Morbid Angel - Heretic (2003)Release ID: 324
While putting together my recent Top 100 Death Metal Albums chart (ending with all 100 albums ranked 9/10 or higher on my chart), I was getting through an album that a few people here on Metal Academy loved: Altars of Madness by Morbid Angel. I liked it so much that I decided to listen to most of their first six albums not once but twice. This really helped me evolve my death metal standards, and can now safely say that my current pick for the number one death metal band for ALL the right reasons is Morbid Angel. Reasons include: having a better debut than Death themselves, a more surreal willingness to evolve, heavier and darker music, no lightening their heaviness later on and two incredible vocalists with their own classic eras. The first six are all death essentials, and I even gave two of their albums perfect ratings. After the glory that was Gateways to Annihilation, their slowest but doomiest and possibly most soul-crushing and psychedelic effort, I was hoping I would once again be going against the metal grain and enjoy Heretic, the first of their albums that is considered unnecessary.
Well, I gotta say it. For the most part, their heaviness didn't wane from their previous effort. Morbid Angel went back to death metal roots with this one, and because of that, there's practically no willingness to evolve. This means that the album is largely made up of standard pounding death. The album doesn't do anything freaky or surreal until Place of Many Deaths, which is seven songs totaling up to 25 minutes in. Only then does it go into weird, freaky and creepy background ambiance akin to Blut Aus Nord's The Work Which Transforms God. Lemme tell you, it was a major breath of fresh air to get away from another mid-to-low-tuned flat-ass pounder with only a couple decent riffs to make it fairly enjoyable. But deep down I knew that the chances of this continuing through the album were minimal, but not impossible. Turns out, that minimal chance had a breath left for the two-minute ambient track, "Abyssous." But as soon as that was done, we went right back to what the band was playing for the first six tracks. Thankfully, it gets pretty unexpected out wild in the last few shorter tracks, but it would've helped the album if these shorter, weirder bits were more scattered around the album instead of lumped at the end. Putting some of these unpredictable and shorter bits in with a bunch of silent pauses on,y made it less charming. They should've been segues.
So in their efforts to remain a relevant death band, they put to much focus on the weirder bits and not enough on the actual point of their career: death metal. So Heretic shows the band just putting out generic death metal and sticking weirder tracks on for the heck of it without organizing things or making the death metal rock. It's raw heaviness brought down by riffs of either middling or decent quality and an unfocused teeter between laziness and ambition. The long and short of it is simple. The staggering potential of this album by evolution revolutionaries is both untamed and untapped.
Release info
Genres
Death Metal |
Sub-Genres
Death Metal (conventional) Voted For: 0 | Against: 0 |