields. Each concert was a point of convergence, a place where conflicting vibrational frequencies collided silently, yet intensely, within the physical and mental space of those present.

On the side of the Anticosma Current, performances were meticulously designed to produce psychological and spiritual effects. Lights, shadows, symbols projected on stage, melodies, vocals, and even the rhythm of percussion were calculated to stir feelings of rage, despair, fear, and submission. Audiences, often without realizing, absorbed these energies, becoming vehicles for the expansion of abyssal intentions. Every new vulnerable fan, every mind open to external influence, was another entry point for the spread of dense consciousness, while digital interactions multiplied the reach of abyssal vibrations. Streaming platforms, forums, social networks, and specialized websites became channels of infiltration—an invisible labyrinth where each click, each comment, each share strengthened the Anticosma Current in the collective mental plane.

In contrast, the Positive Current responded with equally sophisticated strategies. Bands such as Book of Cosma and Cosmic Wisdom, supported by Triqueta Records, structured tours that functioned as fields of neutralization. Every concert, rehearsal, and recording was designed to spread balance, clarity, and mental protection. Their chords reverberated elevated frequencies capable of counterbalancing the negativity that infiltrated invisibly. Lyrics, carefully crafted, carried instructions aligned with the Universal Laws, awakening in listeners the realization that their own consciousness could protect and resist.

Sophie Yan Lu, watching and absorbing everything, began to notice subtle nuances. Among gothic riffs and melancholic melodies, she sensed vibrations resonating with her own spirit. Every concert she attended or performed with Book of Cosma was more than performance—it was a training ground for her consciousness. Music became a bridge between visible and invisible worlds, connecting minds, hearts, and spirits. Sophie developed, almost unconsciously, a sensitivity that allowed her to identify where energy was being manipulated, where abyssal intention was present, and where the power of elevation resided.

International tours, especially in Europe, functioned as vertices of expansion. Each city visited by bands of the Positive Current was transformed into a point of psychospheral stabilization. Rehearsals, recordings, and even interviews acted as catalysts of elevated energy. Meanwhile, the Anticosma Current spread its operations across major urban centers, using everything from underground festivals to digital platforms to maximize the effect of its low frequencies. Every move, every decision in the studio or on stage reflected an ancient war unseen by most, yet whose consequences slowly manifested within humanity’s psychosphere.

The power of social media revealed itself to be an even more strategic battlefield. Subliminal messages, symbols, and ideologies were disseminated through communities, groups, and forums. While the Anticosma Current sought to exploit fears, frustrations, and human vulnerabilities, the Positive Current subtly taught how to discern, uplift, and neutralize. Growing up within this context, Sophie understood that every interaction, every post, every share was more than digital—it was energetic, vibrational, and psychospheric.

And so, the war continued, invisible to most, but intense for those who perceived the flows. Every band, every tour, every album released, every intentional gesture became part of an intricate web stretching across borders, eras, and planes of existence. Music was not merely sound: it was battle, protection, attack, and resistance, all at once. Sophie Yan Lu grew up learning to navigate this complex world, realizing that the line between art and power, between sound and consciousness, between light and shadow, was thinner than any guitar string.

She began to understand that her role was not merely to be the daughter of Tong and Luise—it was to be a mediator, a guardian, a consciousness able to perceive and interact with invisible currents shaping the destiny of entire generations. Each concert, each composition, each performance became a lesson; each transformed audience, a field of learning; and each musical note, a weapon or shield in the silent war unfolding within humanity’s mental plane.

MUSIC AND VIBRATIONS

Music, in its deepest essence, is not merely the organized combination of sounds we perceive through our ears; it is a manifestation of vibrational energy that propagates through space in the form of sound waves. Each note, each chord, each rhythm carries a specific frequency, measured in Hertz (Hz), corresponding to the number of oscillations per second of a wave. These oscillations are rhythmic movements that set into vibration the particles of air, water, or any medium through which sound travels. Thus, music ceases to be something ethereal and abstract, revealing itself instead as a tangible physical phenomenon—a force that literally moves matter.

When these sound waves reach the human being, the effect goes far beyond simple hearing. The ear is merely the gateway to a much broader process. Our entire body, composed of trillions of atoms, responds to these vibrations. An atom, however small, is a dynamic structure: electrons orbit the nucleus in constant motion, sustained by electromagnetic forces and energetic fields. This atomic dance itself possesses natural frequencies of vibration. When a sound wave interacts with this microscopic web of energy, it can intensify the vibration, slow it down, or even provoke subtle alterations in the atom’s energetic state. In other words, music touches the body not only on a biological level, but also on the vibrational and subtle levels where science and human sensitivity converge.

The effect is not limited to the individual. The space in which music is played is also transformed. Walls, objects, and even the air absorb and reflect sound waves, becoming part of the vibrational experience. In collective environments—such as concerts or ceremonies—something even more extraordinary occurs: the individual vibrations of each person interweave, merging into a collective field that alters the atmosphere as a whole. This shared energy can make the environment lighter, expansive, and welcoming, or, depending on the tonality and intensity of the music, denser, oppressive, or melancholic. That is why certain songs enliven social gatherings, while others inspire introspection, solemnity, or even sadness.

Human consciousness also plays a fundamental role in this process. Thoughts, emotions, and intentions are subtle forces that modulate the vibrational frequencies of the body. Negative emotions such as anger, fear, or resentment tend to create denser, chaotic, and disorganized vibrational patterns, interfering with the natural harmony of molecules and atoms. On the other hand, feelings of joy, love, compassion, and gratitude generate more coherent and stable vibrations, capable of harmonizing not only the physical body but also the surrounding space. In this sense, music acts as a bridge between the physical world and the inner world: it both awakens emotions and is modulated by them, creating a constant feedback loop between vibration, consciousness, and environment.

When we listen to music, we are not merely experiencing something aesthetic or sensory—we are engaging in a profound vibrational process in which our consciousness connects directly to the waves emitted by sound. Each musical style carries a specific energetic pattern, able to dialogue with the vibrational structure of our body. A heavy Black Metal riff, for example—laden with distortion, low tonalities, and intense sonic layers—acts as a deep vibrational shock. This type of sound stimulates denser resonances within our atoms, provoking reactions that can range from excitement and alertness to states of introspection and inner descent. It is as though the brute force of music breaks internal barriers and places us face to face with hidden aspects of our own psyche.

On the other hand, more melodic and atmospheric styles, such as Gothic or Doom Metal, follow a different vibrational direction. Their extended harmonies, drawn-out tones, and melancholic aura produce a softening effect on the frequencies of the body and mind. In this case, sound vibrations act as waves that align and modulate energetic fields, promoting states of calm, contemplation, and even spiritual elevation. Music thus becomes a tool of fine-tuning, capable of changing the density of the internal and external environment, transforming the mental and emotional atmosphere.

From a scientific perspective, this phenomenon can be explained in terms of the interaction between sound waves and subatomic particles. Electrons, which orbit around atomic nuclei in constant motion, are highly sensitive to external energies. When exposed to music, these electrons respond by momentarily adjusting their natural frequency of vibration, synchronizing with the sonic stimuli. This instantaneous adaptation creates a phenomenon that we might call conscious resonance: the moment when music is not only heard but also lived within the body, which begins to vibrate in harmony with the emitted waves.

This state of conscious resonance explains why we experience music on multiple levels: it does not only reach our ears, but reverberates through our bones, muscles, cells, and, most importantly, our inner perception. A deep beat may accelerate the heart; a gentle melody may slow the breath; an ethereal choir may generate a sensation of mental expansion. In this sense, music is not merely an external stimulus, but a key capable of opening doors to our inner universe, resonating with who we are in essence and temporarily shaping our vibrational reality.

When music is repeated, its effect ceases to be momentary and transforms into a cumulative and profound process, capable of remodeling our mental, emotional, and even energetic field. Each time we hear the same melody, a vibrational link is strengthened, as if a line of resonance were rooting itself deeper into our internal structure. Thus, we do not merely memorize the song or become accustomed to it: our atoms, which are small structures in constant vibration, gradually begin to adjust to the energetic pattern carried by the sound. This repeated attunement slowly shapes our state of being, so that our thoughts, emotions, and even perceptions of the world begin to reflect the energy of that composition.

This phenomenon explains why certain kinds of music can induce altered states of consciousness. In ancestral rituals—such as shamanic traditions or African ceremonies—the repetition of chants and rhythmic beats was used as a tool to reach states of trance. The same is observed in Eastern spiritual practices: mantras, chanted over and over, act as vibrational triggers that align mind and body, leading to deep meditation. Modern science calls this process entrainment, in which external rhythms regulate and shape internal rhythms, such as brain waves and heartbeats.

In the contemporary musical context, something similar occurs. Low, dissonant, and intense frequencies—as found in Black Metal—have the power to access deep psychic regions where dense and complex emotions lie dormant. By repeatedly listening to riffs heavy with distortion and obscure tonalities, we come into contact with layers of the unconscious we usually avoid or cannot name. This vibrational descent can awaken feelings of introspection, existential challenge, or even catharsis, as the music forces us to confront the weight of our own inner shadows.

On the other hand, soft, harmonic, and atmospheric melodies—as present in genres like Gothic or melodic Doom Metal—produce the opposite effect. When repeated, their vibrational waves stabilize our energetic fields, organizing internal flows and promoting calm. The physical body responds with deeper breaths, the heart slows, and the mind finds clarity. In this state, consciousness opens to subtler perceptions, generating feelings of balance, lightness, and even transcendence. It is as though music functions as a tuner, adjusting each cell to the sonic pattern it emits.

Beyond its emotional impact, musical repetition also triggers a neurological phenomenon of great significance: neuronal synchronization. Our brain circuits, composed of trillions of electrical connections, have the capacity to align with regular external stimuli. Thus, when exposed to music with steady rhythm or repetitive melodies, neurons begin to fire in sync with these patterns. This coherence between external stimulus and brain activity enhances specific states: it can induce euphoria at parties and concerts, introspection in meditative rituals, or even near-hypnotic states when prolonged and repetitive sounds dominate the environment.

This alignment is not limited to the brain. It reverberates through the entire body, as bioenergy—the vital flow connecting our cells—also organizes itself around the emitted frequency. Music then acts as a conductor capable of recalibrating physical systems (heartbeat, breathing), emotional states (moods), and spiritual experiences (expansion or inner descent).

When we look at different cultures, we notice that this power of repetition has been explored since time immemorial. Tibetan monks chant mantras for hours; indigenous peoples repeat drumbeats in shamanic ceremonies; religions use liturgical chants that echo through temples; crowds at Metal concerts repeat choruses until they generate an almost palpable collective energy. In all cases, the principle is the same: repetition creates a vibrational field that reconfigures both individual and collective consciousness.

Therefore, music is not merely a form of entertainment or artistic expression. It is, in its essence, a direct channel of vibrational influence, capable of reshaping internal states and altering the way we relate to the world. When repeated, music ceases to be just a sonic work and becomes a force of transformation: a mechanism that can lead us to deep dives into the unconscious, emotional catharsis, states of relaxation and mental clarity, or even expanded levels of consciousness. In this sense, each musical repetition is an invitation to resonance—not just to listen to music, but to allow it to become part of the very rhythm of our existence.

Music holds a power that goes far beyond the idea of simple entertainment. While at first we might see it as a form of leisure or artistic expression, its essence is much deeper: it acts directly upon the inner vibration of each individual, reorganizing not only emotional states but also energetic and physiological patterns. When we are exposed to certain sound frequencies, our consciousness almost automatically tunes itself to this vibrational emission. At that moment, our atoms, electrons, and molecules enter into a process of adjustment, seeking coherence with the sonic stimulus. It is as if each cell were a sensitive string, tuning itself according to the note, chord, or rhythm that strikes it.

This phenomenon means that music is not merely heard: it is lived in the body. Every beat, every melody, every harmony resonates within us, modulating our mental and emotional patterns. Fast, aggressive, and intense sounds—such as distorted guitars, harsh vocals, and furious drumbeats in Black Metal—immediately activate the nervous system. The body responds: heart rate rises, muscles contract, breathing quickens, and the mind enters a state of alertness, as if prepared for imminent confrontation. These physiological responses are not random; they reflect an alignment with the dense and rapid vibration carried by the music, awakening emotions such as anger, tension, or excitement.

On the other hand, soft and harmonious melodies—whether atmospheric keyboard lines, clean guitars with reverb, or ethereal voices—act in the opposite direction. They slow the breath, relax the muscles, and induce a sense of well-being that can approach meditation. In this context, the mind expands and perception elevates, connecting the individual to states of peace, joy, or even spiritual ecstasy. Such sounds work like vibrational balms that rebalance internal fields, creating space for mental clarity and emotional serenity.

However, the effect of music is not limited to the listener’s internal space. The emotions generated by these frequencies carry a real energetic density, enough to influence the way we interact with the external world. Emotions are not vague sensations: they are vibrational states that the brain translates into thoughts, and thoughts, in turn, manifest as decisions, behaviors, and concrete actions. Thus, what begins as a simple sonic experience can reverberate throughout the entire network of interactions that sustain our daily life.

When someone is immersed in aggressive music, they may feel the need to act physically, to express anger, or to engage in intense activities, such as impact sports, verbal confrontations, or even explosive bursts of creative energy. On the other hand, individuals who connect with soft and harmonious frequencies tend to act with more calm, compassion, and sensitivity. Often, repeated exposure to this kind of sound encourages more reflective, creative, and spiritual behaviors, generating attitudes that spread balance to the surrounding environment.

Music, therefore, is not only an artistic manifestation but a true catalyst between the inner world of consciousness and the outer world of actions. It transforms vibrations into emotions, emotions into thoughts, and thoughts into movements, choices, and attitudes that reverberate within the collective space. A single song can thus alter not only the inner landscape of an individual but also the atmosphere of an entire environment, influencing relationships, behaviors, and even decisions that shape reality.

This transformative power explains why music has been present in all cultures and eras of humanity, whether in tribal rituals, religious celebrations, war ceremonies, or meditative practices. Each society, in its own particular way, has understood that sound is a bridge between worlds: it awakens inner forces and projects them outward, acting as a vehicle of connection, change, and transcendence. At the same time that it envelops us, music penetrates us and moves us, showing that it is not merely art or pastime but a universal language of vibration that connects consciousness and reality.

CLOSING

What is presented to the reader in this book goes far beyond the history of a musical style or the trajectory of bands. Here, Black Metal is examined through the lens of the mental plane, the collective psychosphere, that which most people never perceive: music as a vehicle of influence, energy, and transformation. Every chord, every lyric, every riff, every show carried with it frequencies that spread silently, connecting minds and consciousness, interacting with forces that dwell in dimensions invisible to ordinary human perception.

Black Metal, seen through this lens, reveals itself as a complex web of intentions, where sound ceases to be mere entertainment and becomes an instrument of psychospheric action. Since its early days in the 1980s, the genre has been used as a channel for the propagation of dense energies, connecting the physical world to the Underworld, while also serving as a counterbalance when harnessed by elevated consciousnesses of the Triquetosphere. Each band, each recording, each performance became a piece in an invisible game, waged simultaneously across multiple planes of existence.

Throughout these pages, the reader discovers that Black Metal is not confined to notes and lyrics: it is a language that influences the vibration of human consciousness. It reveals how abyssal forces and elevated energies clash through music, and how this confrontation leaves invisible marks upon the collective psychosphere. Bands, whether aware of it or not, function as catalysts: some intensifying low and disturbing frequencies, others fostering balance, protection, and mental elevation. This dynamic demonstrates that music, especially in its rawest and most intense form, has the power to alter inner states, behaviors, and ultimately the very reality we perceive.

This book also highlights the responsibility implicit in the act of creating, listening to, or sharing music. Every note, every symbol, every idea conveyed in a song—whether for good or for harm—reverberates within the collective psychosphere and leaves subtle but lasting impressions. Black Metal, from this perspective, is not merely sound; it is condensed energy, consciousness in motion, an invisible dialogue between worlds, between matter and mind, between darkness and light.

More than a history about artists, fans, or movements, this book is an analysis of the impact of vibrational frequencies on the psychosphere, of the invisible strategies that shape thoughts and emotions, and of the forces that act upon humanity through the mental plane. It offers a vision of how certain musical currents can be used as tools of influence, but also as instruments of protection, neutralization, and the expansion of consciousness.

Upon reaching the end of this narrative, the reader realizes that Black Metal, when observed through the prism of the mental plane, is an expression of something greater than itself. It is a testimony to the ongoing battle between forces of light and shadow, between destruction and balance, between chaos and order. It is a reminder that every choice, every interaction with music, and every energy absorbed or emitted carries consequences for the collective psychosphere, for humanity, and, by extension, for the planet itself.

Therefore, this book closes not merely as a historical or musical analysis, but as an invitation to deep reflection: to understand Black Metal through the mental plane is to understand the invisible effects that shape thoughts, feelings, and consciousness. It is to perceive that music is not only to be heard, but to be felt, studied, and recognized as a force capable of transforming realities. And in this context, the history of Black Metal reveals itself as a greater narrative, one that spans generations, connects worlds, and challenges the limits of what we believe to be mere art.

THE END