Slayer - World Painted Blood (2009)
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Slayer
World Painted Blood
Tracks
1. World Painted Blood 2. Unit 731 3. Snuff 4. Beauty Through Order 5. Hate Worldwide 6. Public Display Of Dismemberment 7. Human Strain 8. Americon 9. Psychopathy Red 10. Playing With Dolls 11. Not Of This God
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Review by Chris Familton
Metal
is one of the few genres that should always be taken with a grain of
salt. From the poodle rockers to the thrash metallers and the po-faced
post-metal moodists there is the overwhelming impression of people
taking themselves too seriously.
Fans of metal either fall
into the category of obsessive listeners who are dazzled by the
technical speed and dexterity of the musicians or those who appreciate
and often enjoy it but accept the ridiculous nature of the evil
posturing.
Slayer are one band that sit on top of the holy mountain of metal. Alongside Metallica, Megadeth and Anthrax they are at least the kings of thrash, if not metal in general.
Their
success had been built largely on their classic "Reign In Blood" album
but also with their unswerving devotion to the metal idiom of
aggression, speed and breakneck precision.
The ridiculously
titled "World Painted Blood" is no exception to their tried and true
formula but it does see them injecting it with fresh life and energy.
Rick Rubin acts as executive producer but outside his undoubtedly large
influence it really does feel like four men with their heads down,
playing their instruments like their lives depend on it.
The big
songs on the album that stick in your mind are the title track with its
mood generating first minute that launches into that familiar razor
sharp riffing and machine gun drumming from Dave Lombardo; Unit 731
with its insane speed and Kerry King and Jeff Hanneman’s soloing; the
slow grinding menace of Beauty Through Order and the almost glam stomp of Americon that sounds like an advancing cyber army.
Playing With Dolls
surprises with Tom Araya’s vocals not initially being screamed and one
of the slowest grooves they have committed to tape. The central riff is
like a deathly take on Rage Against The Machine.
Of course,
they can’t help but take the song into familiar Slayer territory, but
it is an insight into a band willing to step outside a very small
square.
Most of Slayer are involved in writing the lyrics but
they could come from a single pen, such is the standard subject matter
of government, oil for money, organised religion and death. Hate
Worldwide is typical of their rallying cries with lines such as “I’m a
godless heretic / Not a god fearing lunatic / That’s why it’s become my
obsession / To treat God like an infection"
So Slayer keep on
doing what they do best - writing brutal and nihilistic metal. It is
unflinching in its purity, regardless of how seriously you view their
approach. Fans of the band will hungrily devour World Painted Blood and
no doubt hold it high as a true return to form.
RATING: 4 out of 5
Brought To You By The Dwarf
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