Reviews list for Gorguts - From Wisdom to Hate (2001)

From Wisdom to Hate

Yeah, they open up the album with blast beat skronking. I already know how this is gonna go…

Or so I thought. Now don’t get me wrong, this still isn’t my preferred flavor of Dissodeath, but there’s a big difference between this and the previous Obscura, that difference being that this sounds like actual music.

While there’s no shortage of annoying skreeonk angular guitar riffs, there are also some “normal” sounding Tech Death riffs thrown in that are quite good. The songs have slightly more natural progression, sounding like composed works rather than 10 second segments of random chaos cut and spliced together. The drumming is more controlled, doing more to serve the music rather than be as wild and chaotic as possible. And lastly, the vocals are a bit deeper, stronger, and better enunciated, a massive boon after the high-pitched bellowing of Obscura pushed my tolerance to its limit.

I was very pleasantly surprised to find Gorguts take a few steps back and head towards a more normal direction on this album. While this still isn’t that good to me, the massive improvement from Obscura could definitely lead to something great down the road if they continue honing this style rather than chasing the next weirdest thing.

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SilentScream213 SilentScream213 / September 06, 2025 10:08 AM
From Wisdom to Hate

At some point (may still be his view) Luc Lemay viewed From Wisdom to Hate as the natural progression from Erosion of Sanity as opposed to appearing after Obscura.  What Gorguts' fourth album represents is a mellowing of some of the avant-garde elements that made the previous album more jarring and obtuse to some listener's ears and reverted to some more familiar atavistic death metal that has become pretty much the trademark songwriting of the band.  Whereas Obscura was at times untidy amidst the rampant entertainment value of the record, From Wisdom to Hate offered a compositionally more grounded outing that relied on good songwriting as much as it did the challenging aspect of its predecessor.

There had been a three year gap since their previous release and the bulk of that time had been spent on tour as well as (for Luc at least) some intensive study taking up non-road time.  The large gap and distractions proved too much for an impatient Steeve Hurdle and he had chosen to leave the band over the inactivity whilst Patrick Robert had vacted the drum seat for the returning Steve MacDonald after the touring life proved too intense for Pat.  Having poached Martyr's Dan Mongrain into the Gorguts' camp, Luc set about teaching him the band's back catalogue and quickly found that the guy was pretty much a natural (he learned 4 songs from Obscura in just one evening) and so Mongrain got straight onto the songwriting credits for some three songs of his own and one co-written with Lemay.  Despite some pretty significant personnel changes, the band landed on their feet with a familiar face wanting to return and some highly-skilled, new blood to flex their artistry also.

The effect is obvious as the band bridged that gap between the inventive and eccentric nature of their last outing and the more familiar hue of more traditional death metal that charged the still pioneering direction of the band with an energy that most bands struggle to retain beyond their debut.  Although arguably for me the album needs a tad more of the Obscura vibe, From Wisdom to Hate was a fine pre-cursor to the next stage of Gorguts where the real clever stuff started to happen and their ability to write structural and deeply textured songs really took off.  Hearing what the band are putting out now can have those roots traced back to their fourth outing.  As solid as it is, there's a real feel for boundaries still getting pushed, only this time it is more subtle in how it delivers that, abandoning the full-on assault approach for more strategic-based deployment of their forces.  

For me there was some danger of this release getting lost in the discography as a lot of my attention has been on the third and fifth releases from the band.  I am glad I revisited this (purchasing a CD copy along the way) because From Wisdom to Hate is an essential release in the Gorguts' catalogue.  It takes the gold dust of Obscura and blends with the promise of Colored Sands and represents a band at the turning point in their career, fully-matured like some fine wine and ready to provide richness to the already plentiful dinner table.

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Vinny Vinny / August 02, 2020 12:43 PM