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Obituary - Slowly We Rot (CD)

Slowly We Rot
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Album Details: Slowly We Rot

Release Date:01/27/1998
Label:Roadrunner Japan
UPC:4527583007609

Other Available Formats: Slowly We Rot

User Reviews: Slowly We Rot

  • Overall:

    Classic

    By Adrian  Mar 4, 2002

    Obituary, the name come synonymous with the Florida Death Metal scene, and it befits one of the true pioneers of US Death Metal. Unyieldingly heavy, the sounds of this album still stands head and shoulders above the rest even though this release is w...ay past its decade of existence.Its polished sounds cut through like like shards of glass piercing the listener. Couple that with the guttural debut vocals of John Tardy(his voice must be heard to be believed)and the bludgeoning musical style of the band, Obituary have with this album, redefined the meaning of Death Metal. Truely a Metal milestone. An undisputed classic. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Slowly We Rot

  • All Music Guide

    If death metal first came to life in Florida during the mid to late '80s courtesy of Possessed (Seven Churches) and Death (Scream Bloody Gore), another Florida band, Obituary, brought it to fruition in 1989 with Slowly We Rot. These five guys took what Possessed and Death had done to a new level of deathliness. The music of Obituary wasn't simply an extreme form of Slayeresque speed metal with ghastly vocals; it was fullfledged death metal, with downtuned guitar riffs of monstrous size, painfulsounding growls and moans for vocals, and distinct tempo changes that often brought the songs down to a lumbering doomy tempo rather relentlessly breakneck speeds à la thrash. These innovations don't seem so revolutionary now, given the innumerable death metal bands that arose during the '90s and beyond, to the point where the style practically burned itself out, spinning off into such substyles as black metal. But in 1989, Obituary were blazing a new trail, along with other Florida peers like Mo...rbid Angel and, a bit later, Deicide, Malevolent Creation, and Cannibal Corpse. The guitar riffing of Trevor Peres (rhythm) and Allen West (lead) is downright pummeling, especially when they slow the tempo down to a crawl and chug along. But it's John Tardy's unearthly growling that stands out most and attracted the most attention at the time. Put simply, the guy sounds like he's in pain, as if a knife were stuck in his stomach or something. It's Obituary's trademark sound and what set them apart from their legion of followers. Add to this the production of upandcomer Scott Burns, and you have the blueprint for a generation of death metal bands to come. Granted, Burns' production isn't quite as brutally crystalline as it would be in successive years. In fact, it's downright lofi here, lacking the high highs and low lows that would later become his trademark, but these were the early days and budgets were small. A few songs here stand out, mainly the first few, the title track especially, yet Obituary never were a singles band and their albums were better experienced from beginning to end rather than in pieces. And Slowly We Rot certainly stands up well to beginningtoend listening. Given the intensity of the music, it's a mixed blessing that the album runs short, as do most Obituary albums, though there are a lot of songs here, some of them just a couple minutes long. Relative to what Obituary would accomplish in the years to come, Slowly We Rot is one of their best albums, certainly their most inspired, though the production values mar it a little. Still, it's a historically significant album all the same, not only in the context of Obituary's career but, more importantly, in the context of death metal in general. This is partly where it all began here and across the Atlantic, where the grindcore bands of Earache were carving out their own niche, one that would soon overlap with that of Obituary and their Florida peers. - Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Obituary

Obituary was one of the first full-fledged death metal bands, emerging around the same time that enough like-minded bands were forging death metal into a recognizably distinct subgenre. Like their peers Death, Morbid Angel, and Deicide, Obituary was formed in Florida (the town of Brandon in 1985); their sound eschews the intellectual lyrics of the former, the religious ... Read more