Retaliation
Spirit Disease
- Style
- Death/Thrash Metal
- Label
- Inverse Records
- Year
- 2011
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
/ 100
Killing songs: Love Is Blood Red, Spawn Of Satan, One Bullet For You & Destroy Everything With Hate
Hailing from Finland, Spirit Disease has been spreading their
brand of thrashing death metal and grind-spurts since 2002. Retaliation
is the band’s second LP and is quite aptly described by the group’s
own description of their music: “steamrolls like a bull on steroids and
grooves like a headless rhino.” One can find the kind of 90s brutality that
At The Gates perfected while also seeing touches of Bolt
Thrower and a tiny bit of fellow Finns Rotten Sound
in there as well. The guys remember to add the more-than-proficient solo and infusions
of melody here and there while overall keeping it nicely brutal.
The band’s lengthy history shows commendably in their technical chops
from the mincing blast beats to the pummelling stringassaults. Singer Tuberculosis
brings a slightly muddy yet hefty growl/screech aching to the might of David
Vincent while guitarist Koskinen and bassist Sallanen seemingly provide vocals
for those always-tasty-when-done-right gang shouts.
With song titles like Keep The Hate, Nothing But Death and
Suffocate In Depravity, you can easily deduct the record’s thematic
lines. The intensity and quality is retained in grand fashion on speedy tracks
like Collateral Damage and Spawn Of Satan while Love Is
Blood Red (my favourite thus far) introduces a brilliantly thrashing mode
that combines some melodies and groovy riffage to great effects.
On the lesser side we find a plodding track like Watch Them Die and
You Should Be Killed, which mostly comes off as a pastiche of a Cannibal
Corpse-scorcher that succumbed to rigor mortis way too soon. Fortunately
versatility is provided near the end. One Bullet For You momentarily
turns the course toward Discharge and other advocators of the
D-beat. The 6-second burst Hoarse clearly feels like an homage to Napalm
Death’s more progressive moments. The album closer Destroy
Everything With Hate reaches out for slightly more epic grounds with massive,
tempo-changing riffs, sweet double bass furries, a furious solo battle between
the guitarists and a seriously infectious chorus that should slay on the live
stage.
This album was my first encounter with Spirit Disease and
it was a very pleasant one. The production job is strong on every front and
with the exception of a few lazy tunes, these guys seem to have a knack for
catchy brutality. I expect ever improving and more versatile things from these
guys in the near future so keep those orifices peeled.