Warfaze All Album

Released just a year later, Oshamasajik is often considered one of the band's strongest works. It featured a return to harder sounds but with a modern, alternative rock polish. Mizan Rahman joined as vocalist for this era.

Label: Soundtek Note: Last album with Sunny Hasan. Recorded in a period of internal band conflict.

Musical Analysis:
The album has a melancholic, weary tone. "Kache Acho" (You Are Close) is a slow, sorrowful ballad about distance in relationships. "Brishti Pore" (Rain Falls) features a haunting slide guitar. The production is muddy, and Babna’s guitar solos are less frequent. warfaze all album

Reception:
Mixed to negative. Many felt the band had lost its identity. Warfaze went on a 4-year hiatus after this release. Sunny Hasan departed in 2005 to form his own band.

By the late 90s, the band saw a major lineup overhaul. Vocalist Sunjoy departed, and Babu Karim took over the microphone for Jibondhara. This album marked a significant stylistic pivot. Released just a year later, Oshamasajik is often

By the time of later albums — especially the mid-to-late 1990s — Warfaze had matured technically. The band embraced longer arrangements, more sophisticated harmonies, and progressive structures. Key records in this phase show clear influences from progressive metal and classic progressive rock: shifting time signatures, extended instrumental passages, and conceptual leanings. The musicianship became a focal point: virtuosic guitar solos, layered keyboards, and complex drum work replaced some of the early raw immediacy. This shift broadened their palette and showcased the players’ skills, but it also introduced a tension: complexity for its own sake sometimes risked alienating listeners who loved the band for its primal, anthemic punch.

The heaviest offering

Otto is often cited as the heaviest album in the Warfaze discography. With a stable lineup finally established, the band delivered a record filled with crunching guitars and aggressive vocals. It was a response to the growing metal scene in Bangladesh.

Experimental with softer elements