Thermonuklear Thrash Metal Warfare (Split)
Nailgunner/Wounds
- Style
- Old School Thrash/Death Metal
- Label
- Bestial Burst
- Year
- 2005
- Reviewed by
- Aleksie
Killing songs: Shortcut To Hell, Nuklear Tormentor & Holocaust Reich
Ach, time to bask in a whipping of local old school annihilation. Nailgunner
and Wounds are both Finnish bands laying it down unrelentlessly
raw and punishing on this split release. Hi-fi-afficionados and people looking
for peaceful dishwashing-background music should steer clear.
Nailgunner comes to the bat first with their prominent thrash
metal assault. First pitch and the highly unpolished production scratches your
senses to either direction, give or take, depending how you like your album
to sound. The very live-in-the-studio sounds are well understandable, as if I
remember correctly my chat with the bands drummer, most of Nailgunners
part on the split was recorded on the first take and left raw on purpose. The
guitars are prominent and very biting, but the drums could be more high up,
as they tend to get buried from time to time. As a member of the aformentioned
afficonados who liked their production megapunching and polished, I unfortunately
have to deduct points from this. The live feel does support the material well
though as it, emphasises the energy squeezed into the tracks, that is of very
high levels.
Shortcut To Hell starts chugging with great twisting
speed metal riffing and a driving "humppa-komppi", also known as "thrash
metal-beat" in English. Slayer is written all over the please, especially
in the unashamedly Kingesque solo. Singer Sami Kettunen has definitely one of
the most interesting voices I´ve ever heard. Imagine Steve Souza going
on a death metal trip and instead of plain singing, literally spitting the words
out. The prominent spitting effect that sounds a bit like a lisp is quite unique.
Come to think of it, his singing would be bestdescribed by everyones favourite
Looney Tunes quackmeister Daffy Duck taking a jar of horse steroids and singing
Exodus all night long. Denim Stallions injects he same speed from the
grooving drum beats, but for some reason when the chorus starts at roughly 2.00
the whole tune falls flat. Usually tempo changes are very welcome in my books
but here it doesnt work for me. Luckily the double bass-attack picks it up in
the end.
Nailgun Attack is a fine peace of midpaced bulldozer-turned-sadistic-fast-moshpit
-tune but it ends too damn quickly. Riffing this fine could have easily used
a second verse and choruses. Nuklear Tormentor saves the day as a real
jewel of the disc, as not only is the song a killer pit-anthem, Kettunens delivery
in the very catchy chorus is beyond belief in unbridled dedication. Yeah, it
may not be completely on tune or in tempo, but dammit if this aint thrash metal-feeling
I dont know what is. Real smilebringer this song, and in a good way. Human
Warhead suffers accordingly in trying to follow the awesomness that is
Nuklear Tormentor. Great riffs abound, but it just doesnt match the
previous one in sheer aggression - or catchyness for that matter. A collectively
fine work from these thrashers, which would have been made much better with
finer production. On a five star scale, three-outta-five. www.nailgunner.cjb.net
Where Nailgunner offered five tunes of new material, Wounds´
half introduces two demos from the bands history, Holocaust Reich from
2003 opens the pack with the title track that takes the split on a much harder
death metal influence. Suffocation and Dissection
come to mind as the blast beats break down some walls. The very infectious chorus
makes the track above the best in Wounds´ part. the thrashy
grooves in the middle are a nice touch. Barbarized And Brutalized also
keeps it fast and extremely heavy but the singer-bassplayers half-vomiting voice
starts getting to me at this point. It does suit the material but isnt really
my piece of pie.
Violent Warfare and Ritual Afterlife both feature some prime
riffing and shout-along choruses, but dont match the openings feverish feeling.
Points though for the solo in the latter, which brought out the air guitar in
me. The demo features some nice bass-heavy production, which appeases me as
a fan of bass mayhem. The latter part that features the Brutal Mutations
demo from 1999 is more of the same with singer Soldeheds voice having a much
more prominent guttural growl instead of the vomiting effect, which pleases
me more. The thrash metal element is more prominent on these earlier pieces,
as more killer solos abound. In comparison to Nailgunners material
on the split, Wounds´ part is not as memorable or catchy
to me, but does fare much better in the production side. Therefore, I decree
two´n´half-outta five twinklers. Find info about the band at www.wounds.fi