Slaughter - Strappado review
Band: | Slaughter |
Album: | Strappado |
Style: | Death metal, Thrash metal |
Release date: | 1987 |
Guest review by: | vezzy |
01. Disintegrator/Incinerator
02. Nocturnal Hell
03. F.O.D. (Fuck Of Death)
04. Tortured Souls
05. Parasites
06. The Curse
07. Strappado
08. Maim To Please
09. One Foot In The Grave
10. Tyrant Of Hell
11. Death Dealer
12. Tales Of The Macabre
Strappado. The act of suspending a person in the air with a rope attached to his hands which are tied behind his back. He is then dropped from a height almost to the ground before being stopped by an abrupt jerk, hence the length of the rope. Not only did it cause limb dislocation, but it was also psychologically intense. At the same time, Slaughter's first and only full-length album provides an intense, unpolished and passionate death-thrash experience.
Primarily rooted in thrash metal, Canadian metal band Slaughter were, nevertheless, credited for influencing the death metal genre (righteously so too, there are quite a few elements of it in their music). The riffs are primitive and simplistic but are arranged in such structures coupled with distorted/screeching solos that it all works quite well and is at times distinctive. The production quality is by no means stellar having an unvarnished garage band feeling which is fitting as it helps with the fuzzy, raw tone of the music, plus, this is death metal/thrash, so what do you expect? If you enjoy technically dazzling music, then you better stay away from this as it is generally basic but ambitiously played and simply merciless. The vocals are generally shouts and grunting but growling is also displayed in "Tortured Souls", in a rather demonic undertone too. Drumming is multifaceted from basic beats to relentless rolls, a beastly kick drum and general variety. Bass is rather murky and not very easily decipherable but it does keep up.
I can't really speak as to which tracks are the best of the bunch as the whole thing clocks in at just under 24 minutes, so it's best to listen to it in its entirety. "Incinerator" is probably the best though (from the introduction of "Make way for the incinerator!" to the distorted opening riff and good solo). In some versions, it is fused with the preceding track "Disintegrator", creating a pretty nice effect.
Personally, I'd say this manages to rank up there with the likes of Possessed and Death. If you happen to come across a copy, buy it, but don't expect anything fancy or refined. Just crunchy and relentless old school death-thrash.
Rating breakdown
Performance: | 9 |
Songwriting: | 8 |
Originality: | 7 |
Production: | 7 |
Written by vezzy | 10.08.2010
Guest review disclaimer:
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
This is a guest review, which means it does not necessarily represent the point of view of the MS Staff.
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