And not the polite kind of noise.
We’re talking screaming low‑end guitar, drums that sound like they’re trying to punch through the Earth’s crust, and vocals that swing between melodic prophecy and pure volcanic release.
This is a two‑piece that plays like a five‑piece that’s been possessed.
HER NAME WAS FIRE doesn’t “blend genres” — they collide them.
Grunge grit, prog wanderlust, blues swagger, stoner weight… all smashed together into something that feels both familiar and completely alien.
Every riff feels like it’s been dipped in gasoline.
Every drum hit feels like it’s trying to settle a score.
And because they’re fully DIY — design, illustration, filmmaking, the whole creative ecosystem — the band’s world feels cohesive, intentional, and unmistakably theirs. No committee. No polish. Just raw vision.
They’ve shared stages with heavy hitters like Mondo Generator (Nick Oliveri, ex‑QOTSA), The Vintage Caravan, Radio Moscow, and The Black Mirrors, and they’ve held their own with the kind of swagger that only comes from total creative ownership.
Across Portugal and Europe, they’ve built a reputation for shows that feel like controlled chaos and riffs that hit like a meteor. The pandemic forced the duo into an involuntary hibernation, but instead of cooling off, they pressurized. What came out the other side is heavier, darker, and more focused than anything they’ve done before.
Electrify
Genre: Stoner‑punk meteor strike
Vibe: Getting drop‑kicked by a riff wearing steel‑toed boots
“Electrify” doesn’t open the EP — it ambushes it. João’s guitar tone sounds like it was recorded inside a collapsing volcano, while Tiago’s drums are basically a bar fight in 4/4. The chorus hits like someone yelling motivational quotes at you while shaking your shoulders violently.
This is the track that says: “We’re back from the pandemic and we brought weapons.”
Head on the Wall
Genre: Aggressive stoner‑grunge meltdown.
Vibe: Existential crisis but make it groove.
This one feels like the soundtrack to pacing around your apartment at 3AM, arguing with your own reflection. The riffs are sludgy enough to qualify as a controlled substance, and the vocals swing between melodic prophecy and “I’ve had enough of this nonsense.”
The final minute? A slow‑motion collapse into beautiful, cathartic chaos.
Facekicker
Genre: Stoner-garage rock with a twist.
Vibe: Short blast of melodic garage-punk energy.
The song operates at the intersection of stoner rock, punk urgency, and sludge‑leaning heaviness. João Campos’ guitar tone is thick and abrasive, built around a central riff that drives the track with mechanical precision. Tiago Lopes’ drumming is equally forceful, emphasizing punch and momentum over ornamentation.
The arrangement is compact, leaving little room for atmospheric detours. Instead, the band focuses on impact — short, sharp bursts of energy that underline the track’s confrontational title.
Better Days
Genre: Desert‑blues swagger with a cracked grin.
Vibe: Driving through the desert with no AC and too much attitude.
“Better Days” is the EP’s swagger track — dusty, bluesy, and mean in all the right ways. The riffs strut. The drums stomp. The vocals sound like they’ve been marinated in sunburn and cheap whiskey. This is the one that’ll get stuck in your head while you’re trying to do normal adult tasks like grocery shopping or pretending to listen in meetings.
Steamed
Genre: Psychedelic doom lullaby.
Vibe: Watching the world burn but it’s kinda pretty.
The closer is a slow‑burn monolith — a sunrise made of smoke and distortion. It’s the emotional gut‑punch of the EP, the moment where the duo lets the weight settle.
The final riff feels like a farewell wave from a giant made of granite. Heavy, patient, inevitable.
Final Verdict
Obsidian Light is HER NAME WAS FIRE at their most feral, focused, and creatively unhinged. It’s a five‑track reminder that stoner rock doesn’t have to be sleepy, psychedelic doesn’t have to be gentle, and duos can absolutely sound like they’re trying to crack the Earth’s mantle. This release will appear in various top 10 lists of 2026!
