Blood World

Blood World is the fourth studio album by Christian metal band Mortification, released in 1994. It was a commercial hit and the band's most successful album.[2]

Blood World
Studio album by
Released1994
Recorded1994
StudioSaint Andrew's Studios, Melbourne, Australia
GenreThrash metal, groove metal[1]
Length44:48
LabelNuclear Blast, Intense
ProducerMarc McGormack, Mortification
Mortification chronology
Live Planetarium
(1994)
Blood World
(1994)
Primitive Rhythm Machine
(1995)

The album focuses more on thrash metal, with hardcore punk, groove metal, and classic metal influences, and contains less death metal influences than past albums. Instead of the Steve Rowe's growls, the album mainly contains his shouting style singing, but the growls do make occasional appearances.

According to Australian Music Online, "the strange combination of extreme styles began setting Mortification apart from the crowd of same sounding bands and widened the band's audience as they became quickly recognised as innovators and not imitators."[3] Blood World received rave reviews in America and Europe. Horror Infernal Magazine gave the album 13 out of 13 points.[3]

Track listing

All songs written by Mortification

  1. "Clan of the Light" - 4:20
  2. "Blood World" - 4:13
  3. "Starlight" - 4:50
  4. "Your Life" - 4:15
  5. "Monks of the High Lord" - 6:16
  6. "Symbiosis" - 7:11
  7. "Love Song" - 4:03
  8. "Live by the Sword" - 3:24
  9. "J.G.S.H." - 0:30
  10. "Dark Allusions" - 5:45
  • "Symbiosis" was originally recorded on the band's prior live release, Live Planetarium.

Credits

Mortification

  • Steve Rowe - bass guitar, vocals
  • Michael Carlisle - guitar
  • Phil Gibson - drums

Production

  • Marc McGormack - producer
  • Mortification - producer

References

  1. Russell, George (1 February 1997). "Mortification: A matter of life and death". Cross Rhythms Magazine #37. Cross Rhythms Radio. Retrieved 9 December 2010.
  2. Ryhänen, Pekka Mortification review. Imperiumi.net
  3. Mortification Biography Archived 10 August 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Australian Music Online. Amo.org.au
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.