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Slayer discography kickass
Slayer discography kickass











Heck, even I’m not going to attempt to defend Desire or the slightly better In The Name Of God, but just because an album has a few crappy songs on it doesn’t mean that it has to be dismissed out of hand, surely? In the end, Scrum is a huge step up from the prior Nu-Metal-influenced madness, and whilst Screaming From The Sky is utterly forgettable, the album ends on a high point with Point. Overt Enemy flies by, attacking Christianity and doing a mediocre job of it even with a good solo and some decent riffage, Perversions Of Pain is nice and speedy with a Seasons In The Abyss-esque chorus, whilst Love To Hate is another one of those catchy, bouncy ones with a neato solo that Razor and Tankard fans wish didn’t exist to tempt them away from their true Thrash heaven. Well, I didn’t.įrom then on out, things are a little more varied. Of course, the following track is the one song that people acknowledge as being good, and Stain Of Mind is truly kickass, heading straight for the catchy section of your brain and cheekily throwing in Slipknotty whispering, yet so infectious is it that you won’t care.

slayer discography kickass

Death’s Head may be a little more ‘jumpdafuckup’ in style, as my colleague Charles likes to say, and really if you’re a die-hard Slayer-er it’s indefensible, but forget that it’s Slayer for a moment and it’s a perfectly reasonable Groove Metal song. It could have come from Christ Illusion, such is the quality, and even the vocal effects can’t stop this from being a killer track. Opener Bitter Peace is definitely good, sounding like your typical slower Slayer song at first before unleashing the Modern Thrash fury. Now, for the good: a fair few of the songs present are more than enjoyable. It makes the instruments sound terrible, especially the drums – provided on this album by Paul Bostaph, and whilst he does a more than decent job (without coming close to Lombardo’s position as master and commander of the good ship Thrashblast, obviously) it’s bloody annoying to listen to at times. Tom Araya’s vocals are another bone of contention, especially the silly whispers and vocal effects which really don’t do the band any favours, but the main problem I have with Diabolus In Musica is the dreadful production, the kind of artificially ‘raw’ job which the likes of Slipknot love. Of course, it sounds dated over ten years later, but it’s also clear that there are actual riffs and solos in there, often rather good ones. Let’s get the negativity out of the way Slayer undoubtedly moved to ‘update’ their sound for this album, downtuning and applying liberal amounts of groove. would be at the bottom, but that says more about the quality of this oft-maligned band’s discography than this album.

slayer discography kickass

Yes, if you arranged all of Slayer’s albums from best to worst then Diabolus. Except the sad truth is that Diabolus In Musica isn’t quite that godawful, isn’t the most terrible thing ever to hit the face of Thrash Metal, isn’t a complete and utter pile of Nu-Metal shite.

#Slayer discography kickass full

I braced myself for a wave of hatred from the basement-dwelling Thrash-loving hordes the moment I realised that I was going to write a positive (well, fairly positive) review for Slayer’s most hated album, the moment that they sold out and wrote an album full of the most turgid Nu-Metal anthems, the point where true fans everywhere took their leave of the band forever.











Slayer discography kickass