iTunes

Opening the iTunes Store.If iTunes doesn't open, click the iTunes application icon in your Dock or on your Windows desktop.Progress Indicator
iTunes

iTunes is the world's easiest way to organize and add to your digital media collection.

We are unable to find iTunes on your computer. To preview and buy music from From Enslavement to Obliteration by Napalm Death, download iTunes now.

Already have iTunes? Click I Have iTunes to open it now.

I Have iTunes Free Download
iTunes for Mac + PC

From Enslavement to Obliteration

Napalm Death

Open iTunes to preview, buy, and download music.

Album Review

Napalm Death's second full effort, From Enslavement to Obliteration in ways put the seal on what the band had done, with most of its members going off to pursue their own individual efforts soon thereafter, and as such is the perfect complement to Scum, showing the quartet both straining at the bit and honing its original approach to a T. Like Scum, it starts on a more deliberate pace, with "Evolved as One" hitting a slow, careful trudge — everything is quite discernible, even Lee Dorrian's sore-throat roar style of singing — which is all the better to build up the listener for whatever happens next. That combination of just enough variety with nuclear-strength ultimate velocity feedback, clatter, and barking once again does the trick; if it wasn't quite as thrillingly new as before, it's still unquestionably grand, making this album the Leave Home to the original's Ramones, if one likes. The song titles once again make it clear that fluffy bunnies aren't the band's subject du jour: "Unchallenged Hate," "Mentally Murdered," "Retreat to Nowhere," "Make Way!" There's a little bit of wry humor starting to surface at points, though — thus "Cock-Rock Alienation," which somehow manages to be a critique of the modern music business' interest in sheep-like consumers even while blurring along in the expected fashion. Those moments where the band finds a more straightforward thrash-stomp once again show that the quartet could nail that when they desired, but as always it's when the group completely goes beyond the conventions that things just completely hit a new hit. Crazy high point: the four-second solo on "Uncertainty Blurs the Vision," which compacts a feedback shriek of ecstasy into the smallest possible space. [Early CD versions of the album included Scum and other extra tracks, though the two are now usually found separately.]

Customer Reviews

The Best Of Grindcore

Don't buy this album looking for great musicianship or singing but if you like death metal and dont mind 5 second songs check this out. The lyrics are pretty good but since you're buying this off of i-tunes you won't have a clue what hes vomitting out. Even though most of the songs are under a minute dont think they're not worth listening to because some of the best ones are short (Its A M.A.N.S. World!, C**k Rock Alienation). I highly reccomend this album.

To the person who said to go listen to slipknot...

My my my how ignorant people have become. This is GRINDCORE, if you listen to slipknot how did you manage to get from your dirty little POP band (slipknot) to the best GRINDCORE band in existence.

This is probably one of Napalm's best albums. The majority of the songs are longer than on "SCUM" therefore you have more magic to listen to. The instrumental work has certainly improved since "SCUM" (although later albums feature stellar and much better instrumental work) The vocals i think are much HEAVIER on this one than SCUM or possibly any other album (considering there is a different vocalist (Marty Greenway)) Overall the album as a WHOLE is better than SCUM

Wonderful improvement for ND. Love the album

egh ok

now i no these guys are the king of grindcore n there incrediably influencial blah blah blah, and dont get me wrong i love any kind of metal, but i think there r just much better bands out there

Biography

Formed: 1982 in Birmingham, England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

The fathers of grindcore, Napalm Death pushed the envelope of metal to new extremes of ear-splitting intensity, rejecting all notions of melody, subtlety, and good taste to forge a brand of sonic assault almost frightening in its merciless brutality. Formed in Ipswich, England in 1982, the group trafficked in the usual heavy metal fare for the first few years of its existence, but by the middle of the decade they began to expand their horizons by incorporating elements of hardcore and thrash into...
Full Bio

Become a fan of the iTunes and App Store pages on Facebook for exclusive offers, the inside scoop on new apps and more.