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Greatest death metal albums
Greatest death metal albums












But the truth is Venom comprised three dorks from Northern England who didn't believe any of the shit they wrote, and the amazingly raw sound of their album was more a result of shitty production than any agenda on the band's part.

greatest death metal albums

On the surface, this first Venom album was positively frightening it looked and sounded as evil as our parents envisioned rock music to be. Venom came out of the starting gate with many of the elements that formed the template for death metal to come: fast, punk-style tempos, a raw, brutal guitar sound, harsh vocals and a sense of foreboding amplified by the band's unrelenting obsession with writing about Satan. If there is a granddaddy of death metal, this album could be it. VENOM- Welcome to Hell (Neat Records, 1981) By Don Kaye, Jeff Kitts and Ula Gehret (Reprinted from Guitar School, April 1996) No matter what, the genre has left us with a number of albums that define the parameters of one of the few kinds of rock and roll left that will definitely still annoy your parents. Other bands have broken out of the death metal ghetto and continue to flourish-Sepultura being a prime example. That's why there aren’t too many quality death metal albums being released nowadays and why the genre has reverted to mostly underground status. Of course, some bands took the genre to ridiculous extremes, while others refused to progress.

greatest death metal albums

Death metal shied away from traditional hooks or melodies it was simply an explosion of raw power and crushing heaviness. So the tempos got quicker, the riffs got darker and more brutal, and the vocals got hoarser, more guttural, until they resembled screaming animals instead of anything remotely human. But some hardcore fans and bands wanted something even heavier, faster, and uglier they wanted metal taken to the very extreme. Thrash metal bands, like Exodus, Slayer and Metallica, while consistently heavy, always kept a steady stream of melody running through their music. So where did death metal come from? It was a natural-or unnatural, if you prefer-offshoot of the thrash/power metal scene, itself sired by the punk and New Wave of British Heavy Metal explosions of the late Seventies.














Greatest death metal albums