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Merciless Death – Realm of Terror

Tuesday, December 23rd, 2008

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Merciless Death at Myspace

Any album starting off and ending on with a musical homage to Death Angel’s “The Ultraviolence” by a band named after a Dark Angel song is enough to tell any thrash fan they are in for a good time. I would have expected a generic time too truth be told, but Merciless Death are one of the premier thrash revival bands in the world today and have their own distinct style that is pretty hard to compare with anyone else. It’s intense, violent, and is musically as occult as its lyrical themes with eerie Jeff Hanneman-esque solo’s as landmarks amongst the passionately speedy riffs and drum fills. Not a minute is wasted with Merciless Death playing at a faster tempo than most thrash bands thus meaning their album is 28 minutes whereas in the hands of someone such as say Evile it may be pushing towards the 40 minute mark.

Bassist Andy Torres is also the bands vocalist and his punk rock vocal technique has divided some of the more purist Thrash fans. The way I would describe his singing style is to imagine Jerry A of 80’s Hardcore punk band Poison Idea but with a bad throat infection and marbles in his mouth. It’s an acquired taste but although it definitely needs work I think it suits the music much better than someone warbling like they were in say Metal Church. This is thrash for the thrash fans, it’s not going to appeal to people who don’t love this genre a lot, but those who are addicted to the thrash will adore this record.

Exodus – Let There Be Blood

Monday, December 22nd, 2008

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Exodus at Myspace

This is a strange review to do as this is basically if you’ve heard what “Bonded by Blood” sounds like, then you really aren’t doing this whole metal thing very well. “Bonded by Blood” is one of the cornerstones of heavy metal as we know it and although re-recording ones early works using better modern technology (see Testaments “First Strike Still Deadly” Destructions “Thrash Anthems” and Anthrax’s “The Greater of Two Evils”) the usual method is to record a greatest hits style package rather than a whole album especially one as influential as “Bonded by Blood”. This is a risky manoeuvre for sure and I’m not sure if it’s paid off.

The guitar’s sounds are more meaty and lower tuned and the recording is understandably of better quality but the one thing I miss the most is Paul Baloff’s vocals. Don’t get me wrong Rob Dukes is an extremely talented and charismatic vocalist and his work on “Let There Be Blood” is a measured and powerful take on these classics but it just doesn’t seem the same without Baloff’s vocals. Off key and slightly out of time are criticisms often thrown at Baloff’s performance on “Bonded by Blood” but his bizarre retching vocal style had a genuinely unhinged vibe that made lyrics such as “there’s blood upon the stage/bang you head against the stage” and “kick in your face and rape and murder your wife” sound as if they were the demented threats of a rampaging lunatic.

In the hands of any other vocalist those lines however sound goofy to the point of parody. It was Baloff’s frenzied and unsettling performance (which proved to be very influential on the likes of Chuck Schuldiner and John Tardy) that made “Bonded by Blood” into a work of malevolence that was as dark and frightening as any of Slayer and King Diamonds best. Without him the riffs are still stellar, and songwriting still streets ahead of this time let alone the standards of 1984 and 1985 but it just doesn’t have that evil threatening atmoshphere that made the original recording what it is. To finish the album, a track from 1983 never officially released as a studio recording entitled “Hells Breath” has been added presumably as an incentive to attract fans who already have the original “Bonded by Blood” to buy “Let There Be Blood”. It’s a charming Venom-esque number, but to be honest if you already have the original “Bonded by Blood” album, there’s no need to get this one.

Rotten Sound – Cycles

Sunday, December 21st, 2008

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Rotten Sound at myspace

Rotten Sound along with Pig Destroyer are the joint world leaders in the modern Grindcore scene. Both bands have a distinct style which is deeply rooted in the genre’s 80’s Hardcore Punk roots and neither could be described as technical as certain other grind bands. Where Rotten Sound differ on this release from both their main competitor in Grindcore and those bands such as Phobia and Kill the Client who are snapping at their heels is the influence of Stockholm Death Metal on their sound particularly Grave. Amidst the fast punkish grinds there are several chunky breakdowns that wouldn’t feel out of place on “Into the Grave” and some of the riffs are more reminiscent of the Stockholm sound than say Napalm Death or Terrorizer and are effortlessly slotted into the Grindcore structures of the songs. Other songs like “Praise the Lord” sound like Amebix at 100 miles per hour.

The most common criticism of Grindcore is that all the songs sound the same, but this is definitely not a complaint one can make about the songs on “Cycles” with the barely structured Crusty chaos of “Deceit” being placed next to the groove laden two minute epic “Caste System” being a prime example. This is truly top draw grind and this album would be my recommendation for anyone looking to get into the genre.

Toxic Holocaust – An Overdose of Death

Saturday, December 20th, 2008

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Toxic Holocaust at Myspace

Long time underground darlings Toxic Holocaust were the first significant American Thrash revival band and “An Overdose of Death” their third full length and their debut for Relapse Records is definitely an album that lives up the hype. Toxic Holocaust have the most original sound of any thrash revival band and instead of taking the usual influence from the big four, crossover thrash and the bay area the sounds of 80’s UK Hardcore Punk (Discharge, G.B.H), 80’s First wave Black Metal (Venom, Bathory, Sarcofago) and Canadian Speed metal (Razor, Exciter) are most prevalent.

“An Overdose of Death” displays a style that is punky without falling into the usual D.R.I/Crumbsuckers clichés that say Cross Examination have, and the Blackened edge is exquisite as it is primeval and raw whilst taking the concept of blackened thrash further than the typical nostalgic Luddite concepts that plague the genre. With the Punk elements Toxic Holocaust are more reminiscent of Abigail/Barbatos genius Yasuyuki Suzuki (who Toxic Holocaust mainman Joel Grind collaborated with on the Tiger Junkies side project) than say Destroyer 666 or Nifelheim. The Speed Metal elements differentiate Toxic Holocaust from Suzuki’s approach with their meaty leads and classic metal-esque yet lightning quick solo’s making “An Overdose of Death” a very different beast from say Barbatos’s “Rocking Metal Motherfucker”.

Like all good thrash revival records this is a record that would have sounded as fresh as in 1985 as it does now. Listen to the riff at 0:40 of “Feedback, Blood, and Distortion” and tell you don’t feel the urge to hurl yourself at the nearest object of a similar mass to yourself whether it’s a water cooler or your grandma. If you don’t, then you should probably listen to Fairyland or whatever kind of lame metal most paintywaist’s like to listen to as this is one for real thrashers.

Meshuggah – ObZen

Friday, December 19th, 2008

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Meshuggah at Myspace

Let’s face it the quality of Meshuggah’s material has been on a downward spiral since 1998’s “Chaosphere”. 2002’s “Nothing” was a mid paced boring trudge and 2005’s “Catch Thirty-Three” was an overly pretentious journey to the musical equivalent of the middle of nowhere with nothing to show for it. The problem with both of those releases is they were too obtuse and for want of a better term ‘mathematical’. You are probably saying “but the whole point behind Meshuggah’s music is their use of complex almost mathematical rhythms; how can their music be too mathematical!” The problem is when the mathematics overpowers all the other elements of the bands formula so that it becomes a staid series of theoretical musings in obscure time sequences and forgets the adrenalin rush and off kilter momentum that made songs such as “Future Breed Machine” and “New Millennium Cyanide Christ” so memorable.

The songs on “Nothing” and “Catch Thirty-Three” had the momentum of a bulldozer stuck in quicksand and instead of making you want hurl yourself around your room instead lulled one into a feeling of drowsiness. “ObZen” at first listen seems to have rectified this problem with the first song “Combustion” which is a full throttle poly-rhythm attack that engages the senses like having a hive full to the brim of hornets flung at you at top speed. In theory if there are a few fast songs on “ObZen” then that should allow the slow ones to be more memorable as they won’t blend into one featureless mid paced chug a la “Nothing”.

However, this is not the case as the next six songs are mid paced and whilst tracks such as “Lethargica” and “This Spiteful Snake” have unnerving yet atmospheric discordance that the material on “Catch Thirty-Three” could never hope to achieve. Unfortunately tracks two to seven to seem to blur into half an hour of mathematical chugging nearly always at the same tempo that betrays however unworldly and mind-blowing this material may appear to be at first listen, when presented like this with not enough fat cut away from the meat, the Meshuggah sound seems as formulaic as Cannibal Corpse or Dark Funeral.

“Pravus” is a faster paced and less samey track which helps to some degree to bring any listeners attention that may have wandered back to the fore. It’s too late though as it’s the penultimate track and its now the turn of the nine and half minute album closer “Dancers To A Discordant System” to finish off the job of disappointing us once more. A moment roughly around 5:45 is oddly reminiscent of Gojira which isn’t surprising given the influence Meshuggah have had upon them, but it further hammers it home that barring a surprise return to form, Meshuggah’s time as innovators and leader seems to be over. With one brilliant track with the rest ranging from “kinda alright” to “deserving to be on “nothing” ” this has proven to be a disappointing album.