The Wretched Spawn
Cannibal Corpse
- Style
- Death Metal
- Label
- Metal Blade
- Year
- 2004
- Reviewed by
- Jack
/ 100
Killing songs: <i>Psychotic Precision, The Wretched Spawn, Festering In The Crypt, Nothing Left To Mutilate, Rotten Body Landslide</i>
Cannibal Corpse just sold over half a million albums in the
US as revealed by Soundscan. Half a million albums that's quite a great number,
even though they have released 8 studio albums and a live album. I wonder how
many they sold in Europe, since Europe claims to be more open-minded towards
extreme music than the US. And in Asia, in Australia and New Zealand ?
America's top death metal selling act returns with a ninth studio album bearing
the sweet name The Wretched Spawn. A ninth album fulled with bestial
brutality and not a sense of delicacy, not a sense of subtlety, not even a sense
of joy or happiness. After all, they are here just to disembowel, castrate,
mutilate, destroy, slain and other nice ritornelloes. And even though it's always
the same old story, they just do it great. Wheter you like their music or not,
wheter you ask them to develop their music or not, they do not want to change
an ounce of their music and play it loud, fast and heavy. Just like a road roller,
they link up crushing, fast-paced songs, alterning one heavy song here and there
such as The Wretched Spawn, Rotten Body Landslide, Festering In
The Crypt. And those are the songs that I like the most from Cannibal
Corpse because they tend to sound more forceful than the typical fast
songs, and also they get more distinguishable between each other and unmatched
in intensity.They don't merely recycle their riffs or their albums, they bring
every record further into while preserving their distinguished sound. The vocals
are still the same cookie monster with sore throat, eructing stories I wouldn't
tell my daughter. The classic thythmic guitar riffs that infect you, the guitars
soloing that answer each other, the bass lines that is Cannibal Corpse
finest's trademark and the amazing pounding drumming.
I always thought The Bleeding would remain my favourite Cannibal
Corpse album ever, maybe because I was fully into the genre at the
time, and also because the albums they put out after this one didn't live up
to my expectations. The Wretched Spawn contains all the trumps to assert
itself as their best work to date. Not to mention the everending exciting work
of Vince Locke.