When Thrash
Metal was “dying” around 1988 and
Death Metal was being born many new bands chose to play
Death Metal to embrace this newfound brutality. As a result, the very first
Death Metal bands had still a lot in common with Thrash
Metal, especially in the riffing department, and subsequently a few bands kept on the “mixed” flame alive giving birth to
Death Thrash
Metal. On the other hand, a handful of bands chose to do quite the contrary: they’d stick musically to Thrash
Metal but would adopt
Death Metal vocals forming the Thrash
Death Metal school, which indeed is a minor genre. Now if you’re the kind of person thinking it’s all the same thing and I’m just being picky or worse showing off (just like some people claim there’s no difference between
Death Doom Metal and
Doom Death Metal), I encourage you to leave this page at once. Uneducated moron.
Stige, an Italian band formed back in 2001, belong to the lesser school of Thrash
Death Metal. On the other band, the Transalpine band is still a long way to be the next
Master or the next Abomination.
Christmorphosis is an OK record. I hate OK records.
Nothing is really bad as musically
Stige are up to date and the production is more than decent; I could rant on the
Death Metal growls which I find a bit uninspired and uninspiring but it's not that bad and I wouldn’t want to make fun of it. The songwriting is fine but it's not as if something would stick out and you’d find yourself thinking: “gee, that track is a killer one”. The leads are very cool but they’re somehow a bit lost and don’t add up to the songs.
Best example that’d spring in mind would be
Cannibal Corpse’s debut, “Eaten Back To
Life”, where lots of the songs were somehow dull as they had not yet found their sound. Still, it had a few gore-drenched hits like Shredded Humans or
Mangled on it which helped them get some status.
And that’s the biggest flaw here, not a single track has the ability to stick in and no matter how many times you'll be playing
Christmorphosis, it will remain somehow flavorless.
And you know how it ends with such records. Not bad enough to flame it but not good enough not to worship the dust god on your CD shelves. The only positive thing is that Thrash
Death Metal isn’t that popular a genre and you don’t see many releases of it flooding the scene so if you’re an avid (and you don’t discriminate) fan of it, you sure will find a few things to make up for this lack of inspiration.
Otherwise, all hope is lost.
Du mußt eingeloggt sein um einen Kommentar zu schreiben