Hypocrisy - Penetralia (1992)Release ID: 5171

Hypocrisy - Penetralia (1992) Cover
Ben Ben / April 29, 2019 / Comments 0 / 1

Hypocrisy's debut is one of those albums that really didn't bring anything new into the world of music but did what it did well enough to be considered a worthwhile listen. What it lacks in originality, it makes up for with pure passion and has nostalgia associated with it due to its simplicity. These Swedish legends set out to make the most brutal and evil death metal album they could. Kind of a Stockholm influenced version of Deicide's fantastic debut album, filled with stupid lyrics about Satan and the death of God. While it doesn't manage to meet the excitement or fearsome conviction of that album, it certainly has some quality tracks to get you raising your devil horns in appreciation.

As far as style goes, Penetralia's roots are based in the classic Swedish death metal sound created by Entombed, Dismember and friends, yet were clearly influenced by the more clinical approach of US death metal. The drumming always takes the most direct route from A to B, which is perfectly effective yet not very interesting to focus on. Masse Bromberg's vocals are stock standard death growls and mostly decipherable, which isn't really a great thing when the lyrics are so immature and terribly written. But that's all part of the fun really and with some very good riffs and a large dose of atmosphere, Penetralia still manages to be entertaining.

Highlights are Impotent God, God is a... and Penetralia. The closing title track is a really great, atmospheric piece that suggests the style that the band would later run with. Hypocrisy would get much, much better than this in years to come, but Penetralia was an acceptable, enjoyable first outing.

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Daniel Daniel / March 28, 2024 / Comments 0 / 0

Swedish extreme metal establishment Hypocrisy have generally built their reputation within the more melodic death metal circles over the years but some may not be aware that they originally began life as a more conventional death metal band back in the early 1990's. In fact, I still kinda think of them in more traditional terms if I'm being honest because we have a very long relationship. Hypocrisy & I first crossed paths when I noticed a cassette copy of their 1992 debut album "Penetralia" on one of my early visits to Neuropath vocalist Mark Wangmann's house in early 1993. I'd ask to borrow it so that I could make my own copy & it'd receive a fair few spins in my Walkman that year. Interestingly though, I never really thought of "Penetralia" as being anything too special, instead treating it as a fairly uneventful meat-&-potatoes death metal release that didn't bring anything new to the table but ticked many of my boxes from a sound point of view. For that reason, I haven't found myself returning to "Penetralia" since the 1990's but my recent period of nostalgia for that period has seen me tempted into a much overdue revisit.

Look, I certainly wasn't wrong with my assessment back in the day because "Penetralia" is every bit your standard early-90's death metal offering. Despite coming from the powerful Swedish scene of the time though, it doesn't take on the wall-of-noise production format that peers like Entombed & Dismember built their entire sounds on, even if there are many similarly structured riffs & punky one-two beats included. Here we find Hypocrisy taking an each-way bet with the US death metal model playing just as big a role in the outcome as their fellow countrymen which is not really all that surprising when you consider that multi-instrumentalist band leader Peter Tägtgren (Pain/Bloodbath/Lock Up/The Abyss/War) had spent a fair bit of time in the United States prior to forming Hypocrisy which was originally intended to be a solo project. "Penetralia" sees Tägtgren performing not only guitar but also all of the keyboards, most of the drums & some of the vocals so "Penetralia" would seem to be very much Peter's pet project. The drumming is admittedly very basic with the simple beats of Tägtgren & Lars Szöke (The Abyss/War) playing a purely supportive role & clearly pushing their limited technical abilities right to the brink of collapse although I do have to admit to enjoying the blast beats sections, despite the fact that they're not the most precise you'll find. The deep death growls of front man Masse Broberg (Dark Funeral/Witchery/Demonoid) are certainly very effective but are also pretty generic which only adds to Hypocrisy feeling more like an also-ran than a leader of the burgeoning young death metal scene.

"Penetralia" offers ten tracks across its 42-minute run time & begins in very solid fashion with two of the best few songs kicking off proceedings (see "Impotent God" & "Suffering Souls"). Unfortunately, the rest of the album doesn't manage to live up to that potential with only the more brutal "God Is A..." competing with those two early highlight cuts. That's not to say that there are all that many disasters along the way though with only a couple of flat tracks ("Jesus Fall" & "To Escape Is to Die") spoiling Hypocrisy's party. Deicide would appear to have been a pretty big influence on Tägtgren as you should be able to identify a number of riffs & beats that appear to have been borrowed from Florida's most notorious Satanists while the lyrics are clearly an attempt to emulate the sheer evil that Glen Benton & co. were able to muster on their 1990 self-titled debut album. Unfortunately for Hypocrisy though, their lyrical efforts come across as extremely immature in comparison & are possibly their most significant weakness when you consider that the vocals are generally pretty easily deciphered too.

There's no doubt that "Penetralia" was an acceptable release for the time & I doubt there would be too many genuine old-school death metal fans that would complain about it much after a blind purchase as it certainly ticks most of the required boxes. It just doesn't do that with a high-quality pen if you know what I mean with "Penetralia" coming across as decidedly third tier when compared to the wealth of classic releases the genre was dishing out to its rabid audience at the time. I have to admit that it does remind me quite a bit of the early Neuropath material though which is perhaps more of an indication that Tägtgren & I come from similar musical backgrounds than it is any indication of any sort of influence. If the idea of an early 90's US/Swedish death metal hybrid sees your ears pricking up then perhaps give "Penetralia" a few spins but I wouldn't expect anything too original or life-changing.


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Release info

Release Site Rating

Ratings: 2 | Reviews: 2

3.5

Release Clan Rating

Ratings: 2 | Reviews: 2

3.5

Cover Site Rating

Ratings: 3

4.0

Cover Clan Rating

Ratings: 2

4.0
Band
Release
Penetralia
Year
1992
Format
Album
Clans
The Horde
Genres
Death Metal
Sub-Genres

Death Metal (conventional)

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