Into Oblivion is the twelfth studio album by American heavy metal band Lamb of God. It was released on March 13, 2026 through Century Media Records and Epic Records.
Lead vocalist Randy Blythe commented on the albums title and themes stating "In general, the album is about the ongoing and rapid breakdown of the social contract, particularly here in America. Things are acceptable now that wouldâÂÂve horrified people just 20 years ago."
It was produced by Josh Wilbur, and was recorded in multiple locations, including Richmond, Virginia, Mark Morton's home studio and Blythe recorded his vocals at Redondo Beach, California's Total Access studio.
Guitarist Mark Morton commented on the recording process stating: Drummer Art Cruz also revealed that this was the first album he recorded while sober, which resulted in him having a completely different approach on the album.
On October 2, 2025, Lamb of God released the albumâÂÂs first single, âÂÂSepsis,â which was accompanied by an official music video directed by Gianfranco Svagelj. The second single, âÂÂParasocial Christ,â was released the following month on November 21, alongside an official music video.
On January 15, 2026, the band officially announced the albumâÂÂs release date and released the third single, the title track âÂÂInto Oblivion,â with an official music video. The fourth and final single, âÂÂBlunt Force Blues,â was released on February 27.
During Into OblivionâÂÂs release weekend, multiple listening parties were held in 35 different states, with more than 140 independent record stores celebrating the recordâÂÂs release. The album sold 26,000 copies in US in its first week and debuted at number 21 on the Billboard 200.
Lamb of God is supporting the album with a North American headline tour from March 17 to April 26. Kublai Khan TX, Fit For An Autopsy and Sanguisugabogg are serving as support.
Kory Grow of Rolling Stone stated, that the "album's title track, released with a dimly lit music video (to match Blythe's dimly lit Weltanschauung) on Thursday, finds Blythe declaring himself "the bringer of the truth from which you run into oblivion." Nick Ruskell of Kerrang! professed that "Into Oblivion boils with this anxiety and anger, occasionally spilling into downright confusion at what Randy sees." Ruskell added "Even in the albumâÂÂs moments of relative let-up â the picked verses of "El VacÃÂo", "A Thousand Years", both of which take on a doomy, almost Alice In Chains-ish crawl â this energy, this fire under their arse, is still there. The band havenâÂÂt been mellowing lately, exactly, but they werenâÂÂt swinging with this much fight in them, either."
Blabbermouth.wrote "This is their finest album since (at least) 2015's and a vigorous restating of their original values, albeit with a few refined and sophisticated elements thrown in to keep the creative fires blazing." Ryan P of Sputnikmusic also gave the album a positive review stating "This album displays Lamb of God on their game to the highest degree. It's groovy as hell and as brutal as a four-ton truck hitting you at 100 miles per hour. As soon as you hit play on the title track and that first riff from Mark blasts you, you know you're in for one hell of a treat."
Stephen Miller of Metal Hammer claimed "The smart money would now be on Lamb Of God coming back every few years to release a decent collection of songs, with one or two standouts that get chucked into the live set that recall, but never match, any of their classic records from the past, right? Wrong. Into Oblivion is a mallet to the back of the skull to anyone who believed that Lamb Of GodâÂÂs best days were behind them. It is, at the very, very least, their best album since 2012âÂÂs Resolution, and it might even top that."
Credits adapted from Tidal.