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Resurrection Macabre

Pestilence

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Album Review

In the mid-'80s, thrash metal had its "Big Four" bands — three from California (Metallica, Megadeth, and Slayer) and New York's Anthrax. In the early '90s, technical death metal's Big Four were three Florida acts — Death, Atheist, and Cynic — and Pestilence, from the Netherlands. The band released four albums that charted an increasingly progressive and even jazzy trip from metal out into deep space, culminating with the controversial, keyboard-dominated Spheres. The current lineup of Pestilence features vocalist/guitarist Patrick Mameli, bassist Tony Choy, drummer Peter Wildoer, and guitarist Patrick Uterwijk, and has returned not to continue the journey where they left off, but rather to effectively reboot the group and reclaim its place within the death metal pantheon. Track titles like "Devouring Frenzy," "Hate Suicide," and "In Sickness and Death" tell the story; Mameli's new version of Pestilence has much more to do with early albums Malleus Maleficarum and Consuming Impulse than the more intricate, thoughtful material found on Spheres and Testimony of the Ancients. Indeed, there's even "Dehydrated II," a sequel to the opening track on Consuming Impulse. In some ways, it comes closer to the progressive aggression of Voivod, but with the in-your-face production and downtuned brutality of modern death metal acts. While this may puzzle some fans who enjoyed the third and fourth albums more than the first two, others — and listeners coming to the band with fresh ears — may not mind at all. Interestingly, Mameli's revisionist take on his band's legacy shows up even more strongly at the end of the album; Resurrection Macabre closes with re-recordings of three classic tracks — "Chemo Therapy" from Malleus Maleficarum, "Out of the Body" from Consuming Impulse, and "Lost Souls" from Testimony of the Ancients.

Customer Reviews

2009 Pestilence KILLS

If you read enough reviews of this new Pestilence record on your Google machine, you'll find that it's a decidedly mixed bag. The naysayers say that this record is boring, musically already outdone by others, the production is "too good" and that "real Pestilence never had blast beats." Well, I say that this is death metal the way it's meant to be played, and it hit my soul the same way as the new Bloodbath CD...not overly technical but damn heavy, at times extremely brutal, at other times really interesting, but for the most part in-your-face and unapologetic. I would even call this record "fun," and it reaffirms in my mind how cool this style of music can be. Try not to groove to this record, I dare you. The Pestilence/Mameli guitar tone is intact and rendered better then ever by the Hansen studios production. His vocals are completely ridiculous...I mean, try not to feel bad for the guy as he goes through "Horror Detox!" Tony Choy (!!!) resurrects his bass stylings that you haven't heard in years. And Peter Wildoer (Darkane) on drums going all eight-limbed on his kit...if you know Darkane you know what he's capable of, and dammit Mameli lets him go off like Jeffrey Ross at the roast of Pamela Anderson. I LOOOVE Spheres and Testimony...I can tell you that Resurrection Macabre arguably sounds nothing like either, but it is INDEED quality death metal that will rip your face clean off. And you gotta love the "old school" song-title-as-chorus approach!

Holy crap!!!!

I can't believe how good this album is. When a bad gets back together after an insanely long period of inactivity the result is usually a subpar effort. The new incarnation of Pestilence is insane. Blast beats, brutal riffing, and Patrick Mameli's voice now rivals any death metal vocalists out there (sorry van Drunen.) If you are a Pestilence fan of albums 1-3 or a death metal fan in general, this is the must buy album of the decade.

Death metal frenzy

Great to see them back in action, This is a sick a*s CD. \m/

Biography

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s

Holland's Pestilence is generally regarded as one of the leaders of the late-'80s/early-'90s death metal scene, following closely behind Death as innovators in the genre. Combining elements of Slayer, Celtic Frost, Venom, and the Possessed, Pestilence was an underappreciated and short-lived outfit that, along with...
Full Bio
Resurrection Macabre, Pestilence
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