All Artists: Immolation Title: Majesty & Decay Members Wishing: 2 Total Copies: 0 Label: Nuclear Blast America Original Release Date: 1/1/2010 Re-Release Date: 3/9/2010 Genres: Pop, Rock Style: Number of Discs: 1 SwapaCD Credits: 1 UPC: 727361247324 |
Immolation Majesty & Decay Genres: Pop, Rock
Since the release of their debut album Dawn of Possession in `91, Immolation have been a driving force in the extreme metal scene that they helped define. Never a band to rely on their previous efforts, Immolation have con... more » | |
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Album Description Since the release of their debut album Dawn of Possession in `91, Immolation have been a driving force in the extreme metal scene that they helped define. Never a band to rely on their previous efforts, Immolation have continued to refine and hone their unique style and sound, creating some of the darkest and most adventurous death metal the scene has ever heard. With the release of Majesty and Decay, their first for Nuclear Blast, Immolation have not only once again surpassed their previous releases, but have also, without a doubt, created their strongest, best produced and most crushing album to date! If a band has ever gotten better with age, Immolation is the finest example |
CD ReviewsImmolation manage to transcend both old school obscurity an The NewReview | USA | 03/10/2010 (4 out of 5 stars) "Immolation has been around for a while, a long while. The band has earned veteran status after forming in the late 80s and persevering through line up changes, fads, commercial exploitations, record label politics, and just the cruel weathering of time. Which brings us to now, and Immolation's latest album Majesty and Decay. One might question the continued legitimacy of any band that has been around for two decades now. It would be expected that like many bands out of that era, Immolation would have slipped into obscurity or dissolved over time. Majesty and Decay offers a very blunt rebuttal to such expectations. The album opens with an ambient intro of guitar echoing with waves of breathy noise and swelling distant booms. This leads into a outright assault of blast beats and dissonant strikes titled "The Purge." Serving as an appropriate preview of the rest of the album, this opening track showcases many of the elements that makes Immolation remarkable today and not some artifact of an era long. The band's technical ability surpasses much of the current "extreme music" contemporaries. The technicality of the instrumentation is balanced with a mature and bold and creative artistic direction. Immolation is unafraid to use piercing sonic textures, clean interludes, bizarre timings, juxtapositions of complexity and straight-forward primitive simplicity. Guitarist Robert Vigna playing style and technique really give the album depth. Playing beyond just harmonies and palm muted bridge chords and dark, fast riffs. He experiments with odd dissonant squeals and octaves. Wailing solos erupt into striking and unexpected torrents of face-melting sound. This gives Immolation a very distinct, signature sound that is masterfully handled throughout the album. The songs don't get old as Vigna weaves in and out of meaty riffs into atonal thrusts that cut into the mix giving real character. By conjuring such eerie atmosphere with aurally disturbing tonal pierces, there coexists both dynamic foreign, unsettling ambiance with brutal in-your-face salvos of pounding death metal. The drumming is intense and dramatic, but not meant to be masturbatory. What is really interesting is the cadence and phrasing created by the drum work. Every tom fill and cymbal crash is not present to satisfy some obligatory pounding rambling or just some layered percussive density. It sounds more deliberate, creating punctuation as a structural component to the apocalyptic riffs and disturbing wails. This is not a mediocre death metal formula of just really good drums put on top of good guitars, the drummer is really contributing to the uniqueness of the band's sound in a very participatory and active manner. Immolation's most recent release definitely won't satisfy the die hard old-school metal heads who champion their early work as "revolutionary" or "innovative" or simplify a "mother f***ing masterpiece/s!" Some might point to the few weaker tracks on the albums and criticize the songs as stale musical left-over filler tracks, or piecemeal predictable compositions. Bottom line: Majesty and Decay is not Immolation's attempt to reinvent the wheel, but it does show a progression and holds fast to both the familiar while progressing the unique. Immolation maintains their relevance and legitimacy with Majesty and Decay and do manage to transcend both old school obscurity and new-school novelty. OUR RATING (4/5)" Death Metal at its best Eduardo De Leon Alejo | 05/24/2010 (5 out of 5 stars) "let's get things straight, Immolation never disappoints and "Majesty and Decay" comes to prove, again, that they cannot be beaten by any other band around. Death Metal at its most intrincate, harmonious and relentless. Hands down! Immolation owns you all!" The best immolation album Stuart C. Thomas | San Diego, CA | 05/17/2010 (5 out of 5 stars) "I believe the band showed off its true colors for this album. Bringing out the old school death metal riffs (catchy and but not monotonous) with crunchy bass and drum annihilation. The guitars are dialed into more rhytmn,then solo and not be over whelming(compared to live). Some bands tend to battling or have dueling guitars. Here you have the progression of early Immolation but the polished age of technology. There is just enough blast beats and double based to keep it honest. There is not anything boring about this album from intro to outros,this is to be a death metal masterpiece. It proves why Immolation's bassist/vocalist(Ross Dolan) stands next to Deicide's(Glen benton),Slayer(Tommy Araya) and Morbid Angel's(David Vincent) as the best of all time."
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