Desecration were conceived in 1992 in
By 1991 in
Many bands, old and new, imitate Cannibal Corpse, Obituary, Morbid Angel, Deicide and the entire slew of American bands that glamorized death metal. Desecration have developed their own unorthodox style of traditional death metal[3] without combining it with any other metal sub-genres. It is evident from their music that they are an old band[4] who have survived rightfully for this duration of time.
By human nature, the band probably received potentially unwarranted attention upon the release of their debut full-length effort Gore and Perversion in 1995. This album was seized by the police with the master tapes destroyed due to the graphic artwork. Some copies released an alternate album cover which stated an apology followed by a brief line explaining that the original art had been censored. Although this album was challenging to track down, it was eventually re-recorded and released in 2002 as Gore and PerVersion 2. While the quality was updated, the songs are the same as the original pressing. What the band released is a death metal piece that runs in near towards an hour, depicting a style previously uncharted in the death metal movement. The album is musically focused and multi-dimensional, reworking structures and rejuvenating itself with each track. No two tracks are similar and the song durations are largely varied, experimenting with a range of tempos. From the opening number ‘Raping the Corpse (Desecration)’, a gripping brand of death metal is unleashed upon the listener, filled with brief melodic nuances, pounding rhythms and pronounced vocal lines.[5] ‘Raping the Copse (Desecration)’ accomplishes its goal as an opener perfectly. The guitars are meticulously structured, well suited yet not predictable in the slightest.
Another intriguing Desecration album is Inhuman. This album differs from Gore and PerVersion (2) in that the aim appears to be experimenting within the realms of death metal more so than previously as opposed to creating a selection of varied death metal themes. In short, it is a more coherent piece of music. Clocking in just short of half an hour this time, Inhuman by passes the listener rapidly although not in a Reign in Blood manner.[6] Simultaneously, it does not leave the listener craving more for it accompanies what it sets out to do succinctly. Somewhat to contrary to what was stated above, ‘Killer Row’ contains a brutal death metal elements but they are employed sparingly and, as a result, it is not a consistently brutal death metal song. Most brutal death metal bands wholly maintain their brutality throughout a release and this is many of their downfalls.[4] ‘Another Obscene Publication’ and closing number ‘A Message to the Censor’ are tongue-in-cheek tracks that stir a giggle out of the listener at Desecration’s detractors.
Lyrical themes in Desecration are not an example of death metal iconoclasm. However, perhaps they are more genuine and well-informed than the average death metal band’s lyrics of malignant torture as Jones is a practicing mortician and fails to hesitate in imbuing his lyrics with his pain-staking knowledge of human anatomy and mortality. Interestingly enough, Jones would rather not stress the obvious correlation between his occupation and his band.
Of course, Desecration are far from immaculate. ‘Frosted Breath’ offers nothing remotely ground-breaking and ‘As the Heart Stops Beating’, while it has its moments, is largely forgettable. Death metal is a significantly limiting genre compared to metal’s other sub-classes. To maintain interest, a band has to notably keep evolving their sound. Cannibal Corpse’s Kill is completely different to the band’s debut full-length effort Eaten Back To Life. In fact, Kill differs substantially to its immediate predecessor The Wretched Spawn in that it features semblance of metalcore embellishments, executed convincingly and worked into the music appropriately, making this classic band refreshing. Compare Obituary’s work throughout their career and the change is minimal, which leaves them overshadowed in the modern extreme metal world.[8] Desecration’s most pressing concern is how to reinvent themselves or retain a refreshing edge to their music and retain their position of staying ahead of the modern UK death metal scene.[9]
In an empire saturated with bland brutal death metal, Desecration are remaining true to the original death metal sound and are one of the only outstanding UK death metal acts to still be doing so and are suffering from an absence of recognition. Their lack of erosion in class or style is a monument of death metal quality in the
[From left to right: Ollie Jones, Mic Hourihan and Andi Morris]
Bibliography:
www.metal-archives.com
‘Reign in Blood’ by D.X. Ferris, 2008
[1] Amputated formed in 2002, much later than Desecration.
[2] Formerly Gorerotted.
[3] Also dubbed ‘old school death metal’ more colloquially.
[4] Compare with new act Hail of Bullets from
[5] Far too many death metal bands treat vocals as a mere after thought. Whilst Desecration may not have planned their vocal lines excessively, they certainly underscore relevant sections of the music and frequently accompany the guitars or drums appropriately. Desecration’s vocal delivery is far more effectively utilized than a more talented death metal band such as Cryptopsy.
[6] Reign in Blood’s engineer has admitted that the album was the intended to have the listener feel as though they were being repeatedly punched in the face, with positive results. Whilst it is easy for a death metal band to undertake such a challenge, such as Cannibal Corpse’s classic Butchered At Birth which is less successful than Slayer although meets a good quality standard, Desecration resisted this interestingly enough, in spite of being a traditional death metal band like Cannibal Corpse.
[7] Krisiun’s Southern Storm and Anal Bleeding’s Two Cocks in the Same Hole come to mind.
[8] Although Obituary are not enhancing their sound significantly, their broody death metal is very irregular and an interesting interpretation of death doom metal.
[9] It seems only fair to mention Rugby’s Mithras as another brilliant
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