Saturday, 28 September 2024

Interview with David Vincent from Morbid Angel before their Australian Tour in 2014

Metalithic: Hi David, it's The Metalithic.com, how are you today?


DAVID: I'm doing Fantastic!


Metalithic: What do you think the difference is of the metal scene today, compared to back in the late 80's and early 90's?


DAVID: Well there certainly are a whole lot more bands, um that's probably the biggest thing, I still think that there's some really good stuff that I hear, and you know some people do it really well and some you know are a lot more derivative.


Metalithic: Are you looking forward to coming back to Australia soon for your upcoming tour?


DAVID: Oh you betcha, I love Australia. We have a lot of friends down there and we've been down there several times and we've always have really good shows and we're looking forward to the same and making some new friends and seeing some old friends and playing some great music.



Metalithic: You will be performing the Classic Morbid Angel album Covenant in it's entirety is this something that the band has wanted to do for a while now?


DAVID: Well we did it in the states and we've had calls, you know people hear that you do something and they want you to do it for them too, it's a neat theme.  I've seen a lot of bands that have done themed tours lately and I like it as well and it gives people a chance to hear the album in it's entirety because I don't think we've played the album in it's entirety before, before this tour.


Metalithic: Are morbid angel currently working on any new material at the moment for a new album or dvd?


DAVID: Oh I'm always working on new material 


Metalithic: What sort of style will your next album be? is it going to be like your previous album with the industrial influences or will you be going back to the more traditional death metal style?


DAVID: Well I don't know what traditional death metal is, for morbid angel traditional has always been doing any manner of things that are expected and or unexpected so we're a band just full of surprises, but we had a lot of different subjects, it just so happens that we had a couple more on this record than we had on previous records.



Metalithic: Morbid Angel has released some of the greatest and most important Death Metal albums of all time, what were some of your influences throughout the early years and what are some of your influences now?


DAVID: Well I mean from an influential stand point my influences have always been the same, you know older, the metal that came before us, Black Sabbath, Judas Priest and some cases Iron Maiden, ? You know the stuff we listened to when we were growing up.


Metalithic: I am fortunate enough to own Satan's Revenge part II the compilation death metal vinyl from 1988, 


DAVID:Oh wow yeah, from new renaissance yeah.


Metalithic: Yeah that's it.  I've heard that the track Thy Kingdom Come was the very first Morbid Angel song pressed to vinyl? is this true or did you have a vinyl out before satans revenge II?


DAVID: That may be, we had some singles and stuff and most of it back then was really a lot of tape trading and stuff you know, I don't even think that that thing came out on CD.


Metalithic: What are some of your favourite songs to play live?


DAVID: You know that depends on the night, I like all the material because you know there's such a diversity in it.  So I just enjoy performing songs and sharing music with people, in other words I'm not sick and tired of any of it.


Metalithic: Well that's a good thing.


DAVID: Well I think so.



Metalithic: What's are some of the craziest stories you remember from being on the road?


DAVID: Well usually involving law enforcement, that's would be the negative kind of crazy.  Well you know we have a good time, we enjoy visiting with our friends and fans and travelling around, it's what we always what we wanted to do it's what we do you know? it's not a job it's a vocation.


Metalithic: Thanks for taking the time to talk to us, and we look forward to seeing you back in Australia soon!


DAVID: Well that's awesome, which city are you located in?


Metalithic: I'm in Adelaide, Unfortunately you aren't coming here so we'll have to travel to a show


DAVID: Ohh No!


Metalithic: Most of the tours don't really come to Adelaide, which is unfortunade but oh well, what can you do.


DAVID: We have been there in the past but it seems like we haven't been there in a number of years, maybe the promoters didn't feel like that for what ever reason, well you know we don't really book our own shows so we have to rely on the local knowledge.


Metalithic: I used to work with Soundworks with Dysie and Brad, a lot of the time they don't bring tours to Adelaide because there's not that much of a metal scene here, Like I'm sure a show would sell out but I think venue wise there aren't many venues that have a decent capacity so I don't think there would be many ticket sales.


DAVID: Ahh gotcha, well maybe one day, there's always something for the future.


Metalithic: Well take care anyway.


DAVID: Thanks a bunch.


Metalithic: No problem seeya later.


DAVID: alright cheers.

Alkira: Juggernaut Album Review

 Alkira: Juggernaut


Alkira are back once again and this time with a devastating leviathan of a full length album, the name Juggernaut is very apt because the album is massive!


I've been listening to these guys since they were known as Fish (don't bother looking for any albums) and have seen them play live numerous times and have been waiting on their first full length album with bated breath.  They have, after 2 excellent EP's; finally written, recorded and sent out promos for their upcoming full length album Juggernaut.  


There is a lot of Thrash coming out of Australia at the moment and most of it is incredible, bands such as Evil Eye, Hidden Intent, Death Dependent and Mason among many others, while these bands are all excellent in their own right it's Alkira that pushes boundaries and creates something with more depth and blurs genres more than any other and that's something that needs to be done with a genre such as thrash, only so much can be done with it and it's just about all been done before.  Juggernaut sounds like old school Death/Thrash like early Sepultura and some of the early Crossover bands mashed together with the classic early thrash and has all been thrown in a cauldron and sprinkled with some prog.  The sound is also a lot bigger than most thrash, it sounds like it's being played in a cavern rather than a hot basement and that gives the album some really epic moments and makes me raise my claw at the sky when the harmonies ring out!


The instruments all sound remarkable on Juggernaut, the drums sound fucking massive and are played perfectly, there are quite a few tempo changes but the drums never lose time and always sound crushing.  The bass sounds like a thunderous cavalcade, it gives the songs a dimension hitherto unwitnessed and on the albums namesake track you can hear it driving the sound out from the shadows it's just devastating.  The guitars... The fucking guitars... The rhythm guitar is just fury incarnate, the speed at times is incomprehensible and they are catchy and never get boring or sound like you've heard it before, it's very unique playing.  The lead guitar is fierce and the harmonies and solos are insane, they are played with such vigor and passion that I'm sure the band had trouble keeping Greg from floating away while he played them. I'm sure the fretboards of both the guitars are scorched from the recording process.  The vocals are huge, the music calls for some massive noise and the vocals are delivered with such malice and hatred that you can hardly contain yourself, you just want to scream along.


The tracks on the album are really varied and unique both to the genre but also to each other which is something that's rare these days.  From the opening epic crawl in on the track “Chains” you can sense the band is preparing you for something epic and once they have you in your seat they unleash the fury like a gunshot to your ear holes with track 2 “Submission Therapy”. Track 4 #479 is a furious death/thrash devastator, it doesn't let up the entire track and sounds like a Sepultura b-side.  Track 7 “Juggernaut” is quite a varied and unique track and has some of the most awesome guitar work on the entire album and is the perfect namesake.  The second last track on the album “Institution” is a fast and to the point track but has these little bridges that change the dynamic of the track from a straight forward thrash track, to a thrash/prog track almost and it is a pleasure to listen to, there is also an extremely well played ending that will break a few necks when played live!  This album has such a variation of tracks and sounds and tempo changes that you never get bored, I never thought even once about any other music when I was listening to this album and that's pretty much my job, so that's very rare.




Pros:

Really varied and well written album

Has a really old school feeling but sounds as modern as it gets

The instruments are played to a tee

Finally a full length!


Cons:

None...


Overall Impression:

I have been waiting a very long time for a full length album from Alkira and I'm really glad it took this long, this is definitely a mighty fucking debut and is for me one of the thrash albums of the year.


Track List:

Chains

Submission Therapy

Land of the Sodomite Damned

#479

The Fleet

Inebriated State

Juggernaut

Spiritual Abuse (Parallel Prisons)

Institution

Shattered End


Total Running Time: 52:20


Line-up:

Greg Challis – Lead Guitar / Vocals

Kyle Simpson – Guitar

Sean Grubel – Bass

Ryan Quarrington – Drums


Genre: Thrash

Release Date: October 18th 2014

Label: Independent

Links: 

https://www.facebook.com/AlkiraMetal

https://soundcloud.com/alkirametal

https://www.youtube.com/user/AlkiraMetal


Agony By Default: The End of Hope Album Review

 Agony By Default: The End of Hope


Agony By Default is currently a one man band from Wyoming in the USA and he/they play some absolutely excruciatingly heavy Death Metal with some absolutely crushing break downs and speed blasts.


But that's not all, Agony By Default have spanned the sonisphere and hand picked the best parts from in and around the Death Metal genre and it all fits together perfectly and sounds absolutely incredible.  So there's that and there's also an out pouring of emotion on a couple of tracks and it really draws you in and creates one of those remarkable moments where you can't bare not to listen to the entirety of the track... and that's amazing.


The only member left in the band Matt Brammer explained that there are 2 drummers on the album, it is noticeable but not distracting, as the album wears on the emotion comes in to it and the drummers change which creates sort of a switch in the music and it sounds like it was supposed to be played and recorded this way.  The guitars sound great and are heavy as hell, the break downs are neck shattering and the solos are wild.  The emotion also pours out from the guitar particularly from track 5 “Amity Road”.  The programmed strings and orchestral parts aren't over used nor do they sound out of place.  The vocals are punishing, from deep gutteral groans to high pitched screams and everything inbetween they always remain hate filled but also fit really well within the music, it's never a case of “I wish that was sung higher or lower” it's always where it should be.


The tracks are quite a varied bunch, the first half of the album is pretty much straight crushing death metal and the second half is more emotional, still heavy as hell but you can feel that the songs we're written with more intent rather than straight malice.  The song “Amity Road” which is almost Insomnium like and for me is the true masterpiece on this album, it has everything and it really sucked me in to the point where I had finished listening to the album in full I had to put that one back on again.  The opening track on the album “Degeneration” sounds like a completely different band and is so crushing and immense that it's hard to imagine a song like “Amity Road” or “Ache and Agony” coming from predominately the same band.  All in all I really liked this album and while there is two different styles coming through it's not overly intrusive and it seems like the album is building that way, like watching something violent and horrifying and seeing all the hatred and then witnessing all the heart ache and grief encompass the victims as it all becomes to much.  That's kind of what I felt anyway.


Pros:

Huge and crushing sound

The vocals are immense

The album really sucked me in


Cons:

I would have liked to hear the music blend together perhaps a bit better with the change of drummers.


Overall Impression:

I was really impressed with this album, the sound is unique but familiar, crushing but emotional.  It starts with fury and anger and ends with a soul searching, sparse, final groan.  I'll have it on repeat for a while.


Track List:

Degeneration

Suffocate

Sleep

Careless

Amity Road

Away

Ache and Agony (A Song for the Sleepless)


Total Running Time: 40:04


Line-up:

Matthew D. "Axl" Brammer - Vocals, Guitars, Bass, Piano, Strings, Drums/Programming


Genre: Death Metal

Label: Independent

Links:

https://www.facebook.com/AgonyByDefault

http://www.reverbnation.com/agonybydefault

Interview with Nergal from Behemoth following the release of their album The Satanist.

 METALITHIC: First and foremost congratulations on your new album 'The Satanist'.

Would you mind telling us about your inspirations and influences on the album?

What was your thought process during the creation of 'The Satanist'?

NERGAL: Well you know what? First of all we really managed to make Behemoth the main inspiration itself you know? I wasn’t really looking for the music as being inspiring because like, there are no more other bands that inspire us. 

We would just go and re-group and I would go and read Jean Genet, Georges Bataille, Bulkolkski and some other books, where the main characters would be this evil outcast, but in the end of the day it would be a lonely man that would be wondering around doing some really sinister things, I would read Faust I guess, and a lot of stuff you know, somehow I would just build a picture of  'The Satanist' in my head both sonically as well as lyrics wise, and I tried to listen to myself, to my intuition and my instincts and would just let it go, let it leave my system and then eventually just channel it into songs, I mean, I know it sounds very generalist, but that’s really what it was.


METALITHIC: How did you come up with the title of the album? Is there any meaning behind the name personally for the band, or was it more of a marketing tactic from your record label to gain more press and controversy from religious people around the world?

NERGAL: Haha, I don't really have people behind my back telling me “alright, if you do this, you will get some more PR!”.

Behemoth are a very very sovereign and independent band, and anything you see on the cover, or in the lyrics, and in the music, there is really nothing or no one who tells us what to do. Same goes for the title, it came out really spontaneously, and unexpectedly when we were on a flight from Finland back to Poland, and I was just sitting next to this guy with a suit and a tie, some businessman and they said we will pull-out in a minute, and they had some thing there called 'The Economist', and so when I saw 'The Economist', I immediately I had this vision, this enlightenment, this illumination in my head, and I just said “WOW!!!”.

I think I even shouted on the plane and I told my guys 'I think I have a title for the record', and I didn't even say it out loud, because it's a fucking genius title, and they started laughing at me and I said “no guys, I am being serious, I'm not going to say it out loud, because I'm already afraid someone will strip it from us.... It is our precious!”


METALITHIC: From my perspective, your writing style on 'The Satanist' has changed into a different style, compared to your previous albums. It seems a lot more dramatic and plays out like a story, was this a major part of the writing process?

NERGAL: Again it just came out that way really, as much as albums such as demigod and ??? which are great records you know, which are dear and honest records, but they sound kind of too robotic, too automatic, and too mechanical.  But in opposition with that the Satanist it sounds very organic, we just felt this is the way we want to build our direction but as soon as some of my love and hurts in my life would have been pretty fuckin tragic or dramatic I would guess that it just ? In the writing process as well. And this comes back to the statement I said before that behemoth itself our lives themselves would be the main inspiration for writing this album and fair to say it wasn't even us I know it sounds very metaphorical but it was a life itself that wrote that record and that life had us ?impersonus? to write this kind of album, you know? It makes sense to me.


METALITHIC: It seems as if Heavy Metal is on the rise and a lot of the younger generation are starting to listen to metal a lot more, joining bands and taking pride in collecting vinyl and CD's again... What are your thoughts on the younger generation and the future of heavy metal?

NERGAL: I put all my faith and trust in them, haha.

It's an older generation of Heavy Metal soldiers. 

I can tell you, well I don't really consider myself as old, I'm 37, I think I'm relatively young, but  when I confront a 20 year old guy at my show or below age 17 or 18 they seem to be bright minded people, they're open minded, and sometimes I'm like wow it's these type of people that enter the genre and it's awesome, it's really like a driving force behind it.

Definitely all of these people are motivation.


METALITHIC: What are a few of your favourite bands, that have influenced you over the years? 

NERGAL: Out of 200? haha.

METALITHIC: Ok, maybe just the top 3 haha.

NERGAL: Really I can't say, there are hundreds and hundreds of bands....Anything from Nick Cave to Mayhem, it can be fuckin Johnny Cash or Immortal Army..... I have a really wide taste.


METALITHIC: Do you have any plans to tour Australia in 2014 or 2015?

NERGAL: We’ve already approached our promoters which is 'Soundworks' in Australia, but we have a new company where the guys are really motivating and they are a driving force behind 'The Satanist in Australia, they push us so hard and make all this promo, it's the biggest push of our album in years, so it really will affect Australia again.

We have played there 3 or 4 times there already, every time we go back there we feel like were at home and it feels amazing. We're definitely looking at coming back in the first or second quarter in 2015 when we come back with the new record.


METALITHIC: What are some of your most memorable highlights of your career?

NERGAL: I'll say recent years, this whole chapter has been so dynamic and so motivating, including the sickness. It was probably the most traumatic and difficult time, but at the same time the fact that we over came it and we came in stronger with such a strong fucking album, it feels great! it feels really refreshing and rejuvenating..... I love it!


METALITHIC: We turned to 'Instagram' and gave our followers a chance to ask some questions;

NERGAL: Ok!

METALITHIC: 'Fuxkyouraccount' asks: “Why do you think the majority of U.S Death Metal bands are generic?”

NERGAL: I meant death metal..... I know I said U.S Death Metal, but I meant all Death Metal as a whole.

The fact that they all seem to strive for perfection and are fighting for perfection, but they they are definitely losing the human factor in their music and this is something I truly hate, I fucking hate that!!

So at the end of the day it sounds like a robot playing some robotic music and I'm not buying it.

Yes I said Death Metal, but in every genre they have the same, they just have no emotions whatsoever. 



METALITHIC: 'Doomkults' wants to know: “ How do you feel about 'The Satanist' breaking through to the mainstream music charts?”

NERGAL: I'm proud that Satan infiltrated the mainstream... Fuck yeah! Haha.


METALITHIC: 'Erikmorales' asks: “I would like to know if you have eaten at 'Grill Em All' burgers in California? Considering they named a burger after 'Behemoth'. If you haven't tried it, would you?”

NERGAL: Of course I would, I mean I occasionally eat beef, I eat no pork, but I eat beef occasionally and yeah fuck yeah why not!! I've heard of it before and I think it's cool!


METALITHIC In 2007 you torn the pages from the bible at a live show in Poland and you called the Catholic church the most 'murderous cult on the planet'. Do you stand by your actions and would you do it again?

NERGAL: I don't know if I'd do it again, because I never go “what if”.... And if something happens, it happens!

Yes I do take responsibility for all my actions and my words and I did, I committed and spent 6 years going to - and - attending these court cases.

I don't know how many there were... Maybe 10, 20, 30, I don't know, I never really counted them.

I spent fucking years going back and forth to the court and battling for my right to be an artist and I'm happy and proud to say I fucking won.... And that democracy won in Poland.

That's my word about it.


METALITHIC: Thanks for chatting with us!

NERGAL: Cheers! Pleasure to talk with you.

Agalloch: The Serpent and the Sphere album review

 Agalloch: The Serpent and the Sphere



It's no secret that I've always been a huge fan of Agalloch, the diversity in their music really keeps me interested in everything they do.  So when I heard they were writing a new album I was extremely excited, this excitement was well founded as this album is Agalloch through and through, experimental and emotionally charged, no two albums are ever the same and this is no exception.


This album starts light and airy then builds in to an exceptional black metal track with a nice feel, they keep it kind of sparse for the most part.  Agalloch are adept at adding a story like structure to their albums, it's not just a collection of songs it's a sonic journey through the deep and dark passages of time.  


The instruments on The Serpent and the Sphere sound great, as with all Agalloch releases.  

One thing that keeps me coming back to their music is the guitars and drums, they play off one another so perfectly that it's almost that they were written in unison by one person if you listen to them, everything is just so well timed and spaced that there is no room for error and there isn't any and this album is certainly no exception.  The unique riffs and solo's are another reason that I'm glued to my headphones it's not the same old tired stuff, it's something different from almost everything else out there.  The vocals are Agalloch through and through, with the harsh screams and the haunting whispers that they put in their music always keeps me entertained.  The really really surprising thing on this album is the bass, the bass in some parts holds the tracks aloft and it is really commanding in certain tracks, such as “Dark Matter Gods” it thunders away in the back ground like a war drum almost while the song finds it's way through all of the twists and turns to the end.  


The album as a whole has an awesome rise and fall, each track has a different feel to it but it all adds up to the great rise and fall of the entire album... then within each track the rise and fall continues it's like a heart beat monitor, it's truly something to behold.  The tracks also have so many twists and turns and stylistic changes that sometimes it almost seems to much but ultimately it all adds up to an epic story with an awesome sound and feel to it.  Track 5 “Celestial Effigy” for instance has quite a few stylistic changes within the confines of it's 7 minute length and at the time it seems to busy and hard to focus on, but the way it ends and leads in to track 6 “Cor Serpentis” an awesome acoustic instrumental; ends the chapter and you know that it had to be in there.  The entire album runs in this fashion but you know that ultimately the story is being told the only way it can be told, which is a very special thing and something that Agalloch are exceptional at.  The way this album ends is possibly the best ending to any album I've ever heard, I'm not saying any more than that, you'll just have to see for yourselves.


Agalloch have come up with another great album, it's something that I could listen to again and again and still not get all of it, it has so many layers and depth that you'll never get it the first time.




Pros:

Great story driven album

The great riffs and drumming

Classic Agalloch sound


Cons:

The amount of changes and right angle turns, at times it doesn't flow as well as it could.


Overall Impression:

The Serpent and the Sphere is another great album by Agalloch which is no surprise,  Throughout the album you witness the journey and exploration of the outer limits of our universe and it's an absolutely momentous feeling.


Track List:

Birth and Death of the Pillars of Creation

(serpens caput)

The Astral Dialogue

Dark Matter Gods

Celestial Effigy

Cor Serpentis (the sphere)

Vales Beyond Dimension

Plateau of the Ages

(serpens cauda)


Total Running Time: 59:45


Line-up:

Don Anderson - Guitars, Piano, Vocals (backing)

John Haughm - Guitars, Vocals

Jason William Walton - Bass

Aesop Dekker - Drums


Genre: Black Metal

Release Date: 13th May 2014

Label: Profound Lore Records

Links: 

www.agalloch.org/

www.facebook.com/AgallochOfficial

Friday, 27 September 2024

Acid King : Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everything Album Review

 Acid King : Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everything


Ten years since the release of III, Acid King have returned to reclaim the throne of fuzzed out doom which has been changing hands over the years since.  This album takes you on a journey through space and time and will alter the depth of your conscious perception, breathe it in deep and exhale greatness.


Acid King are one of the few bands around that can make you feel high from just simply listening to the fuzzed out grooves and epic sustain and their new album is absolutely no exception, it's like listening to music through a deep dense fog that has consumed a mountain top... which is a good thing, trust me.  Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everything builds on Acid Kings already sterling reputation of creating that low slow groove juxtaposed by Lori S' high and sustained vocalisations which is their trademark.  It's Acid King to be sure, but it's a continuation of the music that made them a stalwart of the genre, the last ten years has given them a lot of experiences and thoughts that they can run with and create something momentous. 


The new album is quite a bit darker than their previous work, which is by no means a bad thing.  Personally I love depth, when there is a story or something going on within the music that initiates thought or emotion is what I think all music should be about and this album has it in spades.  The instruments are as always played perfectly but one thing I have noticed is that the riffs and solos are quite a bit more complex and manufacture some absolutely incredible moments, moments that you just want to listen to over and over again, the kind of moments that you'll never get sick of no matter how many times you hear it.  The drums are exceptional as usual but they have played with them quite a bit, the bottom end is epic and the fills, rolls and thunder brought forth is incredible.


The tracks on Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everything are a really well thought out bunch, that give you a glimpse in to the future, the past and the present.  Sandwiched in between the intro and outro which are a couple of really good tracks  that offer some slow and tripped out riffage, there is a bunch of incredible tracks starting with track 2 “Silent Pictures” which really is the perfect opening to the album, it just shows you what Acid King have started to do differently since 2005.  The very next track “Coming Down From Outerspace” is probably my favourite on the album and just worms it's way in to my mind and won't ever leave, probably the catchiest track I've heard in years.  Then there's track 6 “Infinite Skies” which is a slow crawling track until... UNTIL the outro which has one of the most incredible riffs and a spaced out solo in the background that just made me sit bolt upright and gather it's energy like a lizard in the sun.  These three tracks were the stand outs for me on the album but truly they wouldn't be anything without the others surrounding them.  The tracks on this album are remarkable but in it's entirety this album is a masterpiece.  


Acid King have come down from their mountain to record an incredible journey of sonic adultery, you will not feel the same after hearing this album.  ACID KING ARE BACK!


Pros:

Incredible doomy fuzz

Catchiest riffage in history

That Acid King sound with an updated feeling

Can't get enough of this album


Cons:

Can't get enough of this album...


Overall Impression:

Acid King are back and they have come back with something remarkable, Middle of Nowhere, Center of Everything is one of those rare albums that will be absolutely timeless


Track List:

Intro

Silent Pictures

Coming Down From Outer Space

Laser Headlights

Red River

Infinite Skies

Center of Everywhere


Total Running Time: 54:59



Line-up:

Joey Osbourne - Drums

Lori S. - Guitars, Vocals

Mark Lamb – Bass


Genre: Doom

Release Date: April 20th 2014

Label: Svart Records

Links:

http://www.acidking.com/

https://www.facebook.com/AcidkingSF

Morbider – Abyssus: From the Abyss Raised the Morbid Split EP Review

 Morbider – Abyssus: From the Abyss Raised the Morbid Split EP


This is an epic display of old school death metal on this EP, you could be mistaken when listening to this album that this came directly from an underground 80's death metal collective, but this is modern as it comes and as brutal as it gets!


Morbider are up first and with their huge sound that is straight out of the 80's, right down to the guitar tone and brutal vocals.  He (that's right it's a one man band) gets the first 4 tracks on the EP and it's an awesome collection of songs from this beast, it's old school as it comes but it also sounds modern with some ambience in the background and some more modern solo's that tear through the tracks like a furious chorus of ricocheting bullets spraying through an open warehouse.  These four tracks are so catchy and immense that it's almost impossible not to move your head, if you could imagine an amalgam of all of the biggest death metal bands from the early days you'll get an idea of what Morbider sounds like. 


Abyssus takes side 2 and turn the rest of the split in to a filthy, grimy display of ferocious death metal, taking cues from Obituary and Bolt Thrower.  The 5 remaining tracks on the album are a ferocious and devastating mix of the dirtiest death metal in the business and metal that was made for one reason, to absolutely destroy spinal columns.  You get the sense that these guys were sick and tired of the mainstream and came up with something more brutal, not in a technical standpoint but the way it's played, this death metal is played so heavily and without any fucks that it's one of the most brutal things I've ever heard!


On their own these two bands are amazing and to get them together on a split EP is awesome, this is one heavy fucking album and has to be heard to be believed.  Each track is huge and Morbider and Abyssus deliver some of the best and brutal old school death metal on either side of this album.  Morbider is a more clean, technical and Death sounding death metal where as Abyssus is a more destructive force like Obituary was, just pure death metal.




Pros:

Just pure death fucking metal

Hearkens back to the days of yore

Can't get enough of the ferocity


Cons:

Wish I had more of both Abyssus and Morbider


Overall Impression:

If you can find this split and you love your Death Metal do not walk by it you will be not be disappointed.  This is as pure as Death Metal gets Morbider and Abyssus deliver the goods, dripping with gore and muck!


Track List:

Morbider

Unhealing Pain

No More Life

God of Torment

Redemption

Abyssus

Morbid Inheritance

Summon the Dead

Sacrifice

Remnants of War

Outbreak of Evil


Total Running Time: 35:79


Line-up:

Morbider

Dap – Everything


Abyssus

Kostas Analytis – Vocals/Bass

Panos Gkourmpaliotis – Guitars

Antonis Kontozoglou – Drums



Genre: Death Metal

Release Date: July 2013

Label: Independent

Links: 

www.facebook.com/pages/Abyssus/144338552349700?sk=timeline

Aborted: The Necrotic Manifesto

 Aborted: The Necrotic Manifesto



Aborted are back with their huge goresplosion of an album entitled The Necrotic Manifesto and from the opening sound byte you know this is going to be a devastating album...


I will say that I'm not much of a fan of modern Death Metal but this album keeps with the traditions of the old ways and flays it out on the slab for modern ears to devour.  This album keeps me interested than most modern Death Metal with all of the awesome solo's and dual vocals it's not just the same sounds over and over and the slams are fucking huge as are the blasts and furious drumming on the album it's a fire fight within a war within a nuclear fire it's just epic.  I've never been much of a fan of the sound bytes that Death Metal bands put within their music but on this album it's not over used or just horrific gore noises it sets up the tracks really well. 


Everything on this album is just used really well, there's no over use of anything, which seems to be the staple for death metal these days, when used in moderation these huge aspects of the music can become the focal points as opposed to being something you expect which is a huge kudos to Aborted.  Nothing sounds the same and each track is unique in it's own right and keeps in with the aesthetic of the album and the Aborted sound which is awesome.


The Necrotic Manifesto is just a huge sounding album, but the tracks never sound cluttered or over produced which is an awesome thing to hear, a lot of the time these days Death Metal all sounds cold and robotic and without a soul but this has a warmth to it which makes this album just sound absolutely massive.  As I said all of the tracks sound different, you are never left with the feeling that you heard something before and some of the stand out tracks are the ones that give even a different feel to the normal death metal sound such as track 10 “Die Verzweiflung” which is a slammy, slow, almost doomy track with some massive drums and awesome guitar squeals, for me this track just destroyed the preconcieved notions I had of modern DM.  Look I could sit here and describe this album track by track, note by note but all you really need to know is that this album is just huge and sounds awesome and in my opinion this is what modern death metal should sound like.


Pros:

No over use of sound bytes

Warmth and feeling, doesn't sound robotic and soulless

The solo's and drumming are off the fucking chain

The whole album sounds wicked


Cons:

I honestly can't think of any...


Overall Impression:

This is what modern death metal should sound like Aborted have raised the bar in my opinion, offers something new to the ever growing Death Metal genre.


Track List:

Six Feet Of Foreplay

The Extirpation Agenda

Necrotic Manifesto

An Enumeration Of Cadavers

Your Entitlement Means Nothing

The Davidian Deceit

Coffin Upon Coffin

Chronicles Of Detruncation

Sade & Libertine Lunacy

Die Verzweiflung

Excremental Veracity

Purity Of Perversion

Of Dead Skin & Decay

Cenobites


Total Running Time: 42:34


Line-up:

Sven De Caluwe - Gurgloroth

Mendel Bij De Leij - Flesh Upon The Razor Wire

Danny Tunker - Immaculate Resection

JB van der Wal - Nocturnal Pulse

Ken Bedene - Hymen Blaster


Genre: Death Metal

Release Date: 28th April 2014

Label: Century Media

Links: 

www.goremageddon.be

www.facebook.com/Abortedofficial

www.instagram.com/abortedmetal

www.myspace.com/abortedmetal

www.reverbnation.com/aborted

www.twitter.com/abortedmetal

www.youtube.com/user/abortedbelgium

1000 Mods: Vultures Review

1000 Mods: Vultures


1000 Mods is an odd name for a psych/stoner band but don't let that fool you, these dudes punch out the riffs like they've been doing it their whole lives.  You can hear the old school influences pulsing throughout the album, but that's not to say it's all old school... sure you can hear some Blue Cheer or Hawkwind and even Sabbath in there, but there's a lot of the new school psychedelia going on here too, such as Colour Haze or Orange Goblin and even Kyuss at times.  Vultures is full of large modern sounds dripping with the acid fuzz of the early era of psych rock.


Every track on Vultures is just about as groovy as it gets the happy psychedelic riffs bounce around your speakers like you're front row at a phish concert, then there's the monsterous heavy riffs they have that pull you back down to earth and punch you in the guts.  While they all have that sound that is inherently 1000 Mods, there isn't anything that makes you go “well hey wait a sec this sounds like that track from before” it's a very well spaced, timed and written album, no recycled riffs here.


I really love the slow and menacing openings that happen in a few tracks on this album, they sound awesome and set up the coming thunderstorm perfectly, this is most prevalent on “Vultures” the namesake to the album, which also pounds in to one of the best head moving riffs on the album.  The opening track “Claws” starts with a clean sounding guitar that made me think that this might have been a post rock album but to my surprise it kicked in to the classic fuzz sound that is synonymous with psych rock and really blew me away, I was hooked from start to finish with this album, 1000 Mods have really created a strong album steeped in the old school but dipped in the gooey modern flavour, an instant classic! 


Pros:

Classic sound, modern usage.

Awesome riffs and solos

They don't push the issue, they aren't looking to stress you out or nothing man, they just want to entertain you.


Cons:

For me something about the vocals sounded to uniform, some more variation would be great.


Overall Impression:

This is an awesome album, has all of the ingredients I love, such as heavy riffs, awesome solo's, catchy as hell and that head moving flavour.  This is the perfect album to have on while you're working on your big block in the shed! 


Track List:

Claws

Big Beautiful

She

Horses' Green

Low

Vultures

Modesty

Reverb of the New World


Total Running Time: 38:50


Line-up:

Dani - Bass & Vox

Giannis - Guitars

George - Guitars

Labros - Drums


Genre: Psychedelic Rock/Stoner Metal

Release Date: 30th May 2014

Label: The Lab Recs

Links:

www.1000mods.bandcamp.com

www.facebook.com/1000mods