Victory of the Holocaust

añadir las palabras del álbum
añadir una crónica
Add an audio file
ninguna nota
Band Name Skeletal Augury
Album Name Victory of the Holocaust
Type Album
Data de aparición 16 Septiembre 2009
Estilo MusicalThrash Black
Miembros poseen este álbum2

Tracklist

Limited to 500 copies.
1. Intro 01:10
2. Skeletal Augury 03:55
3. From Pagan Flames 06:01
4. Moonbutcher 04:43
5. Black Metal Redrum 03:37
6. Funeral Mutilate 04:31
7. Total Maniac 04:08
8. Death's Hammer 05:22
9. Temple of Blood 04:12
10. Outro 01:38
Total playing time 39:17

Buy this album

 buy  buy  buy  buy  buy  buy  buy
Spirit of Metal is reader-supported. When you buy through the links on our site we may earn an affiliate commission

Skeletal Augury



Ningun artículo encontrado en Español, los artículos de la sección inglesa son fijados.
Sea el primero que añade uno

Comentario @ heavymetaltribune

24 Diciembre 2010

Highly recommended for fans of old school black/thrash metal bands like Sabbat.

Being known for it's tight rules and heavy censorship over media, Skeletal Augury is one of the few China extreme metal bands that managed to catch my attention (besides Ritual Day, the band that appearead on Sam Dunn's Global Metal documentary and Tomb Sound, another black metal band). I chanced upon Skeletal Augury's Victory of the Holocaust on one of the metal blogs I frequented. They are also one of the bands featured on Metal Hammer's April 2010 issue.

On first listen, this band sounds highly influenced by early blackened thrash metal bands like Sabbat (Japan). Raw production quality (without compromising any of the instruments), fast and thrashy guitar riffing and drum beats, complete with shrieky black metal vocals.

Skeletal Augury's music and lyrics are highly influenced and derived from the horror genre. There are a lot of 80's movie-like spoken parts (with low vocals narrating a horror story), telling the story of zombies and vampires, yet constantly reminding listeners that "It's just a movie. It's just a movie".

While having spoken parts to let listeners know its influences are definitely innovative (though not the first of its kind), the band has incorporated so much spoken parts that it gets irritating at times, especially on 5 minute tracks where the listener has to go through approximately 2 minutes of spoken parts before getting to the music. However, while the wait can get irritating, it is definitely worth it with the music that comes after the spoken parts.

As I do not actually own the CD (all music were previewed online), I can't comment on the album art work and the actual physical product itself.

Highly recommended for fans of old school black/thrash metal bands like Sabbat.

1 Comentario

0 Like

Compartir
Scoss - 24 Diciembre 2010: Thanks for your comment on this album I purchased in China 4 weeks ago.
I don't have it with me at this moment, but i will make a description of the artwork later if it interests you.
Bye
    Tienes que ser miembro para poder añadir un comentario