Sacrilege (GBR) - Behind the Realms of Madness (1985)Release ID: 8919

Sacrilege (GBR) - Behind the Realms of Madness (1985) Cover
Shadowdoom9 (Andi) Shadowdoom9 (Andi) / February 27, 2023 / Comments 0 / 0

As the thrash metal scene continued to grow in the mid-80s, there were other bands who were planting the seeds for other metal genres to be formed. There has been the US power/speed metal of Metal Church, the first-wave black metal of Bathory, and the proto-death metal of Possessed, all of whom are so different and can't be mistaken for one another. Another different style is the crossover between thrash and crust punk known as stenchcore. Filled with political angst, one of the founding bands of the genre (besides Amebix), Sacrilege severed the border between hardcore and thrash in a darker sound with their debut Behind the Realms of Madness!

To level up their uniqueness, the band has front-woman Lynda "Tam" Simpson doing some of the grittiest female vocals since Joan Jett, though Tam can't keep compete with other crossover thrash vocalists out there. Despite that, the vocals add to the well-executed dirty vibe of thrash. There are some songs that actually foreshadow the sound Destruction would have in Eternal Devastation next year, albeit in a more punky fashion.

"Lifeline" shows the band unleashing their wall-breaking sound that can scream both Discharge and Slayer. Next up, "Shadow from Mordor" has a more sludgy intro, with terrific soloing to add to the greatness. "At Death's Door" is a little mediocre in the riffing, and draggy even during the headbanging riffs.

The hyperspeed of "A Violation of Something Sacred" brings back the album's quality in the guitar with the hardcore of Discharge, the speed of Motorhead, and the thrash of Destruction, all combined into one. The thick riffing with driving punches in "The Closing Irony" might remind some more of Anthrax, Metallica, and Tankard, closer to metal territory than punk. One last anthem, "Out of Sight, Out of Mind" is fast with more meat in the riffing.

In the end, Behind the Realms of Madness can be considered an underrated classic. The lack of attention is mind-boggling, though it's understandable due to the UK stenchcore scene being nowhere near as prominent as the US thrash scene. Nonetheless, Amebix and Sacrilege are known as the king and queen (in terms of vocalists), respectively, of the genre. And somehow, Napalm Death would take their own crust punk roots into a more popular (and more painful for me) genre grindcore. For those looking for a band mixing the sounds of D.R.I. and Tankard, look out for Sacrilege. I'm quite amazed to find this stenchcore sound that really kicks a**!

Favorites: "Shadow from Mordor", "A Violation of Something Sacred", "Out of Sight, Out of Mind"

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Sonny Sonny / December 04, 2019 / Comments 0 / 0

Because I lived in a nowhere industrial town in England's north Midlands back in the day, I had to rely on magazines and music papers to suggest new bands for me to try so I could expand my listening. Unfortunately, they only really covered already fairly well-known bands or those who had created a bit of a buzz (usually begun by industry insiders), so many great releases from the 1980s escaped my notice until much later. Seeing as the UK had very few decent thrash acts it is weird that Sacrilege never got any coverage from the music press and it also means that I almost missed out on a brilliant slab of crusty, Discharge-influenced thrash metal from my own neck of the woods. The production is crap, but this only adds to the album's crustiness and gives it a DIY air that I really love. It has the kind of energy the majority of thrash bands could only ever hope to possess. Pity they were never this good again, but, hell, to make one record this awesome is more than most manage.

As an aside, listen to "Shadow of Mordor" and tell me if you think Curt Cobain ever heard it before writing "Negative Creep".

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Release info

Release Site Rating

Ratings: 10 | Reviews: 2

4.1

Release Clan Rating

Ratings: 3 | Reviews: 1

4.2

Cover Site Rating

Ratings: 7

3.7

Cover Clan Rating

Ratings: 3

3.3
Release
Behind the Realms of Madness
Year
1985
Format
Album
Clans
The Pit
Sub-Genres

Thrash Metal (conventional)

Voted For: 0 | Against: 0

Stenchcore (conventional)

Voted For: 0 | Against: 0

Sacrilege (GBR) chronology

Behind the Realms of Madness (1985)
Within the Prophecy (1987)
Turn Back Trilobite (1989)