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Celtic Frost

Celtic Frost Album: “Morbid Tales [Bonus Track]”

Celtic Frost Album: “Morbid Tales [Bonus Track]”
Album Information :
Title: Morbid Tales [Bonus Track]
Release Date:2007-01-15
Type:Unknown
Genre:Metal
Label:JVC Victor
Explicit Lyrics:Yes
UPC:4988002519712
Track Listing :
1 Human (Intro) Video
2 Into The Crypts Of Rays Video
3 Visions of Mortality Video
4 Dethroned Emperor Video
5 Morbid Tales Video
6 Procreation (of the Wicked) Video
Review - :
Though they'd been together for barely a year and had yet to play their first concert, {$Celtic Frost} brought a remarkably accomplished vision to the recording of their first album, 1984's {^Morbid Tales}. With its highly focused {\thrash metal} intensity and peculiar mix of satanic and esoteric lyrics, the album would sow the seeds of {$Frost}'s overwhelming influence in years to come. And, along with the powerful visual impact of its bandmembers' leather-bound wardrobe and badly-drawn facial corpse paint, songs like {&"Visions of Mortality"} and {&"Morbid Tales"} would be analyzed, digested, and regurgitated by manic hordes of disillusioned European youths forming their own {\death metal} bands in years to come. Following the hellish primal screams of intro {&"Human,"} and the lethal {\speed metal} of {&"Into the Crypts of Rays,"} {$Tom Warrior} (aka {$Thomas Gabriel Warrior}) and company lock into a fierce groove which rarely falters through to the last riff of closer {&"Nocturnal Fear."} With its primitive grind, the excellent {&"Procreation (Of the Wicked)"} (later covered by {$Sepultura}) remains a career highlight, but shows no sign of the band's future experiments in {\avant-garde} {\metal}. In fact, these are only hinted at by the female voice recital utilized in {&"Return to the Eve,"} and the bizarre {\noise} experiments of {&"Danse Macabre"} -- a collage of sound effects, violin, {$Warrior}'s moans, and all-around mayhem. As for {$Celtic Frost}'s own source of inspiration, {$Venom} and other {\New Wave of British Heavy Metal} bands provide the bulk of it. The main riff of {&"Dethroned Emperor,"} for instance, simply offers a slight variation of {$Diamond Head}'s {&"Am I Evil."} But it was {$Celtic Frost}'s very isolation from {\rock}'s typical breeding grounds which fed their uniquely European perspective. Had they not been impoverished outcasts within Switzerland's protective prosperity in their formative years, it is unlikely that theirs could have been such a twisted and wonderful evolution. [A Japanese version added a bonus track.] ~ Ed Rivadavia, All Music Guide
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