Classic Album of the Moment

death album of month
DEATH
Spirtual Healing
1990
Key Tracks: Altering The Future, Spiritual Healing

Favorite Classic DM Band?

MORTUARY DRAPE - Buried In Time


MORTUARY DRAPE
Buried In Time
Avantgarde Records
7/10





From the moment you pop in the disc, Morbid Angel instantly comes to mind. But whereas the initial technical trickery of these accomplished black artisans is reminiscent of that style of playing, ‘Buried In Time’ illustrates a group that has formed an impressive album of death metal with a razor sharp edge.

The quality of the production here is simply awesome. You’ve never heard such excellent drum and cymbal tones on a death metal record before, and the mix is dead on. The record was recorded at AlphaOmega studios, hailed as one of the predominant recording facilities in Italy.

Guitarist Cruel Abbot has an interesting style which is progressive and iconographic, damaging with its concentrated vehemence. The onslaught of tracks like ‘Unfading Revenge’ and ‘Look Behind’ palpitate with a dark energy and vindictive force.

Drummer War Machine Helgast performs complex, laborious double kick patterns and difficult time signatures with painstaking precision. His performance stands out as that of an extremely focused and rehearsed player and his skills place him among the elite of the genre.

Diabolical ringleader and only remaining founding member Wilderness Perversion has a predictably granular growl, but he enunciates well, making his acrimonious lyrical rampages understandable and much more listenable than some singers who just scream unintelligibly. His performance is especially capable on ‘Who Calls Me’. Arcane of Veiled Light (yes that is his name) manages some decent bass fills on occasion and capably supports the drumming madness of Helgast.

Mortuary Drape remains a band to be reckoned with and line up changes has further enhanced the capabilities of this weighty group.

Written By: Harvester Crowlee

TOTAL DEVASTATION - Reclusion


TOTAL DEVASTATION
Reclusion
Firebox Records
7/10





Total Devastation proves to be both brash and at times, completely relentless on its newest record, “Reclusion”. This six-member Finnish metal act tears through eleven gruff tracks of an industrial strength with the abrasive barking of Jaakko Heinonen making for an excellent compliment to the band’s power chord based, wall of sound guitar rumblings.

“Divine” is a bottom heavy thumper that morphs into blasting and webbed riffing. The group incorporates more than a few different types of influences, but takes things from a left of center approach.

Highlights here include a spinning vortex of sound called “Converted Illusion” and the savage opening cut “Murderous”, where Total Devastation actually manages to live up to its menacing moniker.

The propulsive “Ground Zero” finds the group slyly straddling the line between Gothenburg and metalcore influences, which works wonderfully. This track is definitely the sleeper of the album.

On “Well Of The Dead”, Total Devastation try their hand at a bit of doom. Enhancements gives the song an electric nature, giving listeners o taste of cyber-death metal that is something completely different than Fear Factory.

A surprisingly well put together project, “Reclusion” has a great deal to offer those who crave supercharged metal of many moods.

Written By: Withered Corpse

MORGOTH - The Best Of Morgoth 1987 – 1997


MORGOTH
The Best Of Morgoth 1987 – 1997
Century Media
9/10





This is a massive collection from one of the top purveyors of death metal in the late eighties and early nineties. Morgoth were slaying crowds with their unique brand of aural violence when most of today’s death bangers were in nursery school. Marc Grewe possessed a voice that was the sickest thing this side of Tardy, vomiting out the possessed, demonic sounding screams that gave the band it’s undeniably brutal nature.

A superb career retrospective, this album encapsulates a decade where Morgoth would rule the death metal stages of Europe with an unforgiving vengeance. The power inherent in this group’s forceful, hell-spawned sound runs through the course of this retrospective. From the band’s original ‘Pits Of Utumno’ demo through their more adventurous foray into sonic madness, ‘Feel Sorry For The Fanatic’, the group explores numerous pummeling avenues of musical brutality.

Despite their experimentation with different aspects of musical darkness, Morgoth never failed to deliver an exaggerated attack of thrashing, deathly force. ‘Burnt Identity’ is just as uniquely savage sounding as it was when released back in 1990. This signature song is one of the most catchy vomiting death songs ever written and it stays entertaining with some interesting tempo switches that enhance the song’s overall weightiness. ‘Body Count’, from the ‘Cursed’ album is a track that is well named for it leaves the corpses piled to the sky in its wake. Within the somber chords of ‘Isolated’, listeners find the group taking an approach of pure doom that further serves to emphasize the tracks gargantuan strength as Grewe spills his trademark vocals forth like a tanker of blood, thick and messy.

On the group’s final album, ‘Feel Sorry For The Fanatic’, the group took a more commercial turn that sadly lacked the vomitous vox of previous releases. Tracks like ‘This Fantastic Decade’ show that the band could pull off a creative left turn just as easily as bands like Tiamat were experimenting with during that time period. ‘Decade’ contains low-fi production that makes the band’s tone dirty, yet without a doubt, more melodic than any previous Morgoth offering. Meanwhile the diehard fans of this act will greatly appreciate the inclusion of the ‘Pits Of Utumno’ demo in this package, offering a glimpse into the product of the formative years of the act that is truly a crucial piece of death metal history.

The inclusion of 24 audio tracks overall in this 2 disc set should be enough to satisfy any Morgoth follower’s appetite, but it’s the inclusion of six videos with this package that turns this compilation from a great set to a mandatory purchase. With videos for ‘Isolated’, ‘Cursed & Sold Baptism’, Under The Surface’ and ‘Last Laugh’ as well as two great live clips, ‘Body Count’ and ‘Resistance’ this comprehensive assemblage from the most mighty of the European death metal groups is to fucking die for.

Written By: Maggot Farmer

NIGHTRAGE - Descent Into Chaos


NIGHTRAGE
Descent Into Chaos
Century Media Records
8/10





Nightrage brings the listener a thrashing attack that rests right upon the cusp of death metal on “Descent Into Chaos”. With superior screamer Tomas Lindberg fronting this rather aggressive group, there’s little doubt that comparisons to Lindberg’s former ensemble, the much revered At The Gates, will instantly come to mind.

Lindberg sounds somewhat more focused here, lashing out with raspy barks that are a perfect compliment to the chugging, intensity the band delivers. ‘Phantasma’ is truly a killer cut, sounding like the angrier big brother of Dark Tranquillity, relying more upon sheer, brute force than atmospheric concepts. It is a bit surprising to hear “Poems” sounding accessible; the riffs mirror Shadows Fall somewhat, while the vocal onslaught continues with gruff intensity. The striking imagery that graces the disc’s cover relays the over the top intensity that Nightrage brings to the table on the title track, a rabid, violent thrasher that cuts a swath toward sonic annihilation.

Nightrage knows when to lock into a groove and although there is a great deal of faster-tempoed ideas on this record, this five piece plays together tightly, opting to beat the listener over the head repeatedly rather than make swift strikes which seldom connect. Gus G. (Dream Evil) definitely makes his presence known on the tuneful thumper ‘Frozen’, injecting a melodious riff into the foray. Mikael Stanne (Dark Tranquillity) guests on this track further adding to the inventiveness of the group’s overall sound with some well-placed clean vocals. These vox give the song an interesting hook that is quite memorable.

The addition of some fantastic guitar soloing makes this song one of the highlights of the record. The detuned, bottom heavy sounds of “Silent Solitude” make for a solid moshpit anthem that again reaches for a growling hook from Lindberg. Producer Patrik J. Sten hes a great ear for putting out this style of music, everything is mixed very well and the levels all line up in order to create a full sound that is heavy as hell, but slightly polished as well. Things get hectic on “Omen”, which is delivered at a breakneck pace, designed for total thrashing and destined to get crowds going crazy.

A break from the intensity is found in ‘Solus’, an instrumental focused of melody and power that reminds the listener of “Risk” era Megadeth.

Nightrage pays homage to old school thrash metal on the venomous “Reality vs. Truth”, which closes out the album on a headbanging note, sounding similar to an even more intense version of The Haunted.

“Descent Into Chaos” is a powerful album on several levels is definitely one of the surprises of 2005.


Written By: The Boatman

PANZERCHRIST - Battalion Beast


PANZERCHRIST
Battalion Beast
Neurotic Records
8/10





As with so many albums, production is the factor in keeping Battalion Beast from being a truthfully great record. Although it's likely that this is intentional to a certain degree, the bony, tinny production encountered here is much more suitable toward bands like Arkhon Infaustus and Angelcorpse than a outfit with a stronger Death Metal perspective like Panzerchrist. With out the low-end rumbling and compressed sound that characterizes so many brilliant Death Metal records, the impact is substantially lost. While Battalion Beast certainly has better production than the band's last full-length attempt, Room Service, it still does not bear the proper weight required to make this a great Death Metal album.


This is not to say that the intense, yet balanced "War In The North" or "Flame Of The Panzerchrist", a cut that gets started with a doomy preface (complete with tolling bell) and is followed by a Slayer-esque, medium-paced bout of chugging, aren't the type of cuts that make you want to gain a swift case of whiplash. These tracks are good, they could simply sound better. Most impressive is the rapid-fire blasting and solid footwork from drummer Reno Hilligsø Kiilerich. Hisstamina and exertion forms the backbone of the track "He Is Dead Who Will Not Fight." Kiilerich's playing elevates Panzerchrist from being an average group to one that shows glimpses of dominance.


All in all, Battalion Beast is yet another solid effort from these war-mongering Danes. While there’s not much progression to be seen on this album, the group still executes its deathly war with body-stacking effectiveness. While not yet in a league with Impaled Nazarenes of the metal world, Battalion Beast brings Panzerchrist one step closer to such greatness.


Written By: The Boatman

POLTERCHRIST - Engulfed By The Swarm


POLTERCHRIST
Engulfed By The Swarm
Season Of Mist Records
Death Metal
7/10





Polterchrist transmits fierce death metal and tuneful moody movements with ease on their latest 'Engulfed By The Swarm'. My biggest complaint about the record is that the vocals are pushed back in the mix, rendering the Quarthon-like howls of vocalist Kevin McClintock difficult to hear at times.

That said, this band's style of composition is unique, ranging from swirling Death Angel style riffery to squealing harmonics which lend a nod to death metal giants Pestilence. The album cover art is pretty cool; featuring strangely mutated locusts overtaking a Japanese city...I enjoy the originality of this concept, which is not your run-of-the-mill death metal fare.

An electronic intro kicks off 'The Art Of Ferocity' and when the vocals set in, I am reminded a bit of The Kovenant until the band settles into a straight forward thrashing jam which makes you feel as if you are looking over the edge of the abyss...Veterans of the Philadelphia metal scene, Polterchrist display a high degree of originality on tracks like 'Alone' with it's ethereal, lost sounding vocal beckons and the chilling 'Desolate Paradise'.

Remixing this album so that the vocals (which are actually quite masterful) were more clear and upfront would add another point to the rating.


Written By: Maggot Farmer

SEVERED REMAINS - A Display Of Those Defiled


SEVERED REMAINS
A Display Of Those Defiled
Comatose Music
7/10





Seven tracks of low-end rumbling and grumbling in the vein of Suffocation make up “A Display Of Those Defiled.” One may infer that Severed Remains are really into the New York death metal giants, seeing that this disc includes a cover version of “Liege Of Inveracity.”

Ben Rubin and Andrew Marunowski unleash a ripping guitar assault on the fast paced and highly technical “Prelude For Dementia” as vocalist Joe Reed issues deep guttural barks that are nothing less than earth shaking in their abject intensity. The group bursts forth with an insane blast to kick off “Grind…I Just Might” that rivals their more well known death metal peers in terms of sheer intensity.

Drummer Anthony Biello comes up with some fantastic stick work to usher in the squealing “Shishkafuck”, a track that assaults the listener with a pummeling onslaught of scalar ripping and frenzied rhythms. Two remastered demo cuts are included here, the better of the two being the bizarre “Derived Of Fluids”, where the production is virtually unlistenable, but this disc would have been better off if both of these horribly recorded tracks were left off.

Fear not, the group digs into the Suffocation cover quite proficiently. Not that many bands can pull off the intensity of a Suffocation track without error, but Severed Remains definitely deliver here.

Absolutely an item that would be of interest to any fan of low rumbling death, “A Display Of Those Defiled” hits the mark five of seven times, which is not so bad at all.


Written By: Maggot Farmer

SCHIZTOME - The Art Of Dying


SCHIZTOME
The Art Of Dying
Casket Records
7.5/10





Power grooving death metal is the order of the day as Schiztome unleashes ten ragers that grab the listener by the throat and squeeze hard. The band has an upfront style that is as explosive as it is aggressive, making key tracks like “The Art Of Dying” and “Sleepless Malice” a suitable feast for those that have an appetite for ballsy, brutal metal. Craig Baker sounds like Phil Anselmo went through guttural boot camp, belching out nasty barks amidst the flurry of neck-breaking thumping his bandmates deliver.

The production is very bassy here, yet not muddy whatsoever, lending a substantial weight to “Age Of Fire” as Baker growls and wails in the foreground. The band have a reasonable degree of technical ability, but they do not allow musicianship to overwhelm the groove of cripplers like “Slaughtered And Consumed”, instead opting for a blunt, full frontal metal attack.

“Symbiotic Disharmony” comes off as a combination of Pestilence and Demolition Hammer, with rapid fire drumming and speedy right hand work by guitarists Leigh Jones and Geoff Holmes.

The only major problem with this record is the inconsistency in the level of the snare drum and the aerial toms, which fade in and out in terms of volume.

“The Art Of Dying” is an album that is definitely worthy of notice, if nothing else, for its sheer overwhelming force. Crank this one up loud.


Written By: The Boatman

VARIOUS ARTISTS - Choosing Death: The Improbable History Of Death Metal And Grindcore


VARIOUS ARTISTS
Choosing Death: The Improbable History Of Death Metal And Grindcore
Relapse Records
8/10




This package serves as companion to Albert Mudrian’s informative, introspective look at the forces behind the scenes that helped to shape an entire subgenre of extreme music, death metal and its bastard twin, grindcore, which technically came first. For those that are just getting interested in extreme music, this is a great place to uncover the roots of the art form, as well as keeping you up to speed with a few of the newer groups that are setting a new standard for the style.

“Choosing Death” gets going with the group that started it all, the much revered Napalm Death, a group focused on smashing the stereotypes and music and creating their own style. “Scum” might be, more so than any other track on this compilation, indicative of the true intent behind the creation of extreme music. Its low key production lends forcefulness to the cut as the group slam through the track that introduced grind to a completely unsuspecting public. Furious blasting rips through your speakers as Napalm summon a new era in pure sonic extremity. An especially sought after track is included by Bostonians Siege, who brandished a powerful sonic melding of metal and hardcore. These bashers are represented here with the cut “Walls”, a piece that would influence Napalm Death to take up the torch of grinding madness.

Flint’s Repulsion were America’s most extreme group at one point and “Maggots In Your Coffin” shows the listener exactly why, but Florida’s Morbid Angel would shortly thereafter emerge as the most popular death metal group with the release of their seminal 1989 classic “Altars Of Madness.” The bands rapid fire pace and evil image made their music that much darker and that album’s “Chapel Of Ghouls” served to completely define the death metal phenomenon. Over in Sweden, Nihilist was enjoying quite a stir from their self released demos that were widely circulated amongst underground tape traders. “Severe Burns” gives the listener a glimpse at the formative sounds of this young group, who would soon become Entombed. When Obituary hit the scene in 1989 with their Roadrunner Records debut “Slowly We Rot”, no one had heard anything quite like the deathly barf of vocalist John Tardy. Obituary would go on to become a big seller for Roadrunner, helping to set that company up for the success that it enjoys today.

Although a bit short on the production side in comparison to the group’s future albums, “Slowly We Rot” possessed a certain vibe that was unmistakably morbid. This song’s razor edged guitars are fashioned to rip the rotting flesh from your bones and ultimately, they serve their purpose very well. Everything about Deicide was and still is to this day, over the top, both in terms of the group’s overtly satanic image and lyrical content as well as in the group’s insanely wicked music. Singer Glen Benton’s approach of layering vocals makes the songs on the group’s debut “Deicide” sound wholly ungodly as Benton looks toward Evil Dead 2 for vocal training. “Lunatic Of God’s Creation” hold up today as one of the best put together and most memorable songs in all of death metal. There could be a bit of question as to whether “Heartwork” could be considered to be a cut that showcases Carcass at their most influential. The classic “Symphonies Of Sickness” was probably the most notable offering from the foursome; however “Heartwork” is a solid track that hints at death metal moving into a more melodic, streamlined and surprisingly commercial arena. The reason can be attributed directly to Columbia Records who upon launching a partnership with Earache Records, sought to bring the extreme into the mainstream.

Amazingly, At The Gates had a much more tremendous impact upon the metalcore scene than on outright death metal in general. The band showcases their pummeling riffing here with “Need”, from 1995’s “Slaughter Of The Soul”, definitely a high point in the blood soaked history of this deviant form of aural chaos. Chuck Schuldiner was a driving force in the movement, nearly since its inception. By the time metal fans caught wind of the most appropriately named ensemble, Death, Schuldiner was churning out anthems like “Pull The Plug” that were simply skull crushing. By “Symbolic”, the band had refined their sound, incorporating a further amount of melody to enhance the completely brutal riffing and sick, Drano gargling voice of Schuldiner. This period of the group’s history is often overlooked, but there can be no doubt that this effort’s title track was one of the most punishing examples of death metal to date. Opeth brought a progressive element to death metal that brought the band close to fans' hearts immediately. With “Demon Of The Fall”, you will discover that Opeth were accomplished artisans early on in their career, but maintained a unique heaviness that would establish the group as the leaders of the new era of the style. The reclusive Pig Destroyer brings fans into a virtual tornado of vicious gore to fans with an exclusive track “Untitled.” Here, you will discover that Pig Destroyer are unafraid to test the limits of grinding and this song makes the argument that they are poised to overtake the genre as the most extreme act out there.

The modern Headbangers Ball gave a ton of support to “We Will Rise” as Arch Enemy proves to be melodic as well as overwhelmingly aggressive. Vocalist Angela Gossow has emerged as the first overwhelmingly popular female vocalist in death metal and her scratchy growl brings a bleak atmosphere to the sound of Ach Enemy that makes the group’s recent material all the more worthwhile. Other hot new talents such as the insidiously evil Zyklon and bands such as Hate Eternal and Nile are spearheading an even more complex menagerie of musical deconstruction that shows that death metal is anything but dead in 2005.

Providing a wide retrospective of some of the most influential and skilled performers in the short history of extreme music, “Choosing Death” not only makes for a spectacular companion to a great read, it is in and of itself a top notch collection of highlights that no true fan would want to be without.


Written By: The Wizard

BLOODBATH - Nightmares Made Flesh


BLOODBATH
Nightmares Made Flesh
Century Media
9/10





Hypocrisy frontman Peter Tagtgren steps into this death metal killing machine in order to masterfully lead Bloodbath through 14 brand new tracks that illustrate the band’s ability to meld technicality with memorable refrains which sing the praises of all that is moribund.

“Nightmares Made Flesh” aims to pummel listeners to a bloody pulp with grinding rhythms, machine gun drum blasts and vocals which are completely raw and intense, but at once, comprehendible and catchy.

“Brave New Hell” is a wicked journey toward the abyss, featuring varied tempos and crunching guitar rhythms. Tagtgren can manipulate his voice in a number of sick contortions, all of which fit the music of Bloodbath very well and he also is a major factor in making these songs memorable with his ear catching barking. The buzzing blast of power behind “Feeding The Undead” provides a substantial backdrop to Tagtgren’s blood-soaked vocal rumblings.

The ominous strains of “Eaten” show that Bloodbath can pull off a grotesque death anthem at a more lumbering pace. “Year Of The Cadaver Race” is one of the highlights of the record, complete with buzzing flies and screams of agony.

Bloodbath packs way more terror filled thrills into a single album than you can get from a big budget horror movie and the best part is that you get to visualize the sick insanity for yourself. Definitely, this is a death metal milestone.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

BURNING SKIES - Murder By Means Of Existence


BURNING SKIES
Murder By Means Of Existence
Lifeforce Records
7/10





With the addition of Burning Skies, Lifeforce Records gets an injection of wicked extreme death metal that is the sonic equivalent of a homicide. Investigators at the scene of the crime will find razing guitar chugging, devilishly over the top vocals delivered with a harsh intensity and pounding rhythms that decapitate on arrival.

‘Individual Hate Complex’ is pure aural devastation while ‘Emo Assassination’ and ‘Hatred Remains’ highlight the group’s aggressive style.

Burning Skies is a band whose music leaves nothing standing in its wake. Call the coroner and break out the toe tags, things are going to get pretty messy!

ERIN FOX © 2004 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

CANNIBAL CORPSE - Kill


CANNIBAL CORPSE
Kill
Metal Blade Records
4/10





For how long can a band appeal to the lowest common denominator of the metal audience before they simply stop making records and go away? Cannibal Corpse has continued to beat the same tired drum so repeatedly, the gore-wallowing band has become a veritable AC/DC of death metal. With each successive record, this band sinks further into a depressing pit of blood-splattered redundancy. On their latest mistake, Kill, Cannibal Corpse offers up a renewed round of garbling, chromatic pap calculated to appeal to all who dwell on juvenile, cliché themes like “Brain Removal Device” and actually believe that it’s brilliant.

Although Corpsegrinder has been in the band for a longer period, his guttural chops have not at all truly compared to the ghoulish, graveyard growls of former frontman Chris Barnes. During “Necrosadistic Warning”, the vocals are so purely one-dimensional and uninspired; you’d think that you were listening to a bad demo from any one of the countless inexperienced garage bands spewing out death metal in the mid-nineties. Decent production by Erik Rutan cannot even save Kill from utter mediocrity. With so many passé songwriting themes, a band with the amount of know-how that Cannibal Corpse has should be expected to at least deliver an overpowering performance. That’s not the case, with cuts like “Five Nails Through The Neck” and “Make Them Suffer” sounding as if the band is simply going through the motions.


If any death-metal album could ever be described as ham-fisted, it’s this one. Directionless, half-hearted soloing during the intro to “Purification By Fire” paves the way for further shallow gargling from Corpsegrinder, with the end result being an almost laughable “stab” at the band’s past glories. It’s hard to feel apologetic for Cannibal Corpse when reading lyrics like “Submerged In Boiling Flesh” and “Manical.” There’s only so many ways in which one can articulate a desire to rip out your entrails and feast on your bowels. Someone stop Cannibal Corpse before they Kill again.



ERIN FOX © 2006 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

CROWPATH - Son Of Sulphur


CROWPATH
Son Of Sulphur
Willowtip Records
8/10





Yet again, listeners are treated to one of the finest Swedish death metal bands of today as Crowpath bludgeon listeners with an unstoppable wall of mathematically supercharged death and grind.

As if that’s not enough to satisfy your addiction for extremity, Crowpath also manage to find room in their skilled songcrafting for a touch of doom, which breaks the more insane musical passages up nicely, offering a degree of dynamic to the album that many bands of this style fail to ever achieve.

Evading the sophomore jinx seems all too easy for these guys, as they expand upon the direction of their “Red On Chrome” debut, offering a new level of technical ability, while staying true to sounds that are nothing save exercises in the exploration of the horizons of the brutality of death and grindcore.

With a guitar sound that emulates dropping Piggy and Mitch Harris in a blender on high speed, Crowpath is all over the meter, issuing rapid-fire, rolling blasts, urgent grunts, anguished, piercing squeals and a stringed attack that is formidable, to say the least.

Tracks like “The Will To Burn” and “Pigeonsmasher” showcase the group’s high level of proficiency on their respective instruments, all the while making for a chaotic, blistering sonic bruise for thine ears to behold.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

TORCHBEARER - Yersinia Pestis


TORCHBEARER
Yersinia Pestis
Cold Records
7/10





Torchbearer issues some reckless, technical death that grows on the listener after a couple of spins, but ultimately offers very little new to a genre that has to be pushed to its limits in order to remain entertaining. death metal requires that musicians challenge the listener with new ideas, having completely burned out once already, the style is one that simply must be expanded upon in order to retain its effectiveness. During the track “Dead Children, Black Rats”, vocalist Par Johansson changes his voice up a bit, allowing a deep and ominous speaking voice to give the track a dose of character. Production-wise, this is an excellent record. The intensely compressed kick drums have an original quality that causes the music to seem more stabbing and akin to Sinister in some moments. This record’s gover features a artistically interesting, well done version of a reaper figure that helps to bring out the mental imagery in the album’s lyrics. ‘Bearer Of The Torch’ stands out as this records finest track offering the varied dynamics that make this music truly memorable. This song contains some thick grooves, intricate melodies during the breaks and seriously damaging blasts. You will discover some competent guitar solos tastefully dispersed throughout the record. These solos are blazing scale runs that are performed with a skilled precision. A strictly infectious chugging riff graces ‘Pest Cometh’, while the more frantic portions of this track are slightly reminiscent of Morbid Angel if that group had a growler which was a bit darker sounding. “Thus Dying Came Unto Kaffa” is a speedy, blackened burst which is emphasized by the type of melodic diversion you would expect to hear from a power metal band, then Torchbearer returns to high gear for the song’s hyper-blasting verse. Henrik Schonstrom plays at blinding speed on “Failures Dawn”, sounding eerily machinelike and inhuman. Lyrically, the band has some decent darkened poetry that is well written and makes for great thematic content overall. Torchbearer is a group that would appeal to most fans of death metal, and perhaps a small segment of black metal fans. Tossing a bit more diversity amongst the blasts certainly would not harm the efforts of this group, but “Yersinia Pestis” still makes for a solid death metal listen, despite its lack of originality.

SIX FEET UNDER - Decade In The Grave


Six Feet Under
Decade In The Grave
Metal Blade Records
8/10





Six Feet Under buries the competition with “Decade In The Grave”, a fully comprehensive collection that proves why this Chris Barnes-led outfit is the most important band in the entire death metal genre today. When consumed in such substantial quantities, the band’s hauntingly grinding sonic violence becomes all the more lethal. Singer Barnes is well known for intending to create the kind of music that will “…rip people’s fucking heads off” and with “Decade In The Grave”, the brash and wholly intense frontman has achieved the fullest realization of his creative ambitions to date. A raging battlefield of death awaits the listener with this enormous offering, as SFU stack the corpses to the sky with no less than four discs packed with over seventy of the band’s best works, rare tracks and a seventeen cut DVD that will bring grave-digging devotees of the group through the band’s entire blood-soaked career of brutalizing graveyard metal.

Six Feet Under often comes across as being very harsh. But it is that harshness that often makes the band’s songs appealing. Less production is more for SFU and that makes the demo tracks, early recordings and rare cuts all the more enticing to hear. Although many compilations of this sort are more geared toward diehard fans of a group, this decade of death stuffed into a box becomes the perfect medium to discover the group for the first time as well. This set runs the gamut of diversity, showcasing each of the varied aspects of the group’s sound from the punk metal stomping of “Revenge Of The Zombie”, to the blunt force trauma attack of “Victim Of The Paranoid.” When the doomy, Sabbath influenced darkness of “Feasting On The Blood Of The Insane” begins to deeply set in, you’ll know exactly why 1999’s “Maximum Violence” record is one of the most revered death metal albums of all time and by the time the cut’s bludgeoning verse kicks in, you’ll be overtaken by the bruising sonic demolition that only Six Feet Under can deliver. As this set rolls through two discs of the band’s album highlights, tracks like “Murder In The Basement”, “War Is Coming”, “Torture Killer” and “The Day The Dead Walked” are prime examples as to why Six Feet Under has remained the most noteworthy act of this type for the past ten years.

More recent material is represented well, with standouts from the group’s 2005 “13” record bearing a major presence. Fan favorite “Shadow Of The Reaper”, that albums, nastily grinding “Decomposition Of The Human Race” and the thrashy, markedly grim sounding “Deathklaat” each underline the band’s dominant, skull-blasting venom. A full fledged death-tank of an album, “13” shows the band to be in their prime, but for those who haven’t picked it up as of yet, the best material is to be found in this collection. The inclusion of Barnes’ pair of Leviathan demos shows that he is an artist which deeply desires to express himself with varied forms of metal and these legendary metal hallmarks are almost the icing on the cake. With more than enough audio to satisfy any follower of these Godfathers of death metal, the inclusion of a comprehensive DVD makes this set mandatory. Chris Barnes is truly a luminary in the creation of this style of music and this excellent package confirms the storied underground vocalist’s band as being the preeminent force in all of death metal. Prepare to be buried alive.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

IMMOLATION - Harnessing Ruin


IMMOLATION
Harnessing Ruin
Olympic Recordings
8/10





Over the years, Immolation has come to rely more upon traditional metal elements rather than the death styling of the early nineties in order to deliver an impression of darkness.

The mix here is low-toned, with crunching bottom end bludgeoning being the band’s modus operandi. Dirging riffs create a doomy feeling on “Son Of Iniquity” while creating a classic death vibe on “Swarm Of Terror” that seethes with a brutal tonality. Immolation have deliberately attempted to create different states of ambiance, ranging from grooving grinding to dissonant offset polyrhythms. Ross Dolan possesses a grainy, gruff bark that gives tracks like “Our Savior Sleeps” an ominous tone. On this track, you will find Immolation combining widely separated styles with expertly dark song craftsmanship.

At times, the band summons a wall of noise and others they move for more disjointed grooves. Steve Shalaty can blast with the best of the extreme metal drummers, issuing a precise yet variable attack. If you’re an Immolation fan and have heard about this release, you probably already own it. If you haven’t had the opportunity to check this legendary group of NY deathsters out, “Harnessing Ruin” is as good a reference as any, easily standing up to the group’s prior albums, with an added bit of catchiness to boot.

If the bleak strains of the apocalyptic title track can’t get a metalhead moving, it’s hard to imagine what would. Immolation continues to prove themselves deserving of a lofty stature within the death metal community with yet another outstanding album of pure unholy death delivered with caliginous conviction!


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

TORTURE KILLER - Swarm!


TORTURE KILLER
Swarm!
Metal Blade Records
9/10





In consideration of the fact that Torture Killer initially started out as a Six Feet Under cover band, it is particularly sweet justice that the legendary Chris Barnes has joined up with the group as a full-time member. Having already made a name for themselves with a well received, duly powerful 2003 debut, “For Maggots To Devour”, Torture Killer has returned with their idol at the helm for this vital death metal milestone. Produced by Barnes and perfected by the superior mixing skills of Erik Rutan, “Swarm!” slashes away at the listener’s aural faculties with razor sharp riffing, battering double-kick fueled rhythms and of course, the signature undead growl of Barnes, with the combined din leaving mile-high stacks of decaying corpses in the aftermath of its supernatural devastation.

An immense, chugging riff powers “Forever Dead”, a cut strikes the senses like a blunt weapon, bludgeoning the listener into submission with relentless double bass flurries and zombified headbanging grooves. Twin guitar harmonies by guitarists Tuomas Karppinen and Jari Lane during this track’s outro provide the type of diversity that makes the music of Torture Killer appealing. In an age where most death metal bands equate technicality with brutality, the band proves that it is possible to be focused on groove and melody and still come across as being extraordinarily weighty. This type of enhancement also crops up on the memorable “Multiple Counts Of Murder”, a track that incorporates speedy, Exodus-style thrashing sequences and purely overwhelming and infectious chorus breakdown.

“Cannibal Gluttony” stands as being one of the tracks that most unquestionably bears a distinct Six Feet Under vibe, but manages to be even more dynamic with a lead break that is musically reminiscent of King Diamond and a furious wall of guitars that purely slaughters during the track’s chorus. The only real complaint about this otherwise outstanding effort is the infrequency of guitar solos. Quite often, the two axe-wielders will take part in contrasting harmonies to give the music a counterpoint to the more straight-ahead material but rarely do you hear the guitars actually breaking off into a lead at all. In all actuality, the more straight ahead approach is more suited to the type of sound the band is going for, but it would be nice to hear a bit of fretboard blazing under the barks of Barnes.

That said, every track you’ll find here is indeed completely killer, making for yet another essential bullet in the proverbial belt of Barnes’ accomplishments. Once again delivering exactly what the fans expect and ravenously fiend for, “Swarm!” will reign amongst the most mandatory death metal releases you’ll hear in 2006.


ERIN FOX © 2006 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

DARK FUNERAL - De Profundis Clamavi ad te Domine


DARK FUNERAL
De Profundis Clamavi ad te Domine
Candlelight Records
7.5/10





With this diabolically crippling live album, Dark Funeral further enhances its position as one of the elite occult metal bands on the scene today. Their purely chaotic symphonies of evil are even more destructive in concert as the band rips through fourteen blasts of Satanic fury.

These recordings stem from the group’s 2003 South American tour, a locale where the group is obviously immensely popular, judging from the tremendous crowd responses garnered with every break in the action. A barbaric rendition of “An Apprentice Of Satan” appears here, showing Dark Funeral to be an awe inspiring war machine of unstoppable proportion.

Frontman Emperor Magnus Caligula leads the group through flesh peeling representations of many of the group’s most hailed cuts including a pummeling version of “Secrets Of The Black Arts”, a thunderous “Open The Gates” and a show-stopping flurry in “Armageddon Finally Comes”. Blacker than black, primed with an intense hatred and commanding an overpowering ferocity,

“Profundis Clamavi ad te Domine” is a torrid live set that will take you on a journey to the very depths of the burning abyss. Do not miss this impressive display of hell-spawned might!


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ZYKLON – DisIntegrate


ZYKLON
DisIntegrate
Candlelight USA
9/10




In short order, Zyklon has emerged as one of the most important death metal acts of the new millennium. Picking up where the band’s 2003 effort “Aeon” left off, “DisIntegrate assaults the senses with a callous, virulently vile attack.


Whether Zyklon is bashing out a Morbid Angel-style death groove, or a Slayer-type thrashing assault, the band remains decidedly bludgeoning in unleashing a vivid torrent of muscular death. Life-eradicating anthems like the brutalizing title track and the chaotic, cacophonous cut “Vulture” underscore the band’s penchant for creating blasting strikes without remorse.

Experiencing the tyrannical vocal presence of Secthdamon, or the hyperspeed detonation emitted by revered drummer Trym gives the listener an experience that is as close to death as one can get without attaining the actual feat.

Zyklon proves with this beastly offering of crushing sound to be nearly matchless in the field of death metal today.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

BESIEGED - Besieged


BESIEGED
Besieged
Comatose Music - 2004
5/10




A brash onslaught of technical death metal, Besieged offer up eight tracks intended to brutalize the listener with furious blasts and deep, guttural growls. Vocalist Jason French would be a serious challenger in any “How low can you go?” contest and his chaotic guitar leads are viciously intense.

This said, this self titled record severely suffers from poor production at various points throughout the record. You’ll find some heavy guitar tones here, but the manner in which they were mixed is often quite muddy, with the production often sounding more like a pre-production demo as opposed to an actual album.

On an album as bass heavy as this one, further compression would assist in helping the listener through the sludge. Songs such as “Golgotha” and “Age Of Malevolence” would no doubt be of interest to fans of underground death, nonetheless. The thumping violence of “Age Of Malevolence” would no doubt appeal to fans of bands like Suffocation, especially being of note to those who enjoyed that group’s earlier recordings, but again, the production aspects rear their ugly head, with instruments fading in and out for no good reason and the flapping tones of the bass guitar coming into direct conflict with French’s guttural belching.

If you’re the type of fan that can get into sonic brutality no matter how ill- produced, you might find some redeeming qualities here, but most listeners will want to steer clear of this record.


ERIN FOX © 2004 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

BELPHEGOR - Goatreich Fleshcult


BELPHEGOR
Goatreich Fleshcult
Napalm Records
8/10




Belphegor issues an Imperial crush of torrential blackened death metal on "Goatreich - Fleshcult" as these four diabolical Austrians attack their instruments with an acute supernatural force.

The listener will hear hyperblasting beats, squealing guitars and evil death-vomit vocals on odious symphonies like "Bleeding Salvation" as Belphegor aim to bring sheer, disharmonic annihilation with their blasphemous cacophony. The vocals on "Fornication Et Immundus Diabolus" are entirely some of the sickest utterances ever.

Vocalist Helmuth projects larynx grinding belches on this cut, the absolute highlight of the record. "Sepulchure Of Hypocrisy" offers dirging melodic death in its finest form, an aural funeral possession set to bury the goyim beneath a wall of disharmonic evil absolute. Nefastus is a slaying drummer that delivers complex, rapid strikes throughout the album. He slams out pounding blasts on the title track as Sigurd shreds through a Kerry King influenced solo featuring excessive whammy bar jacking and dive bombing. Culled from the artist's "Infernal Live Orgasm" disc, "Swarm Of Rats" is a tenebrous wall of hatred that is a pure Armageddon of sound.

The group alternates between ripping blasts and melodic cosmic interludes on "Kings Shall Be Kings" and "Festum Asmorum Chapter 2" is a virulent blast of ungodliness that resonates with a supreme intensity.

Many artists have attempted this style, but sloppiness or poor production often stifles their successfulness. Belphegor suffer from neither of these problems as the band executes their musical onslaught with precision in all instances.

Those who enjoy ripping, technical death with a blackened mind set will surely find "Goatreich - Fleshcult" to be completely mesmerizing as Belphegor show here that they are among the elite of this extreme form of music.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

APOSTHATE - First Born Evil


APOSTHATE
First Born Evil
Necrotorture - 2005
3/10




Awfully rough production here, as Aposthate kick out some extremely underground sounding blackened Death Metal.

The drumming is far too triggered, coming off like a badly programmed drum machine, but some solace may be found in the band's unmerciful riffing. "First Born Evil" is so underground; you'll need a shovel to listen to it.

Somewhat like traveling back in a time machine to 1991, "First Born Evil" shows Aposthate has slight potential, especially in the guitar department, but that's really about it. Next.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

APHOTIC - Stillness Grows


APHOTIC
Stillness Grows
Flood The Earth Productions - 2004
5/10




For the label's first release ever, Flood The Earth records have assembled three EP recordings from Green Bay’s Aphotic on a single disc. Aphotic perform a style of atmospheric death metal laced with keyboards, MIDI programming and dark growling that is guitar driven and for the most part well executed. The first five tracks are culled from the band’s most recent EP, ‘Stillness Grows’.

I enjoy the songs here but the production is slightly weak, sounding very tinny at times and lacking the balls of a big budget project. That said, the band weave their way through tracks like ‘Lunar Ride’ and ‘Benumb’ skillfully. The eerie outro to ‘Lunar Ride’ does a nice job of creating a chilling ambience. Tracks six through nine hails from the group’s ‘Under Veil Of Dark’ release.

On these recordings, the vocals are a bit louder than on the newer material. ‘Free Me’ is a solid track that deviates a bit from the norm with tranced-out vocals and sweeping acoustic elements until the song kicks in to some interesting mid tempo double bass reminiscent of Tiamat.

The final five tracks are taken from the groups first EP, ‘Aphotic’. The production on these tracks is probably the worst of the batch. Although there are some great song ideas here, this material should have been rerecorded or left off the disc. It screams ‘I am a demo!”, ‘nuff said. Aphotic have written some pretty decent atmospheric death throughout their career. If they had the opportunity to take their time a bit in the studio, the end result would surely be much better.

I would like to hear what happens if Aphotic ever laid their hands on some decent studio time with a good producer.


ERIN FOX © 2004 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

AMORPHIS - Eclipse


AMORPHIS
Eclipse
Nuclear Blast Records
9/10




Many Amorphis fans anticipated this album with bated breath, with this newest platter of vigorously tuneful Finnish sounds introducing the talents of new singer Tomi Joutsen, who replaces the band’s longtime and much-revered frontman Pasi Koskinen. Often, groups are required to make such changes and for whatever reasoning, the results on this latest achievement stand as being surprisingly positive at the end of the day. Although Eclipse is an album where fans will find Amorphis to be more accessible than ever before, a large amount of the base of the band’s sound remains deeply rooted in the recognizable strains of their classic legacy.

As one of the first groups to factually combine the death metal style with more commercial sounds, Amorphis has overcome the odds on this refreshingly well-constructed record. While cuts like Perkele (The God Of Fire) and “Brother Moon” exhibit a noticeable return to the melodic death metal orchestrations of Elegy, most often the listener is thrust into a forebodingly harmonious musical realm that excels as a combination of the sensations delivered by the group’s most recently acclaimed effort, Tuonelaand to a much lesser extent, Elegy Motivated by a strongly persuasive intent to produce vital, engaging modern rock.

Over the years, more and more of the Finnish goth sound has penetrated the sound of the group and while Amorphis most certainly reclaims their identity on this stellar disc, that singular, distinct identity is less at odds with contemporary sounds than at any other point in the band’s career. Rife with bold, melancholy harmonies, “Two Moons” projects the classic Amorphis style that fans have come to know and love over the years, with Joutsen instantly proving himself to be a worthy replacement for Koskinen. A familiar thread runs through epic tracks like “Leaves Scar” and “The Smoke”, while “Under A Soil And Black Stone” delivers a restrained, morose sensation in what is as close to a traditional rock ballad as the Finnish sextet has ever managed.

Those who have followed Amorphis since the days of “Tales Of A Thousand Lakes” will find this latest chapter in the history of the band to be a logical next step. Being nothing short of amazing, Eclipse is nothing short of a must-have release that firmly re-establishes Amorphis as being one of the mightiest outfits in today’s European metal community.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ARCH ENEMY - Doomsday Machine


ARCH ENEMY
Doomsday Machine
Century Media Records – 2005
9/10




This positively is the record that metal fans have been waiting for, a churning, hammering masterpiece of an album from Arch Enemy.

It is almost too easy to heap scores of praise upon this talented, deadly outfit as they make a roaring return with a record that lives up to the high expectations that fans have held for this release.

The twin guitar assault of the Amott brothers Chris and Michael has never been so precisely sharp or as emotionally compelling as it is here on “Doomsday Machine.”

As considerable heft in terms of riffing is counterbalanced with a diverse variety of melodic interplay throughout the record, the outcome is decided in this music’s overall substantially skull-crushing effect. The group is known for this balance, and tracks such as “Taking Back My Soul” and “I Am Legend/Out For Blood” reflect the group’s musical duality, while showcasing a maturity that is evidence in the continued maturity in the group’s songwriting.

Metal fans should be thankful for bands such as these. Arch Enemy continues to grow artistically, making improvements on their signature sound with each successive release, even though each preceding album remains a metal classic in its own right. One of the band’s newest anthems of rebellion, “Nemesis” is a prime example of the group’s wizened song crafting. When parts flow together as well as they do on “My Apocalypse”, and at the same time retain such a resourceful perspective in terms of performance, you have a formula for fantastic metal.

Ferocity seethes from vocalist Angela Gossow; it is her presence and performance that determines the overall darkness of the cuts. Although many bands are experimenting more often with clean vocals over heavy riffing, the group switches that equation around, with Gossow taking the approach of issuing blatantly abrasive death growls over riffs that are uncharacteristically melodic, even for Arch Enemy.

More than anything, this record is a broadening of the horizons for extreme music and it’s simple to imagine that it will be lauded as such by those in the industry that are in-the-know, but more importantly, this record is the product of a will for this type of record within the metal community, showing that metal can be raw, yet expertly composed and performed.

Darkness surrounds the thick atmosphere of the chugging “Carry The Cross.” as Gossow reflects a particularly menacing stance. “Hybrids Of Steel” showcases the talents of the Amott brothers; fusing Steve Vai influenced melodies with a pounding heavy metal rhythm. Sweeping arpeggio scales meet ultimate crunch on this instrumental track that will be of strong appeal to any guitar aficionado inclined toward heaviness.

The high-caliber rhythm section of Arch Enemy features bassist Sharlee D’Angelo and Daniel Erlandsson. It is their slamming tempos that are the backbone of Arch Enemy, as the pair powerfully demonstrates on mercilessly massive “Mechanic God Creation” and the buzzing, bludgeoning “Skeleton Dance.” The latter, accentuated by eerie sounds and an overpowering riff is a perfect example of a trademark composition for this quintet of metal warriors. Yet again, the guitars shred over ringing chords, then take a right turn headlong into a grinding power groove.

Easily one of the top five metal albums of 2005, “Doomsday Machine” delivers a crushing death blow for those that believe extreme metal cannot appeal to a wide cross-section of metal listeners. This monumental metal milestone launches this July 26th. Will you be prepared when “Doomsday” arrives?


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ARCH ENEMY - Dead Eyes See No Future


ARCH ENEMY
Dead Eyes See No Future
Century Media - 2004
7/10




Here’s a little treat that will tide Arch Enemy fans over until the band’s next release. One of the strongest tracks from their ‘Anthems Of Rebellion’ album is showcased here, featuring the flaming guitar manipulations of founding member Michael Amott.

Three live tracks are put forth, lifted from recordings of the band in Paris during their 2004 tour. ‘We Will Rise’ really gets the audience into the action, their thundering chants clearly audible as the band rips through a great version of this highly popular tune.

Amott’s lead conveys shredding of the highest degree; he is one of the best lead players around, without a doubt. ‘Heart Of Darkness’, exclusive to the US release is classic Arch Enemy, with a formidable effort by drummer Daniel Erlandsson and bassist Sharlee D’Angelo.

The guitar tandem of Michael and Christopher Amott show diversity in the rhythms of ‘Burning Angel’ which are a cool hybrid of Megadeth and Iron Maiden. On each of the live tracks, vocalist Angela Gossow spits furious vocal rumblings inundated with nihilistic attitude. Additionally, there are three covers exclusive to the release. Megadeth’s ‘Symphony Of Destruction’ sounds if someone took 80 grit sandpaper to the original, with excellent execution from the guitar duo and the flanged out bray of Gossow. AE tear up Manowar’s ‘Kill With Power’, injecting an adversarial gruffness to the song, which is performed at a blistering pace.

Lastly, in the way of covers, we have ‘Incarnated Solvent Abuse’ a track from Mike Amott’s former band Carcass. Coming from a big Carcass fan, the EP could do without this incestuous track. It is no more desirable to hear this than it would be to hear Megadeth cover Metallica. Sorry. With the inclusion of the video for ‘We Will Rise’, fans will get a great clip that they’ve probably seen 100 times by now if a true AE fan, or if you've ever watched Headbangers Ball. Still, it is pretty cool to have a digital copy for the collection.

Aside from the Carcass misstep, ‘Dead Eyes See No Future’ is a release worthy of the attention of any fan of blazing fretwork and snarling blackened vocals.


ERIN FOX © 2004 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ALETHEIAN - Dying Vine


ALETHEIAN
Dying Vine
Hope Prevails Productions
7.5/10




Sometimes doomy, at others progressive, Aletheian are one of the more interesting acts to emerge from the underground, this eight track effort providing a substantial amount of listening enjoyment for fans of any type of extreme metal.

The group, formerly known as Crutch, is very sound from the standpoint from which they exercise technicality in the context of their songcrafting. “Broken Legacy” delivers, strong, engaging melodic six string action, while “Out From The Shadows” reflects an advanced degree of writing skill, at times resembling a darker Trivium.

One disappointment is that the vocals are not further up in the mix. Joel Thorpe makes an excellent frontman for this bleak group, whether issuing grim growls or harmonic voicing, his singing is generally well suited to the band’s music.

Guitar geeks will be well enamored with the variety and adept nature of the group’s riffing, as Aletheian extract many different influences in creating a sound that is at once forebodingly dark and intelligently progressive.

Highly recommended for fans of Opeth and artists of a similar nature, “Dying Vine” bears all of the characteristics necessary for a decidedly bleakly intense metal listen.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ALTERED AEON - Dispiritism


ALTERED AEON
Dispiritism
Black Lotus Records
7.5/10




Altered Aeon plays an in-your-face style of thrash metal that is upfront and aggressive, however, the vocals of Kjell Andersson alternate between gruff barks and a style which is generally found in slower, doomier bands. This factor alone sets the band apart from the pack.

With so few acts playing actual thrash these days, this style is fairly welcome. For the most part Altered Aeon stick to the style of the second wave of thrash metal, but they add to it even further, bringing in an impressive array of technical flurries and blasts that keeps the music quite interesting.

The unpredictability of tracks like “The Resonance Of Form In Transition” and “Carpe Noctem” are what make the record. Obviously, Altered Aeon is very creative in their composition but the impressive nature of the group does not stop there.

The musicians put forth a tremendous effort. When drummer Henrik Ohlsson launches into one of his signature, machine-like beats, he keeps the pace solid through the verses, indiscriminate as to what the stringed instruments are playing. This creates a good footing for Andersson’s vocals to open up when he wishes to. But during the breakdowns and bridges, Ohlsson shows adeptness for flurried accents and swift shifts in time signatures that emphasize the technicality of the guitarists even further.

Per Nilsson and Nicklas Rehn feed off of each other’s guitar attacks like axe cannibals and on the breaks where the rhythm separates, you can really hear these two driving each other to perform even harder, as each throw in fills and licks while the other goes to work.

Highlights here include the lead off track “Dispirited Chambers” and the soaring, frantic “Dreamscape Domain”, but every track here is excellent, in the end making “Dispiritism” a worthwhile addition to your thrash metal record collection that will result in an enthralling listen many, many times over.

ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ACRIMONIA - Parasite


ACRIMONIA
Parasite
Independently released
6/10




Emerging from the burgeoning Polish metal scene, Acrimonia have returned with another offering of intense, thrashing riffing accentuated by the skillful playing of Piotr Burkacki, the group’s frontman. Complex rhythms intertwined with driving, thrusting beats power Acrimonia tracks like “Disaster” and “Madness Time”.

Technically speaking, Acrimonia possess the ability to rival the best players out there, but the vocals of Buracki could stand to be engineered a bit better, often drowning out the rest of the instruments on the heavier vocal passages. “Behind The Door” features some crippling bursts of notes and a bizarre breakdown that comes from a very abstract angle. Buracki delivers a completely shredding lead here that shows that he is a master of the fretboard.

The group show their ability to cover a wide range of moods, such as on the tuneful “On High”, which is one of the most well put together tracks on the project. Its Maidenesque melody break is decidedly intense and well played. Employing both a four and five string bassist is also quite a unique touch, as the interplay between the two never manages to conflict, instead sounding as if Zawad is playing on a detuned guitar as opposed to a bass. “Parasite” surely shows promise, if this band had a decent recording budget, they certainly could go much further.

Nonetheless, this is a fair showing that should be of note to fans of well- accomplished fretwork.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ABORTED - The Archaic Abattoir


ABORTED
The Archaic Abattoir
Olympic Recordings - 2005
7.5/10




Grinding along like the true splattercore champions they are, Aborted delves into tense, disjointed sounds that hack, slash and chop away at some seriously clever death metal that is garnished with touches of thrash and doom.

“Gestated Rabidity” is unremitting in its head-on approach, delivers thick deep guitar chugging and rapid fire double bass hits courtesy of drummer Gilles Dellecroix. Aborted have deliberately moved into a direction that finds the band exploring wider variations in tempo than on “Goremageddon”, implanting a more dynamic touch to tracks like the bruising “Hectatomb” and the weighty, bludgeoning hammering of “Blood Fixing The Bled.”

The bass guitars are a touch masked in the mix, drowned out by the thunderous six-strings, but there’s still an abundance of low-end thump to go around on savage songs like “The Inertia”, which kicks in with an almighty roar that is made all that more dominant in consideration on Dellecroix’s swift feet. Tue Madsen turns in another capable job of production. His guitar tones are always very thick and as on his work with The Haunted’s last record, the guitars retain their edginess while still remaining unquestionably, gravely and heavy.

Vocalist Sven DeCaluwe emits varied, extreme voices, often settling for an abrasive rasp or a commanding, gravelly belch to make his point while during other times; the singer uses a fairly inimitable singing voice that sounds best when accompanied by his deeper trackover.

Aborted have developed sonically with this album while managing to keep hold of their integrity, which is commendable, being that such a feat is rarely accomplished by death metal ensembles. You will hear that they can still bust out a gory groove with a touch that remains as sick as ever on “The Gangrenous Epitaph”, its shredding rhythm descending into a fury of slamming, grinding death.

Worthy of any death metal fan’s awareness, this release will likely dissatisfy only those purists with a tapered, inflexible view of the genre.

ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

ABOMINATOR - The Eternal Conflagration


ABOMINATOR
The Eternal Conflagration
Displeased Records
6/10




The Eternal Conflagration is a staunch exercise in Blackened Death Metal as Abominator tear through eight tracks that bear similarity in structure to early Summon and Angelcorpse. Production qualities here leave a bit to be desired. The album's sandpaper-like, up-treble studio workings at times provide the band's music with the proper edge, but during other moments, it's just too messy to enjoy to its fullest extent.

“Desecrator Of Sanctuary” is pure fucking chaos, as the sick belching of vocalist Andrew Undertaker emerges as a violent eruption and the incessant thunder provided by ex-Deströyer 666 skin-smasher Chris
Volcano forms a relentless attack. "Blasphemous Embellishment" spews forth a manic blitz with the rhythm coming at you like bullets from an AK-47 and cavernous bellows which resonate with pure aggression from Undertaker.

These Austrians show a great deal of endurance on the overpowering "Hellfire Armada," a track that takes cues from early Black Metal before launching into a crushing wall of abrasiveness. Here, Abominator sounds intensely evil, especially when the track meets crescendo at its coda.

War Metal fans are destined to enjoy this, but the sketchy production assures that only the most dedicated warriors need apply. Abominator can certainly deliver a hellish metal attack. It would be interesting to see what the band could accomplish with a better-rounded recording.


ERIN FOX © 2005 - ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

The Funeral Pyre - The Nature Of Betrayal


The Funeral Pyre
The Nature Of Betrayal
Creator Destructor Records
8/10




This Californian six-piece rips through a set of hyper-pissed melodic death metal on “The Nature Of Betrayal” that’s very, very much like older Dark Tranquillity.

Furious rhythmic sequences are tied in with blood-letting, razor-wire riffing as John, the band’s vocalist screams until his larynx resembles that shredded beef jerky that’s found in a little can like chewing tobacco. “Here The Sun Never Shines” possesses an almost black metal ambience, its supersonic blasting flurries unrelenting in their unmerciful assault. The Funeral Pyre is dead set on inflicting maximum damage, and their follow-through is very admirable. Blast after blast pummels the listener into a tenderized pulp and The Funeral Pyre keeps coming back with even more aural damage.

Of course, there’s plenty of melody tucked deeply inside this sonic chaos, especially in the guitars, but keyboard accompaniments give the entire shebang an imperial aura. Impressive presentation helps this record along. While the layout is not extravagant, the CD booklet gives you a pretty good idea of what these guys are going for from a purely artistic standpoint. Why does it matter? Because you want the most for your hard-earned dollar, that’s why.

At this point, this sort of music definitely has its audience, which will certainly flock in droves to such a release. Don’t expect anything that’s necessarily original here, but this band is absolutely crushing in what they do.

ERIN FOX © 2007 – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Cerberus - What Have We Become


Cerberus
What Have We Become
Hell and Death
5/10





While it’s impossible to deny the songwriting talent of Cerberus, One gets the impression that they’re stuffed into some sort of practice space while listening to “What Have We Become.” This EP, consisting of five new tracks is a step up from the band’s last full-length in terms of songwriting, but a notch below in terms of sound. Tweaking the mix certainly might have helped, but still, the stuffy sound of the rhythm guitars is noticeable.

Overall, these guys are going for a melodic, At The Gates thing sometimes, and during other, less intense moments, the music’s not too far removed from a death core-influenced Iron Maiden. John Guettler is a fair growler. Gravel-throated screams and guttural grunting are his forte, and he pulls off tracks like “Obsidian” and the EP’s title tune in convincing fashion. The rhythm section is quite tight, specializing in up-tempo thrash beats. There’s even a bit of axe-shredding thrown in for good measure.

But ultimately, it’s hard to get past the rough sound of this EP. The muddy rhythm guitars and slightly-buried vocals do little to enhance the group’s sound, making this an average effort that most metalheads would do well to pass on.


ERIN FOX © 2007 – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

Ordeal - Atrocities


Ordeal
Atrocities
Shiver Records
8/10




In many ways, “Atrocities” is a record that takes you back to the days when death metal was birthed from the grave in the early nineties. Ordeal has studied this style of music a great deal in their substantial underground tenure, recalling the sounds of bands from Death to Monstrosity, while taking time to tweak songs like the ravaging “Anxiety” and the mid-tempo “Craving For Glory” in such a manner that they don’t sound like directly nostalgic interpretations. The latter track is a good example of the band’s ability to mix things up a bit, employing doomy breakdowns to drive home the point of the sufficiently skin-shredding main theme.

A bit of Paradise Lost creeps into “Gemini,” while the more intense passages speak the language of early Vader. Although Ordeal is a band that surely wears its influences on its sleeve, their strong execution makes for a worthwhile listen. As “Reversal” builds into an overpowering torrent of death, the band surprises with a very melodic bridge lapsing into complete blasting madness. Displaying such creativity makes all the difference in not being just another face in the crowd. This cut, in particular is a real standout in terms of creativity.

Let’s say that it’s great to see a group that can put a new focus on a successful formula without falling into the trappings of modern trends. You’ll find no hardcore shit or Gothenburg worship on this album, just pure, straight-up death metal the way it was intended to be played. “Atrocities” would be a welcome addition to the collection of any fan of the Morrisound days.


ERIN FOX © 2007 – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

THE SEVENTH CROSS - Scorched By The Flames Of Vengeance


THE SEVENTH CROSS
Scorched By The Flames Of Vengeance
Candlelight USA
1/10




On “Scorched By The Flames Of Vengeance,” The Seventh Cross melds early Gothenburg sounds with hardcore. It’s very, very apparent that these guys are no masters of their instruments. You’ll find a pile of chug-chug riffing, and the sort of song arrangements that add up to lots of hair swinging and guitar flipping. Most fifteen year olds that aspire to be the next As I Lay Dying can generally fare better than this.

Although this was supposedly remixed, remastered, etc., that doesn’t stop the levels of the drums from fading in and out with an annoying degree of irregularity. The bell on the ride cymbal of drummer Simon simply must be stopped. The volume of this clanking piece of shit is irritating to the nth degree. Bet five bucks he asked for it to sound like that, too.

Chug-chug-chugga, et al and an untalented Drano barf from frontman Sheep adds to the trash-it factor. It’s excruciating to sit through a whole album of this sub-par, basementish demo-quality garbage, but hey, it’s a review, so you do what you gotta do.

By the time this is all sorted out, not only are there zero tracks worth mentioning, it has me wondering why Candlelight is waiting to ante up on the big Erin Fox solo record.

Seriously, most folks with a miniscule amount of talent could eek out something more creative and enjoyable than this, and they probably wouldn’t have to waste any time and/or cash remixing the damn thing. Caveat Emptor to the max, metal people...


ERIN FOX © 2007 – ALL RIGHTS RESERVED