Bringer Of Blood
Six Feet Under
- Style
- Death Metal
- Label
- Metal Blade
- Year
- 2003
- Reviewed by
- Jack
/ 100
Jay:
Killing songs: I still managed to find one... <i>Braindead</i>
Chris Barnes, who was at the time in Cannibal Corpse and Allen West
from Obituary started Six Feet Under as
a side project band returning to the roots of death metal, while their main
bands were evolving outside the realm of classic death metal. However, Chris
Barnes got his ass properly kicked out of Cannibal Corpse during
the recording sessions of Cannibal Corpse's fifth album Created
To Kill (the band later decided to give the album the title Vile),
while Obituary simply vanished in the swamp of Florida and
later on Allen West got kicked out of Six Feet Under (don't ask
me why, I don't remember the reason behind that).
After listening to Six Feet Under's fourth studio album (if
you don't count the tribute album Graveyard Classics, the live stuff
and other MCD), that's just what I have in mind. I don't want to be catalogued
as a purist, but when you listen to their first album Haunted, there's
no possible comparison with this almost pitiful new album. Haunted
was indeed a fresh reminder of what had been done best in the earliest days
of death metal, while every album they put out afterwards were just declinations
of the first album, adding slight touches of punk or rap metal in it. There's
absolutely nothing new in this new album. Just old hat sickening death metal
with mostly punk vibrations and the usual guttural repetitive vocals of Chris
Barnes. This is an uncomplicated and unchallenging new album. It's not a bad
album at all, but I have listened to that kind of metal a thousand times before
and it was sometimes worse, but sometimes better than this. The limited digipack
edition contains a making-of DVD and a bonus song that isn't worth a the few extra
bucks.
Now, do most of all death metal bands have to decline ? The likes of Entombed,
Katatonia, In Flames, Sepultura, Desultory, Benediction or
Morbid Angel have produced some of the most challenging death
metal albums ever but then simply managed to either warm up the soup producing
albums that didn't meet their standards or turn their back to their roots, while
on the other hands bands like Carcass, Morgoth, Cancer,
Pestilence, Atheist, Messiah or Obituary
decided on the other hands to stop all activities before it was too late. In
fact very few bands managed to remains faithful to their roots while releasing album after album of above quality materials. Want some names ? Cannibal
Corpse, Bolt Thrower, Grave, Immolation, Hyprocrisy, Malevolent Creation or
Loudblast indeed did succeed to mature like good old French
vines or Swiss cheese ;-).