2.26.2018

PIG DESTROYER

















"mass and volume"
Year:  2006
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  2
Time:  25 min.
Genre:  electronic
Style:        Experimental














Recorded by Shannon Follin and Scotty O'Toole, December, 2006 at Omega Studios. Written and recorded during the final day of the Phantom Limb sessions. 3,100 copies pressed on clear green vinyl, another 300 on green splatter and 100 on clear.
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"theoctagonal stairway"
Year:  2020
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  7
Time:  30 min.
Genr:  rock
Style:        Grindcore














Trying times calls for trying music, and there are few bands more up to the task than Pig Destroyer. Their name alone conjures images of bloodied swine corpses or maniacal abattoir workers taking pleasure in their meat-murder. Alongside godfathers Napalm Death, the Virginian five-piece are one of grindcore’s most notorious bands, pushing the boundaries of extremity to their limit over the past two decades. Their most recent full-length – 2018’s Head Cage – added a more metallic flavour to the violence, and now, with this new stopgap EP, PD explore the benefits of electronic warfare.

It’s an interesting move to split a six-track record into two halves, especially when the whole EP is less than 30-minutes and one of those tracks is an interlude, but there are two distinct moods at play. The first is one of abject grind savagery while the latter removes the riffs to become something wholly more sinister.

It should be noted that Pig Destroyer completists may have heard some of these songs before. The title track comes from a 2013 Adult Swim release, while The Cavalry and Cameraman were released last year as singles. Here though, they fit the cohesive jigsaw of depravity.

As opener The Octagonal Stairway eerily whirrs into action, the punishment begins. Crushing with all the might of The Hulk at his greenest, a flurry of blast beats and chainsaw riffs ensnare the senses with drums that bore into your soul, rampaging at a rate of knots that doesn’t falter for next two songs. The Cavalry is a lean, mean, grinding machine, with all its fat trimmed to be a turbocharged pummelling that still finds a headbanging groove; ducking and diving through thrashing metal, Ministry-esque industrial electronics and Kaoss Pad antics. Cameraman calls an end to the first half, piling on and peeling back layers to disorientate while the grind ploughs forward.

Interlude New Channel 6 doesn’t offer much respite from the record’s oppressive nature, as a newsreader reels off headlines about New Orleans being under water and LA being on fire, before taking an even darker turn as the anchor instructs us to ‘Be ashamed of everything that’s ever happened, it’s your fault’ while thick industrial builds below. It’s certainly not The One Show.

Head Cage – taken from the title of their previous record, although it didn’t appear – is like something straight from a horror movie as warped spoken-word ricochets against digital rain and pounding drums in hypnotic fashion. But it’s the eleven-minute finale that truly captures Pig Destroyer’s new penchant for noise.

With “field, ambient, noise and drum machine” provided by one Iggor Cavalera of Cavalera Conspiracy, Sound Walker’s initial bass pulses strike at the back of your cranium. The menacing, echoing vocals twist and buckle under the weight of the brooding, throbbing electronics, like listening to a lecture while falling down a rabbit hole. It’s not really music, more of an avant-garde experiment that would soundtrack an art installation of grainy war crime footage on loop. The vinyl version of the EP dedicates Side B entirely to this track, no doubt with many copies going unflipped after the first attempt as it’s an uncomfortable journey for those who just want to throw down. But it’s evidence, yet again, that Pig Destroyer are still one of the world’s most sadistic bands, and they don’t even need guitars to prove it (*Review by Luke Morton ).
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"head cage"
Year:  2018
Label:  Nuclear Blast
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  12
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore














When Pig Destroyer frontman J.R. Hayes snarls “They’re coiled on the chairs, they’re crawling down the stairs, they’re squirming everywhere” on “House of Snakes,” Head Cage’s monstrous closer, it genuinely sounds like he’s mentally unraveling. It’s frightening in a way that only Pig Destroyer can be. The seminal grindcore quintet is still capable of producing such visceral, emotionally gut-wrenching sounds 21 years after their formation; it's a testament to the band’s profound strengths. With moments this memorable, it’s impossible not to give Head Cage an earnest recommendation, despite its rougher edges. Head Cage is probably not the record fans were expecting, but the new territory it charts is so resoundingly that one can’t help but be enthralled. Yes, there are undeniable faults, but Head Cage is nonetheless proof that 21 years later, Pig Destroyer is still one of metal and hardcore punk most celebrated creative forces for a damn good reason, that’s more than anyone could’ve reasonably asked for. Score: 8/10
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"book burner"
Year:  2012
Country:  US
City:  Washington, D.C.
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  19
Time:  31 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore












Pig Destroyer was formed by guitarist Scott Hull aside from his other major grindcore band Agoraphobic Nosebleed. The reason for forming Pig Destroyer is to bring back what "grindcore should be". The explanation behind the name of the band was a story in which the members were waiting in line to go on a roller coaster when they were thinking of the "most absurd punk rock name they could come imagine." They thought of Cop Killer and Cop Destroyer, but then thought of Pig Destroyer; a less-obvious name than the other two. At the time they were more political and it made the most sense to them, but now they claim it's just the name of the band. For a very long period of time, Pig Destroyer never had a bass player, nor did they use bass in their music. They went without a bass player in their entire career up until October of 2013 where John Jarvis was incepted into the band. Before 2013, the only ever exception was the recording of a live gig with a bass player for the bonus part of their song "Terrifyer". Contrary to popular belief, Scott Hull did not collaborate with Tribes of Neurot on the album "Static Migration" under the pseudonym "Walking Time Bombs", this pseudonym was used by Pain Teens guitarist Scott Ayers. Shortly before Pig Destroyer formed, JR Hayes and Scott Hull were in the band Treblinka together - the lineup completed by Mason (Enemy Soil), Jeff Kane (City of Caterpillar), and Eric Kane (Strike Anywhere). They played one show at Club Soda (Washington DC) in 1997 opening for Assuck before splitting up.
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"phantom limb"
Year:  2007
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  15
Time:  30 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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"terrifyer"
Year:  2004
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  22
Time:  35 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore







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"prowler in the yard"
Year:  2001
Label:  Relapse
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  20
Time:  29 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore








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2.11.2018

ANTHRAX























"stomp 442"
Year:  1995
Country:  US
City:  New York
Label:  Nuclear Blast
Format:  CD
Tracks:  11
Time:  50 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Alternative Metal















Anthrax is one of thrash metal's "big 4", together with Metallica, Slayer and Megadeth. Anthrax was always most playful of them all already in 1980s, best known from their flirtation with rap music. In 1990 the band had released their most mature, and slower, thrash metal album, 'Persistence of Time'. And then Joey Belladonna left... With new vocalist John Bush came another change: Anthrax took more and more steps towards more groove metal presentation with fine 1993 album 'Sound of White Noise'. Then Dan Spitz left, who played most of the lead guitar parts. Maybe it means something, that Mr. Spitz didn't write anything for 'Sound...' album any more, even though he never was a main writer for the band. Maybe he didn't want the band to get too groovy, rocking? So, welcome to the first Anthrax album, that can be said to contain alternative rock and nothing else. Back when it was released, it might have sounded heavy as the ball of metal junk (no pun intended) on the cover. On the other hand, it looks more like a rock album artwork. Guys were around 30 years old, and new winds were blowing. So many bands tried to survive the attack of grunge rock by making changes in their sound and songwriting in early 1990s. The album is rocking and at times also punk, and those nu-metal whiffs featured aren't so much of killjoy as they could have been. Anthrax, generally, still did things by their own book. 'Stomp 442' is definitely better than their complete discography and is specially recommended for those non-orthodox metalheads!
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"volume 8 - the threat is real"
Year:  1998
Label:  Nuclear Blast
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  15
Time:  60 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Alternative Metal







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2.02.2018

DEMOLITION HAMMER


























"time bomb"
Year:  1994
Country:  US
City:  New York
Label:  Century Media
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  11
Time:  35 min.
Lyrical themes:  social issues, politics
Genre:  rock
Style:        Thrash Metal

















We all know Demolition Hammer's crushing and full-speed ahead thrash metal motif on the "Epidemic Of Violence" and "Tortured Existence" albums. Without Vinny Haze behind the kit, one could only wonder how the next album was going to sound like. Good news for everyone else, Alex Marquez (Solstice, Malevolent Creation, Disincarnate) sat behind the kit. The result? A groove metal aka "metalcore"album, mostly mid-tempo, which truly shocked the people at the time who expected something heavier and faster than "Epidemic Of Violence". Even lyrics are not metal topis but rather hardcore topics (social issues, ecology, politics, etc.). You can hear the trademark Demolition Hammer vocals (fuckin' love Steve Reynolds' voice) and the groovy chops of Malevolent Creation, minus the speed, plus the atmosphere. At time this is their last album dated 1994 and despite the group disbanded in 1995, they returned in 2016 with the original line-up.
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1.03.2018

VOICE OF ADDICTION


















"the lost art of empathy"
Year:  2018
Country:  US
City:  Chicago
Label:  none
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  12
Time:  36 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Punk        Ska


















Voice Of Addiction are politically charged and socially conscious Chicago based punk-rockers. V.o.A. has been around over a decade doing 1.200 shows across US and Canada. Having five official releases and independently selling 6.500 physical copies these boys have proven they are a force to be reckoned with. V.O.A. realizes how important the live show is to their career & never fail to deliver a highly dynamic and energetic performance in which all are encouraged to participate. Both a new full-length physical album and a feature length documentary are due to be released in 2018.
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12.31.2017

BLOODY PHOENIX



















"war, hate and misery"
Year:  2007
Country:  US
City:  Los Angeles
Label:  Rescued From Life
Format:  CD, LP
Tracks:  26
Time:  29 min.
Lyrical themes:  social issues, politics
Genre:  rock
Style:        Grindcore





















formed in 2001, featuring ex-members of LA's cult grinders Excruciating Terror. Blood Phoenix takes up where ExTx left off - blistering straight forward old school grindcore ala early Napalm Death. Their 2007 release "War, Hate & Misery" marks a return to old-school grindcore.
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12.30.2017

DYSCARNATE



















"and so it came to pass"
Year:  2012
Country:  UK
City:  Horsham
Label:  Century Media
Format:  CD
Tracks:  10
Time:  44 min.
Genre:  rock
Style:        Death Metal




















Modern death metal is in an identity crisis, with bands not being able to decide whether they want to venture out into the new wave of "old school" death metal or follow the masses and be technical messes or the thousands of other genre leanings. Dyscarnate, however, are pretty fucking clear about what they want to do: play kickass riffs. Top to bottom this album is just riff after riff. Borrowing heavily from the ideas of early Obituary, Jungle Rot, and modern Behemoth Dyscarnate is perfectly content with being a band that is purely about linear death metal.

Little needs to be said about the guitar sounds from a technical perspective other than I think the distortion pedal I know guitarist/vocalist Tom Whitty throws in his loop (you can see as much in 'In the Studio' videos online) gives the guitar sound a more compressed sound, which when combined with the fuzzy bass sound allows for a sort of fizzing pop on top of the mix. It's really unfortunate because if this had a sound more like Dying Fetus's newest Reign Supreme the album as a whole would benefit. The riffs are, of course, fucking incredible. Ranging from the high octane chugging of "In the Face of Armageddon" to the pounding grooves of, well, any song on the album this record has balls. Whitty's no nonsense style definitely adds to the overall brutality, but leaves the album one dimensional for the first few tunes.

Unfortunately, this album is incredibly one dimensional. By the time "Grinding Down the Gears" is roaring through the headphones, you just want anything else. Then another hardcore breakdown fucking barges in and just tramples all over you. It becomes riff chaos after that as everything just swirls in and out of your ears, causing the rest of the album to go sort of un-listenable. Some might find this overwhelming powerhouse of riffing enjoyable, but at this point all these breakdowns and double bass patterns are becoming too similar. Not entirely devoid of being memorable, thanks to the killer fucking chorus sections like in "The Promethean", but so similar that it becomes pretty grating. This is super unfortunate because the final track, "Kingdom of the Blind", is so chock full of adrenaline and ferocious riffs that you just kind of forget about listening to it. (*Review by Aker ).
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