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Daniel

The re-recording of the title track of Motionless in White's 2014 album Reincarnate rules as much as the original! I look forward to reviewing the rest of this 10th anniversary re-recording EP once it gets added to the site:


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Daniel

David Draiman still has his strength from Disturbed in the opening track of his side-project Device's solo album:


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Daniel

A wicked tech-death storm from the Polish masters of the genre:


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Daniel

I'm a big fan of the "Non seriam" album. I bought the CD upon release & thought it was a big step up from "Thy Mighty Contract". It's still my favourite Rotting Christ release to this day actually.

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Daniel

Tyrus - "Rats Will Have Their Feast" (2012)

Short-lived Melbourne thrash metal outfit Tyrus may never have recorded a proper album with their entire discography amounting to just a couple of short & obscure demoes but they still managed to cement their place in Australian metal folklore, mainly due to the role they played in the creation of the local thrash scene but also because of their association with other early Melbourne metal bands like Hobbs Angel of Death, Fair Warning, Depression & Mass Confusion who they shared members with. When I first took my first tentative steps out into the Sydney extreme metal scene in the very early 1990's, I would quickly find that there was an underground subculture that held aloft widely unknown artists (many from other states) as dark overlords of our chosen field & Tyrus would be mentioned in whispers as one of the founding fathers. In the years that followed I would repeatedly hear those lone Tyrus recordings at drunken after-parties at older metalheads homes so they would them become very much ingrained in my youth, perhaps more than they ever had a right to from a quality perspective. It's been many years since I've revisited them now but the discovery of this compilation of all of Tyrus' studio recordings has lured me in to see how they've held up an incredible 38 years later.

"Rats Will Have Their Feast" draws together the four songs from the self-titled 1986 Tyrus demo tape & the title track from the "Liar" single from the same year in a short nineteen-minute recap of the band's short three-year career. These appeared very early on the Aussie extreme metal story & I'd argue that if Depression's 1985 crossover thrash effort "Australia, Australia" E.P. is the very first Australian thrash metal release then the "Tyrus" demo tape may well be the first conventional thrash one although that's open for debate as there are other seminal recordings from 1986 floating around & it's impossible to know exactly when each hit the streets. Personally, I've always thought of "Tyrus" as ground zero for Aussie thrash metal as these guys had been around for a touch longer than other early exponents like Slaughter Lord & Non Compos Mentis, having first started as a more traditional heavy metal band back in 1984.

The sound quality of the two recordings differs greatly with the demo tape sounding vastly superior. In fact, the demo sports a really good production job for a demo from the time actually with all of the instruments being presented in complete clarity & being well balanced. "Liar", on the other hand, sounds a lot softer & a touch flat in comparison with the guitars being slightly muted & further back in the mix. Tyrus' riff construction is super-basic for thrash & one gets the feeling that band leader Peter Hobbs (Hobbs Angel of Death) had essentially borrowed them from the "Baby's First Thrash Riff" children's hardcover. There's something about the songwriting that gives these simple mosh pit tunes some added weight though, in much the same way as the great Celtic Frost material managed to overcome a similar trait. The performances are very tight & well integrated which certainly helps with plenty of space left in the songs thanks to an element of restraint having been taken with the arrangements. This is naive, youthful metal music for people that live & die by the genre & I just happen to be one of them which helps greatly in the appeal of a release like this one which seems to take the speed metal-infused sound of the earliest thrash records like Metallica's "Kill 'Em All" & Slayer's "Show No Mercy" & blends it with the influence of the classic Venom material.

The material drawn from the "Tyrus" demo is of a very similar standard with all four songs being enjoyable. There's a fair bit of variety in tempo across the tracklisting which keeps things interesting with even the slower numbers like "Crucifixion" & "Shrine of Satan" maintaining a solid footing in thrash thanks to their dark feel & evil lyrical themes. Hobbs sounds quite angry here, much more so than on "Liar" where you can be forgiven for thinking it's a completely different person because he sounds nothing alike, & you can very easily detect the impact of Venom's Cronos on his approach. Opening track "Bubonic Plague" reminds me heavily of Slayer's "The Final Command" & I don't think that's a coincidence although the guitar solo section may well have been lifted straight off of "Kill 'Em All". The speed metal influence is very noticeable on "Liar" & I get the feeling that it may have been recorded prior to the demo but it's hard to say for sure. It's certainly not as successful as the demo material & is the clear weak point of the release. "Cold Steel Warm Death" possesses a similar speed metal backbone & (along with "Shrine of Satan") sounds a little more raw & abrasive than the first two songs taken from the cassette thanks to some variation in the production between tracks. 

While "Rats Will Have Their Feast" may not make for essential listening for the average international thrasher, it does offer a rare insight into the earliest attempts at emulating the thrash metal sound that had taken the world by storm a few years earlier. The fact that it took that long is really a testament to just how isolated Australia was from the rest of the world in a pre-internet era. These recordings will always hold strong nostalgic appeal for someone like myself who spent many late nights & early mornings raising their drunken metal claws to the sky to this material but it's actually held up pretty well by modern day standards too thanks to some pretty decent songwriting & a reasonably good sound quality so you could do a lot worse than to check it out.

For fans of Rampage, Renegade & Hobbs Angel of Death.

3.5/5

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Daniel

Altars - Opening the Passage (from Ascetic Reflection, 2022)

Hate Eternal - All Hope Destroyed (from Upon Desolate Sands, 2018)

Defeated Sanity - Temporal Disintegration (single, 2024)

Immolation - Nailed to Gold (from Here in After, 1996)

Purtenance - Transitory Soul of the Righteous (from The Rot Within Us, 2023)

Kataklysm - The Unholy Signature (from Temple of Knowledge, 1996)

Cephalectomy - Unto the Darkly Shining Abyss (from Sign of Chaos, 2000)


Edit: Just noticed that an Altars track has been nominated already, so let's go with this one instead:

The Chasm - In Superior Torment... (from Deathcult for Eternity: The Triumph, 1998)


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Daniel

Writhen Hilt - Ancient Sword Cult (2024)

I randomly came across this unsuspecting EP the other day and feel like I hit a bit of a gold mine, as this classic style of Heavy Metal fused with Doom-ish undertones seems to be fairly hard to pull off nowadays. Most of the time, the attempts at harkening back to a simpler time of Metal produces something dull and devoid of character, but I've found Ancient Sword Cult to be incredibly compelling with its fuzzy and bottom heavy production with soaring leads and classic chugging. I think the vocalist has an incredible delivery and range for their style, and they absolutely carry tracks like "Mountain" and "To Rival The Sun". Their riffs and overall ideas also have a air of maturity and noticeable knack for what makes classic Heavy Metal memorable and exciting, whether it's the energetic flourishes on the chugging of "Sorcerer's Gate" or the dueling leads of the opening "Death Undone". I think these guys are doing a lot of things right; even the closing instrumental "Aeolia" keeps me gripped like an Eternal Champion interlude track. Despite only being 22 minutes I think there isn't a weak track here, and it makes me very excited for a potential full length album in the future. I'd say Sonny should be fairly interested in this due to it's Epic Doom leanings. 

They apparently have another demo out called The Iron Sparrow, which I think is a bit weaker quality than anything on Ancient Sword Cult but still worth a listen if the EP is up your alley. They definitely experiment a bit too much on "The Rider's Moon", but it still ain't bad. 

4/5

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Daniel

THE GATEWAY: Falling in Reverse - Popular Monster (2024) 5/5

THE PIT: Extol - Synergy (2003) 4.5/5

THE REVOLUTION: Black Veil Brides - We Stitch These Wounds (2010) 5/5

THE SPHERE: Ministry - Filth Pig (1996) 3.5/5

Although the Sphere feature release is pretty good, the other feature releases I've checked out are fantastic and I would recommend them to fans of their respective genres. Keep up the good work on the feature releases, all! I look forward to more...

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Daniel

The sequel track to one of the only enjoyable tracks in Set the World on Fire is so beautiful and one of my favorite songs by Black Veil Brides:


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