Friday, November 20, 2009

Morbid Saint "Spectrum of Death" [1988]


Morbid Saint // "Spectrum of Death" // Avanzada Metallica // 1988

Following the grand tradition of ripped-jean wearing Morbid Noun metal bands, Morbid Saint are a gem of 80's hesher history. Although the band considered themselves as more "death metal" -- their sonic imprint is decidedly thrash-oriented. Wailing dissonant riffs backed by full speed attacks, pounding drums, and what sounds like a man without a throat on vocals.

Morbid Saint began in 1986 within the seething metal metropolis of Sheboygan, WI (lol?). The material featured here began life as a demo entitled "Lock Up Your Children" released as a cassette and limited to something like 200 copies. It was released in either '87 or '88 and the image above was the cover art for that demo. Quickly sold out, producer Eric Greif re-released the material on his Edge Records. 1988 saw the album's proper release on LP format by Mexican label Avanzada Metallica featuring new artwork (below) and the alternate title "Spectrum of Death."



Roughly around the same time Morbid Saint began their friendship with Florida-based Death. Chuck Schuldiner, vocalist for Death, took on the position as manager. It was here that we saw the vast string of shows and tours that would feature both bands and where the Sheboygan boys would begin seeing more and more acclaim and exposure come their way.

1989 would stand as the band's biggest year. Their first album would see itself released once again, and they would be playing countless more (and bigger) shows. However, in 1990, shortly after their "biggest" show to date (Metal Fest III), they would call it quits.

Eventually though, the call to metal would return -- albeit without bassist Tony Paletti. This is the part that gets a bit bizarre. By 1992 Morbid Saint would have a follow-up album ready entitled "Destruction System." This release would remain extremely elusive though. I am of the understanding that a fan-version is out there in extremely limited numbers that the band released via their fanzine/newsletter, but it's difficult to get any hard confirmation on this.

In 2005, Keltic Records prepared to finally unleash the album in a set with the original "Spectrum of Death." Apparently acquiring permission from Avanzada for the latter, but with no known permission for the former. This would end in conflict however, as Avanzada owned no rights to the "Spectrum of Death" material and the label had no contact with anyone related to the band itself. Inevitably, once released and discovered, Keltic was contacted by Greif on behalf of the band and was forced to liquidate reserves. Since Keltic only pressed 500 copies, this makes the release absurdly limited, and with no projected official release of the material in sight.

For now, this all we really have. Officially anyway.

Last year however, "Spectrum of Death" was reissued by Power Play Records featuring remastered tracks and restored artwork from the original release (not the weird Eddie-like artwork featured on the Grindcore release). Perhaps a revamped "Destruction System" is planned somewhere in future?



Friday, November 6, 2009

Carcinogen "Kure" [1992]



Carcinogen // "Kure" // Life Is Abuse // 1992

Very similar to the band they would soon become, Carcinogen's demo is raw, nihilistic, and malformed. Pure hatred expressed through metallic crusty hardcore. Formed in 1990 by future-Dystopians Todd Keisling and Dino Sommese (plus a third member whom I don't know), Carcinogen built the foundation for the Life Is Abuse method and ethos.

Carcinogen and Dystopia are somewhat hard to pigeonhole into an exact sub-genre. In a sense, they are their own beast entirely. All you can really do is cite the chemical makeup. They're the more brutal and evil sides of metal, but with the approach of punk and hardcore. You get the slow and heavy, the weird array of effects-laden instrumentals, and angry bursts of blast beat hardcore. Typically when we see such a massively appreciated band (at least in their own niche/realm) a massive bombardment of copycats follow. I don't think I've ever really said "Wow, this band sounds a lot like Dystopia." Well, aside from Carcinogen, but that doesn't count...and really I guess Dystopia sounds like Carcinogen rather than vice versa.

I would like to point out one track here, and I basically just want to mention this because it made me laugh. It's track #6: "Reconcile." The song opens up with a heavy phaser-induced riff leading into a black metal croon. Get ready for it. Once the song starts to pick up speed and prepare for the first verse you'll hear one of most diseased black metal ewwwwwwwoooowwwww's ever. It's one of those moments that's just so absurd yet perfect you can't help but laugh.

That's it. Love Earth, hate people. Do drugs, sound evil.