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Symphonies of Sickness

Carcass

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Album Review

If Reek of Putrefaction was one series of brusque, quick, and brute explosions after another, Symphonies of Sickness, as its title indicated, is something of a complex step up. None of the power is lost at all, but thanks to a combination of crisper recording and a desire on the part of the band to stretch things out a bit more — three- to five-minute-long songs and so forth — Carcass here play with their enjoyably ugly sound just enough. Thus, hearing a brief stab of synth strings and an actual sense of space in the opening title track might not be too much, but it's still quite a lot in context. But once the vocal growls and a quick, solid riff heralds another hyperspeed section of musical and vocal delivery, Carcass as they were initially known and loved reappear in full effect. Nothing too much changes beyond the slightest of touches throughout Symphonies, but one notable difference is that the lyrics actually sometimes come through, if only just. One of the best bits comes in the middle of "Empathological Necroticism" — in the middle of detailing another hard day at the office with crushed limbs and general evisceration, the working stiff hero of the piece admits, "Life is hard as a mortuary technician." Given that the guy's problems have to deal with such things as pulped cerebellums mucking up his slab and the problems of rigor mortis, it's hard to disagree with the sentiment. An all-time Carcass highlight comes with the perfectly disgusting second number, "Exhume to Consume," which gives an all-new insight into the joys of grave-robbing and, shall we say, feasting on preserved meat. Then again, ignore the lyric sheet and just go nuts with some of the deepest male vocals ever recorded and overall feedback doom crunch.

Customer Reviews

Essential Grindcore/Death Metal

This, Carcass' penultimate, album perfected the goregrind variety of death metal. It has spawned a long-lasting lineage of clone bands and inspired countless other metal acts. There are bands one must sample to know the best of a genre, and those bands usually have a single album that is most representative and influential. This is it. In a short list of extreme metal hall of fame albums, this reigns somewhere near the top. Buy this or lose.

Classic

This is one of the greatest death/grindcore metal albums ever. If you are a fan of super heavy, chaotic and just plain sick metal and you have not heard this album you are missing out on a classic.

Exhume To Consume...?

Where is Carcasses amazing 1st record? iTunes, get it...PLEASE

Biography

Formed: England

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '90s

Often considered one of grindcore's founding fathers, Carcass were among the first bands of the extreme metal genre to try a different lyrical approach — one that reflected a fascination with surgical gadgets and peculiar words straight out of a med student's textbook. Hailing from the same locale that spawned the Fab Four — in case you lived under a rock for the past few decades, Liverpool — Carcass were originally formed in 1985 by singer/guitarist Bill Steer (who would later...
Full Bio

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