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Bathory|Requiem

Requiem

Bathory
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Cryptic though its title and cover image (boasting human skulls and bones strewn across the landscape) may seem, not everything about Bathory's Requiem spells an end to all things. Instead, the album (Bathory's seventh) merely signaled a back-to-basics resurrection of the legendary black metal group's primitive, early-days simplicity, rather than offering yet another chapter in their Wagnerian, long-evolving Viking metal phase of the surrounding years. In retrospect, the album was clearly the first sign of Quorthon hitting a creative wall, with subsequent clues arriving in the form of his eclectic, but obviously searching solo releases of the same period, as well as Bathory's own, often inconsistent albums. In the case of Requiem, any trace of the lengthy epics, ostentatious arrangements, chorused vocals, and ambient keyboards that had dominated other albums was obliterated by the single-minded velocity and death metal mania with which tracks like "Crostitution," "Distinguish to Kill," and "War Machine" pierce the listener's skull. And you can forget about any clean singing, something which as of late had become the norm as well, but which was summarily slaughtered here by the gurgling convulsions of Quorthon's shredded larynx. Ironically, even though Requiem did benefit from the improved audio quality present on the band's later triumphs, on this occasion the final results were surprisingly inferior to the rough-hewn gems of their past. Requiem fell somewhere between the two extremes, thereby failing to fulfill the expectations of most of Bathory's fan contingent.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

More info

Requiem

Bathory

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1
Requiem
00:05:00

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

2
Crosstitution
00:03:18

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

3
Necroticus
00:03:19

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

4
War Mashine
00:03:20

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

5
Blood and Soil
00:03:35

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

6
Pax Vobiscum
00:04:14

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

7
Suffocate
00:03:37

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

8
Distinguish to Kill
00:03:15

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

9
Apocalypse
00:03:50

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

10
The Winds of Mayhem (Outro)
00:00:23

N/A, Composer - Bathory, MainArtist

(C) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg (P) 1994 Black Mark Prod./B.Forsberg

Album review

Cryptic though its title and cover image (boasting human skulls and bones strewn across the landscape) may seem, not everything about Bathory's Requiem spells an end to all things. Instead, the album (Bathory's seventh) merely signaled a back-to-basics resurrection of the legendary black metal group's primitive, early-days simplicity, rather than offering yet another chapter in their Wagnerian, long-evolving Viking metal phase of the surrounding years. In retrospect, the album was clearly the first sign of Quorthon hitting a creative wall, with subsequent clues arriving in the form of his eclectic, but obviously searching solo releases of the same period, as well as Bathory's own, often inconsistent albums. In the case of Requiem, any trace of the lengthy epics, ostentatious arrangements, chorused vocals, and ambient keyboards that had dominated other albums was obliterated by the single-minded velocity and death metal mania with which tracks like "Crostitution," "Distinguish to Kill," and "War Machine" pierce the listener's skull. And you can forget about any clean singing, something which as of late had become the norm as well, but which was summarily slaughtered here by the gurgling convulsions of Quorthon's shredded larynx. Ironically, even though Requiem did benefit from the improved audio quality present on the band's later triumphs, on this occasion the final results were surprisingly inferior to the rough-hewn gems of their past. Requiem fell somewhere between the two extremes, thereby failing to fulfill the expectations of most of Bathory's fan contingent.

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

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