Inventor of Evil
Destruction
- Style
- Thrash Metal
- Label
- AFM Records
- Year
- 2005
- Reviewed by
- Cody
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Soul Collector, Dealer of Hostility</i>
The tried and true old school German thrash masters Destruction are
back with yet another release amidst a slew of new releases coming at us every
which way. With this latest releast Inventor of Evil,I am happy to
announce our beloved Germanic Butcherers are back and definitely still in their
prime!
Ever since the band reunited with long time vocalist Marcel 'Schmier'
Schirmer in 1999, Destruction has released album after album of
blistering old school thrash giving all of us old school thrashers the absolute
madness we thrive on. Ranging from good to amazing on each album, everything
from 2000's All Hell Breaks Loose through to 2003's Metal
Discharge left me almost non-chelantly expecting a continuation of
greatness with their 2005 release, and boy were my expectations held true. Not
only is this a great album, it is one of their better ones, only being bested
by The Antichrist in greatness. Featuring incredibly catchy riffs
(including some riffs in Dealer of Hostility that take alot of influence
from the Bay Area Thrash scene), songs that are NOT monotonous
(Destruction for me can sometimes fall victim to creating unoriginal
music at times), and of course the trademark vocals of Schmier in top form. The
only problem I have is with the third track...
The Alliance of Hellhoundz is like the extreme metal version of Hear
N' Aid. Featuring an all star heavy metal cast consisting of Biff Byford
(Saxon), Doro Pesch, Shagrath (Dimmu Borgir), Björn "Speed" Strid
(Soilwork), Paul Di'Anno (ex-Iron Maiden, Killers),
Messiah Marcolin (Candlemass), Mark Osegueda (Death Angel), Peter
"Peavy" Wagner (Rage), and Peter Tägtgren (Hypocrisy,
Pain). The intention of this song was obviously to bring together some
of the biggest names in the industry to sing about the greatness of heavy
metal, which is fucking cool, I am down with metal fellatio in songs, but what
I don't like is when 3345945 metal vocalists try to one up one another in the
same song with different styles just thrown together for the sheer fact that it
can be done. As far overall quality, this song is passe instrumentally with the
entire focus on the vocals, and the vocals themselves are cluttered adding
absolutely nothing productive to the song.
Despite the one hiccup on the record, the rest of the tracks remain
untainted classics in the making. If it weren't for the heart and soul embodied
in every member of Destruction, I sincerely do not know what the state
of thrash would be in right now, regardless of what country the music is being
played in. Every album Destruction has released in the last 5-6 years
has been an important accolade for not just thrash, but metal in general. It
shows that a band can hold true to their sound yet continue to evolve and
really give the fans what they want to hear. In honor of this, everyone grab
your nearest beverage and raise it high, for I am declaring a toast.....Long
live metal, long live thrash, and long live Destruction! Let there be
many more years left in the hearts, creativity, and talent of this band to get
the job done to help entertain poor schmucks like myself. CHEERS!