Texas death metallers Frozen Soul have dropped their crushing new single “Invoke War”, featuring Robb Flynn of Machine Head. The track arrives alongside an official video as the latest preview of their upcoming album No Place of Warmth, due May 8, 2026 via Century Media Records.
War Within, Not Without
Far from a traditional battle anthem, “Invoke War” turns inward. According to vocalist Chad Green, the song explores:
- Grief, guilt, and depression
- The internal struggle to keep moving forward
- Memory as both weapon and burden
Flynn’s guest appearance adds an extra layer of intensity, reinforcing the track’s emotional weight and sense of confrontation.
The video strips away spectacle in favor of something more personal, depicting the solitary war we fight every day, with symbolic imagery tied to loss and remembrance.
No Place of Warmth stands as the band’s most focused and aggressive statement to date, a record that merges:
- Old-school death metal brutality
- Hardcore punk urgency
- Melodic leads that cut through the frost
Drawing from influences like Obituary, Cannibal Corpse, and Bolt Thrower, the album channels classic extremity while sharpening it with modern precision.
Notable Features
The album also includes guest appearances from:
- Gerard Way (My Chemical Romance)
- Devin Swank (Sanguisugabogg)
- Robb Flynn
Produced by Josh Schroeder, the album was crafted with a more instinct-driven process, written and refined in real time during studio sessions.

Tracklist — No Place of Warmth
- No Place of Warmth (feat. Gerard Way)
- Invoke War (feat. Machine Head)
- Absolute Zero
- Dreadnought (feat. Sanguisugabogg)
- Chaos Will Reign
- Eyes of Despair
- Ethereal Dreams
- Skinned by the Wind
- DEATHWEAVER
- Frost Forged
- Killin Time (Until It’s Time to Kill)
On the Road
Frozen Soul hit the road next month across the U.S. alongside:
- Avatar
- Fleshgod Apocalypse
With “Invoke War”, Frozen Soul prove that brutality doesn’t have to be hollow, it can carry weight, meaning, and emotional force.
No Place of Warmth isn’t just about desolation, it’s about surviving it.