One Kill Wonder
The Haunted
- Style
- Thrash
- Label
- Earache Records
- Year
- 2003
- Reviewed by
- Jay
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Godpuppet, Everlasting, D.O.A., Shadow World</i>
The thrash scene has really been undergoing sort of a revival in the last few
years. Acts like The Haunted have been releasing acclaimed albums that
hearken back to the 80's style thrash, when metal kicked ass. The Haunted's
latest offering "One Kill Wonder" takes an interesting spin on this.
The much-anticipated follow-up to 2001's "The Haunted Made Me Do It,"
"One Kill Wonder" has all you would expect from the Swedish thrashers.
Killer riffs, pounding double bass kicks and brutal vocals. It also features
the horror movie style chords that resonate a feeling of unsettling oddness
for the duration of the album. The main difference between the two albums, which
is noticeable from the beginning, is the raw sound of this record. "The Haunted
Made Me Do It" was a very polished, slick produced album, full of all the
production tricks used in music today. This album has dirtier sounding guitars,
more aggressive riffs, louder drumming, and most of all; Marco Aro does not
use any vocal effects on this album. The vocals sound more like hardcore and
in the vein of Shadows Fall. After a grinding intro, the album kicks
off with "Godpuppet," a true thrash song if there ever was one. When
the intro started, I could have sworn the riff was lifted from "Evil Has
No Boundaries" by Slayer. Marco Aro sounds really pissed off on this
track, another trend that continues for the entire album. The high energy pace
is held on to for the entire album as well. "D.O.A" starts out with a
military march and quickly enters into a pounding aggressive anthem. It is enhanced
by garbled EMS radio sound effects over the chorus. Shades of early Slayer
and Megadeth can be heard here. The title track is violent and loud.
I would not want to be in the center of the moshpit when this one is played
live "Everlasting" is another masterpiece and has a killer, killer solo.
That brings me to another point. The Haunted always include killer solos
at just the right time in the song and the solos are never more elaborate than
they have to be. The album also has enough interludes and slower parts to keep
you happy.
My main complaint (and it's not a big one) is the length of this album. While
it's a good, grinding instrumental, "Demon Eyes" could have been replaced
with another song. Since the album is so short, I would much rather have had
another song than an instrumental. The previous album was around this length
as well. Someone needs to tell The Haunted that CD's can hold 80 minutes
of music. We'll just have to wait for the Japanese import with the two bonus
tracks. With that said, you do feel like you have listened to an album that
can stand alone when you finish it for the first time. Overall, if you like
The Haunted, buy this album. You will not be disappointed. If you have
never heard them before, you might want to check out "The Haunted Made Me
Do It" before listening to this album. I think any thrash fan will like
this album. Recently someone remarked to me "Shadows Fall is the next
Metallica." If the Metallica torch is being passed to Shadows
Fall, the Slayer torch should be passed to The Haunted.