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Slaughter of the Soul (Expanded Edition)

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Download links and information about Slaughter of the Soul (Expanded Edition) by At The Gates. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 53:02 minutes.

Artist: At The Gates
Release date: 1996
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal
Tracks: 17
Duration: 53:02
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Blinded By Fear 3:12
2. Slaughter of the Soul 3:03
3. Cold 3:27
4. Under a Serpent Sun 3:59
5. Into the Dead Sky 2:12
6. Suicide Nation 3:36
7. World of Lies 3:35
8. Unto Others 3:11
9. Nausea 2:23
10. Need 2:36
11. The Flames of the End 2:56
12. Legion (Slaughterlord Cover) 3:54
13. The Dying 3:18
14. Captor of Sin (Slayer Cover) 3:19
15. Unto Others ('95 Demo Version) 3:05
16. Suicide Nation ('95 Demo Version) 3:21
17. Bister Verklighet (No Security Cover) 1:55

Details

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While "Blinded by Fear" begins Slaughter of the Soul with a screwy and interesting semi-industrial percussion loop, about 40 seconds in it becomes all light-speed crunch, riffs, and snarls, so those who never liked thrash in the first place aren't going to be convinced by the goings-on here. But for those for whom such stuff is like oxygen? It depends. Singer Tomas Lindberg actually steers away from the typical Cookie Monster growl in favor of a higher but equally strangled register, while his lyrics avoid bad fantasy poesy, at least for the most part, in favor of more existential crises. If nothing else, he has a good line in influences, with quotes from everyone from William Burroughs to the 13th Floor Elevators. As for his bandmates, nothing here sounds too different from what those who worshipped at the wells of Kill 'Em All and Reign in Blood would have created, but what they do they do quite well. The arrangements are tight and performances strong (guitarists Anders Bjorler and Martin Larsson clearly have practiced their riff action many a time), and the occasional extra touch like acoustic guitar or notable space in the production, holding back at points rather than just grinding things into the ground, never hurts. "Cold" is a good example of this, with a soft electric guitar break about two minutes in, while the instrumental "Into the Dead Sky" consists of nothing but similarly calm guitar and whooshing background noises. Sometimes the contrast can be a bit odd — hearing Lindberg's howls against nothing but brief flamenco runs in "Unto Others" isn't the most typical of combinations! While Slaughter may not be the best album of its kind, it's definitely better than most, with its own character.