Senin, 22 Oktober 2012

Syndemic - Demo 2012


*Artist: Syndemic
*Album: Demo 2012 [demo]
*Year: 2012
*Genre: Progressive/Melodic Death Metal
*Country: Germany
*Format: mp3@CBR320kbps
*Size: 27MB


Tracklist:

1. Progeny Of Sorrow 07:17
2. Silent Wrath 04:26

Total playing time: 11:43


Mediafire
Rusfolder

Rabu, 17 Oktober 2012

* Cattle Decapitation Discografy


Genre: Progressive Death Metal/Grindcore
Lyrical themes: Misanthropy, Gore, Revenge, Animal Supremacy
Country of origin: United States
Location: San Diego, California
Active since: 1996
Current Line Up :
Travis Ryan - Vocals (1999-present) 5/5/2000, Murder Construct, ex-Anal Flatulence, ex-Strangulation, ex-UUM
Josh Elmore - Guitars (2001-present) ex-7000 Dying Rats
David McGraw - Drums (2008-present) Sleep Terror (live), ex-Fused
Derek Engemann - Bass (2010-present) Christ Hate, Covenance, ex-Cast the Stone, ex-Unmerciful


The band has a quite large fanbase among animal rights/liberation supporters. The members are ideologically pro-animal/environment/earth and strongly anti-human. The band originally consisted of all vegetarians, but Josh and Travis are the only vegetarians in the band now. The band started as a three-piece with an unknown guitarist/vocalist, who soon allegedly vanished without the other members knowing anything of his whereabouts.

You don’t name your band Cattle Decapitation if you’re looking to subtly insinuate your way into the consciousness of the masses. Equally, unleashing some of the most intense, horrifying, and extreme metal known to mankind will not ingratiate you with those of a sensitive nature, for the San Diegan’s boundary-pushing music is designed to turn heads and snap necks, and not necessarily in that order. Returning with their seventh full-length, the devastating Monolith Of Inhumanity, the band have never sounded more focused, more aggressive, or more determined to get in the faces of those who erroneously believe they have already experienced the band at their extreme best. “One of the main things this band has done since the very beginning was to try to break tradition and break the mold of what’s acceptable, in any given genre we’re working in,” states vocalist Travis Ryan. “I’m really happy that with this record we’ve been able to successfully push those boundaries further than we ever have, and without going into the ‘suck’ realm or sounding contrived. We’ve gone so far out on a limb on this one, and I’m just ecstatic that we’ve pulled off what we were trying to achieve.”



This achievement stands as one of the most volatile, ambitious, and impossible to aptly categorize records you will hear in 2012. Dragging their ever-evolving deathgrind sound kicking and screaming into the epic territory inhabited by the likes of Dimmu Borgir and Anaal Nathrakh, the quartet redefine all perceptions of what Cattle Decapitation is. “The mindset of this band has always been abrasive and balls to the wall, and like a car accident where there’s no fucking stopping it. Throwing melodic vocals or guitar work – or dare we say catchy elements – into that is tantalizing,” says Ryan. That such elements have been woven sparingly into their turbulent racket does not mean the band have in any way diminished the sheer visceral impact they are known for. “There can be hooks and catchiness without compromising what the band – or any individual in the band – is all about,” asserts guitarist Josh Elmore. “Having these elements at our disposal is just another tool with which we can build the best songs that we can. It was great also having input from Derek (Engemann, bass, who makes his writing and recording debut with this album), who added some new dynamics to some of the songs. We also spent a lot of time thinking about structure on this record, wanting every moment to count, no matter what the tone of it was.” After one exposure to Monolith Of Inhumanity it’s evident that these more melodic elements truly enhance the power of the tracks, and make for a more diverse and involving collection. On “A Living, Breathing Piece Of Defecating Meat” the band unleash a chorus 

that manages to be hideous and infectious at the same time, while the towering “Your Disposal” and “Lifestalker” wield sweeping, dramatic sections tinged with apocalyptic fury, which are all the more gripping for the inclusion of Ryan’s melodic shrieking. “I was waiting for the guys to write parts I could use that kind of melody on, and as soon as they played me “Your Disposal” I dropped the song I was working on and just went for it,” enthuses Ryan. “This is the first record where I really listened to what the fans were saying they wanted, and many of them wanted a lot more of those weird, epic, melodic parts that crept into The Harvest Floor (2009), and I’m like okay, done, because luckily I agree with you this time!”



As with all of the band’s releases, Monolith Of Inhumanity revolves around a central concept, building upon Ryan’s potent distaste for contemporary civilization and the damage wrought in the name of progress. “Whereas The Harvest Floor focused on sort of rounding up the populace and getting rid of them, this record is about what would happen had we let them go. It’s about where humanity will end up if it continues the course it’s on,” the vocalist explains. This concept, inspired in part by 2001: A Space Odyssey, is once again captured in the cover art by longtime collaborator Wes Benscoter, depicting a bleak apocalyptic future and the regression of mankind into apes. “The monolith really represents technology, and the cover’s this trash heap with the monolith atop it and humans scavenging all around it, because that’s all they’re able to do any more. It’s where we’re headed on the course we’re on, and yeah, a lot of kids will say that’s a really negative, shitty attitude to have, but is it not correct?”



In realizing the record, the quartet – rounded out by drummer Dave McGraw – travelled to Denver, Colorado to collaborate with producer Dave Otero (Allegaeon, Cephalic Carnage). “Dave brought really good performances out of everybody, and he gave the record a lot of clarity while the heaviness is still there,” states Elmore, though it was the producer’s suggestions on how to better flesh out the songs that made the most profound difference in the guitarist’s eyes. “The guy really knows what he’s doing. I do a lot of layering after the basic rhythm track, and if I came to a point where I wasn’t sure about something someone would always pipe up and say you realize everything Dave has suggested so far has worked? Try it!” he laughs. That the record is as accomplished as it is also belies the fact that the schedules of the members made it difficult for them to focus on writing it over the year they had allotted. “As it turns out we work really well under pressure,” Ryan says with a wry smile. “But we were all so busy it’s literally a wonder that we got it done at all in that year, let alone what we came out with. It makes me feel like we’re capable of anything, and that’s really a new development.”



The visual aspect of their output having always been important to them, the band are enthused to have the album released as a gatefold vinyl, and to have Tom Bunk, creator of The Garbage Pail Kids collectors cards from the 1980s, design cards for the individual members of the band, which will be available with pre-orders. “Collecting those cards was one of my favorite things when I was a kid, and our friend and ex-manager is a complete nerd about it and has known Tom Bunk for years, and put us in touch with him. This is an older guy that doesn’t have to be fucking around with some deathgrind band who isn’t going to push him to new heights, but he thought it sounded like a fun project and he was very cool about everything. It still hasn’t really hit me that we quite literally have our own Garbage Pail Kid cards!” Ryan grins. “The funny thing is that it also inadvertently ties right into the theme of the record, which has so much focus on garbage and waste. It didn’t even occur to me until months later, but that’s the beauty of this band, things happen for a reason. For instance, for the first time, going into this record I didn’t have the whole concept worked out in my head. Usually I have it in mind as much as a few years before we get around to making the record, and I need that, it has to make sense to me or it’s just not going to work. I was so scared it just wasn’t going to come, but one day it literally just hit me. The title, the concept, the cover, all of it, and suddenly everything fell into place, and now it’s done I think this is the first time we’ve all been one hundred percent proud of what we’ve created – and for good reason.”





Cattle Decapitation - Ten Torments of the Damned Demo 1997    
http://www.mediafire.com/?wzjjymwj4fq

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?fnzvwnkxmmt
http://www.mediafire.com/?dbdtzsxld21
http://www.mediafire.com/?tqhzcysa17nk6uj


Cattle Decapitation - Human Jerky EP 1999    
http://www.mediafire.com/?mywj5o4qmrn


Cattle Decapitation - ¡Decapitacion! Single 2000    
http://www.mediafire.com/?f5ymm2nn4gz


Cattle Decapitation - Homovore EP 2000
http://www.mediafire.com/?5m2b1yqmmmj

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/file/wlyoykyzmdw/Cattle%20Decapitation_Homovore_hell-music.blogspot.com.rar


Cattle Decapitation - To Serve Man Full-length 2002    
http://www.mediafire.com/?mydgjzzetyz

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?hty2zyzdjoj


Cattle Decapitation - Humanure Full-length 2004    
http://www.mediafire.com/?kjyzztzcnjm

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?myaj05ybn52
http://www.mediafire.com/?mxyvqmmj0qa
http://www.mediafire.com/?5omijqqlzzv


Cattle Decapitation - Cattle Decapitation / Caninus Split 2005    
http://www.mediafire.com/?c5z32gtzz3y

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?nkyz35guhnm
http://www.mediafire.com/?qs5mu5lnmqo
http://www.mediafire.com/?9dpdh2e4fjkf2w2


Cattle Decapitation - Karma. Bloody. Karma Full-length 2006
http://www.mediafire.com/?nh9rld134cszoox

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?990dkmev9mh
http://www.mediafire.com/?nnwtygyz4qf

   
Cattle Decapitation - The Harvest Floor Full-length 2009
http://www.mediafire.com/?d2nynoww4oz

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?mewnfimm2m5
http://www.mediafire.com/?xknmrwyjmgm
http://www.mediafire.com/?z1i0jtmkhmn
http://www.mediafire.com/?m3kmwymnmae
http://www.mediafire.com/?neekzmxkjoo


Cattle Decapitation - Monolith of Inhumanity Full-length 2012    
http://files.metalarea.org/30052929

Cattle Decapitation - Forced Gender Reassignment (Uncensored) 2012


Country: U.S.A. (San Diego, California)
Album: Monolith Of Inhumanity (2012 Metal Blade)
Genre: Progressive Death Metal/Grindcore
File: 53.1MB (.MPEG-4, 690x392)

Note: 

The video is incredibly gory, violent, and features strong sexual violence including rape and sexual assault.


Mediafire

Defeated Sanity - live in Moscow, Russia 6 november 2011.


Great performance by one of my favourite bands. NICE PIC & SHOOT !!
Recorded from jivoe.tv


Uploaded By
Zyhui

Summer Slaughter 2007 DVD


00:38 - As Blood Runs Black
09:11 - The Faceless
16:51 - Beneath the Massacre
24:15 - Ion Dissonance
31:25 - Cattle Decapitation
38:50 - Cephalic Carnage
47:16 - Decapitated
52:06 - Necrophagist 

Features performances by: 
Necrophagist, As Blood Runs Black, Beneath The Massacre, Cattle Decapitation, Cephalic Carnage, The Faceless and Ion Dissonance.



Uploaded By
CarlosMonteiro1985

Origin - Studio 24, Edinburgh February 22, 2012


" US band Origin's set from the Studio 24 in Edinburgh. First few minutes are a bit messed up but after it gets really good, very happy with how this turned out!
It has been re-dubbed with separately recorded audio. "


Uploaded By
lambbroadway

Man Made Origin - The Betrayal 2011


Country: United Kingdom (Dundee)
Album: False Consciousness (2011 self-released)
Genre: Progressive Black Metal/Female vocals
File: 104MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x720)



Mediafire

Cytotoxin - Plutonium Heaven 2011


Genre: Technical Brutal Death Metal
Lyrical themes: Nuclear disasters, Chernobyl
Country of origin: Germany
Location: Chemnitz, Saxony


01 React or Recede 03:36     
02 ... in a Complex Velocity 04:38     
03 Human Mud 03:40     
04 Plutonium Heaven 04:17     
05 2 Minutes for 2 Years 02:30     
06 RBMK-1000 03:40     
07 Solemnities of May 04:51

A short while ago I received an e-mail from Cytotoxin asking me if I was interested in reviewing their brand new album. So I clicked their link and gave one of their songs a listen, and about halfway in I was already in awe. “This is the shit”, I thought to myself, and later on replied that I’d be bloody excited to review their album, seeing as it seemed to be right up my alley. A few days later it dropped into my mailbox. Gitty as a child on Christmas I ripped the shrink wrap open, started flipping through the booklet and gave the CD a spin…I can tell you it’s been a while since I fell so head-over-heels in love with a new band this quickly. This young act, formed in 2010, has managed to release one hell of a debut, and I can’t for the life of me understand why they don’t have a label behind it. Brutal death metal with a flair for the technical side of the matter, without losing sight of the chunky goodness that is slam. Plutonium heaven is only 27 minutes long, and it’s a concept album about the Chernobyl nuclear reactor disaster. The concept shines through not only in the lyrical department, but also a few select samples, like for instance that of a crackling Geiger counter in a couple of tracks. It adds such a magnificently spooky feeling, and they actually manage to create an atmosphere, which is damn unusual for the genre. But, the rest of the album’s pretty straight-forward death metal. I’m quite certain they’ve taken on influences from both their European heritage as well of that of the States. I occasionally get to think of Abysmal Torment, and for a short while Devourment comes to mind. Suddenly my mind goes to Brodequin as the blasting is at an all-time high, whereas the technicality gets me thinking of Incinerate and the gurgling gore of Prostitute Disfigurement. But no matter what bands one might find a few similarities to, there’s no doubt in my mind Cytotoxin’s also given the older school of death metal a fair share of air-time, as some of the riffing definitely carries a Floridian feel to them (just listen to Solemnities of May). The tempo changes are vast, and one second might be blasting like crazy, the next goes for a short and semi-melodic slowdown, only to speed up once again and abruptly turne into a down and dirty slam session. The drumming’s truly impressive, and the technicality is all that I could’ve asked for, just as the sudden outburst of a technical guitar solo gets my adrenaline pumping. But they don’t overdo it, they keep the technicality at a sane level, so as to not get too bloody in-your-face. Vocally it’s gurgling, grunting, growling, squealing and anything else you could possibly ask for. Production-wise it’s perfect, letting all instruments shine through. This is without a doubt one this year’s best releases. Impressive and mind-blowing! And it just goes to show that you don’t need made-up stories about gruesome murders, torture and rape to get the gory feel of brutal death metal; you can just retell a bit of mankind’s history.


Mediafire

* Alternative Link
http://www.mediafire.com/?vucf8jw2qg73qqq
http://www.mediafire.com/?91t12h35qi3yrqa

Man Made Origin - False Consciousness 2011


Genre: Extreme Progressive Metal
Country: United Kingdom


Tracklist

1. Faith of the Verse 08:47
2. False Consciousness 06:02
3. Legion of the Lost (Lament for Tomorrow II) 06:53
4. Uncharted Space 04:19
5. Redemption 8: 13 08:13
6. The Betrayal 07:18
7. Into the Darkness 20:02

Anomalous - Ohmnivalent 2011


Genre: Brutal Technical Death Metal
Lyrical themes: Anti-Christian, Redention, Conspiracy, Society
Country of origin: United States
Location : San Francisco, California


01 Premateria (A Fire Birth) 03:40    
02 The Seraphim Veil 05:20    
03 Bicruciforms: The Eternal Return 04:58      
04 Ohmnivalent 08:19    
05 Mitosis 08:42    
06 Panacea 04:44
07 Hypnagogue 05:02    
08 Demiurge 05:26    
09 Binary Resurrection 07:40

What we have here may just be the most technical album ever recorded. When I first heard some of the music these guys were making, I had to call bullshit at first. It is just so insanely technical, and they switch from one idea to the next probably eight times every ten seconds. Although the songs can be a little tedious, this is nonetheless a very good album and should be in the collection of any fan of technical death metal. The usual formula for the songs is to throw out a riff played at hyper speed, and then dispatch it as quickly as it came and then throw out yet another riff. Anomalous never repeat a guitar line twice in a song and the overall memorability of the songs suffer for it, but it is compelling. The sheer amount of riffs in each track is staggering - and they hit you as hard and as fast as humanly possible for the entire length of OHMnivalent. To say that the guitar players are beyond proficient is a major understatement as they can shred as fast as any other guitar legend, but their guitar parts are definitely tight, groovy, and of course, technical as fuck throughout. Another real bonus is when they play a few quiet passages (see the mid-section of the title track) that are just beautiful. This is due in part to a wonderful guitar tone, but these guys are extremely well versed musicians and clearly want to display a nice variety of brutality as well as beauty on this album. Another notable trait of the music found within is that it is completely devoid of any time signature, whatsoever. Try to tap your foot to this, you will not be able to do it. Each riff thrown into the mix seems to also come with its own new time signature, and at times the music sound like a huge cluster of noise, but there is method to the mayhem. You wouldn't believe that humans could comprehend these songs, but they clearly can! The most notable performance here comes from drum legend Marco Pitruzzella, the drummer from Brain Drill. That may elicit a bit of a knee jerk reaction for some, as it did for me, but you need to hear him these days; his drum performance here is anything but annoying gravity blasts with a horrific drum tone. He has really become what I would honestly call one of the finest drummers of our generation. His drumming is still ludicrously fast, but his tone is much better on this record than on Brain Drill's debut. I still can't believe a human can fathom the song structures he was presented with, but he does an incredible job keeping the beat. This man has become a human computer when it comes to his instrument. There is only one problem; he is still playing on that damned electric kit of his. If he would just ditch the electric drums and graduate to a big boy kit, he would be one of my current favorite drummers undoubtedly. This record is one of the most bizarre and frantic cluster fucks ever caught on tape. It suffers from a lack of memorability, but this wasn't written to have hooks- it is just some good djenty tech death! Is it good to play all the time? No. Is it a great record from time to time that is both mind blowing in its delivery and compelling to behold? Oh yes. I look forward to future releases from these guys.


Mediafire

* Alternative Link

Confessor - Condemned 1991

 
Country of origin: United States
Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
Genre: Technical Doom Metal
Lyrical themes: Sorrow, Grief

For those of you who are already in the CONFESSOR Cult and know us well, we are glad you decided to come into the site and look around. For those of you who are soon to be CONFESSOR Cult members and are not up to speed on the phenomenon that is CONFESSOR, below you will learn what we are all about. CONFESSOR made its mark on the underground metal scene in the late 80's by combining some of the genre's essential elements in a way that no band had attempted yet, and that few, if any have successfully blended since. Once dubbed "the world's most obstinately technical metal band", CONFESSOR never failed to bewilder their fans with ability to follow huge gut-wrenching guitar harmonies and wailing vocals with intricately woven riffs that could not be assigned time signatures. The band stood alone on an island it had created in a sea of redundant, cookie cutter metal bands until putting their instruments down in 1994. In the years that followed, CONFESSOR was often cited as a principle source of inspiration for bands and individual musicians alike trying to do something unique. Fans of the band have held them in high regard as a seemingly endless stream of one dimensional bands has dumped itself into an unimaginative cesspool of commercially accepted, but soulless metal. With "Nu Metal" now carrying the torch for heavy music, people who have missed some of the heart and groove of their favorite metal bands have had little to cheer about. CONFESSOR has reformed and is ready to show the metal universe what it has missed. Once upon a time the term "heavy" was synonymous with "provocative" and bands labeled as such prided themselves in their ability to challenge listeners' sense of what music should be. The time has come for someone to forsake gothic imagery and all traces of techno and hip-hop for the loftier pursuit of making metal rock again.

Tracklist

1. Alone
2. Prepare Yourself
3. Collapse Into Despair
4. Defining Happiness
5. Uncontrolled
6. Condemned
7. Eve Of Salvation
8. The Stain
9. Suffer


Narod ( Pass : www.thrashmageddon.com )

Confessor - Unraveled 2005


Country of origin: United States
Location: Raleigh, North Carolina
Genre: Technical Doom Metal
Lyrical themes: Sorrow, Grief


For those of you who are already in the CONFESSOR Cult and know us well, we are glad you decided to come into the site and look around. For those of you who are soon to be CONFESSOR Cult members and are not up to speed on the phenomenon that is CONFESSOR, below you will learn what we are all about. CONFESSOR made its mark on the underground metal scene in the late 80's by combining some of the genre's essential elements in a way that no band had attempted yet, and that few, if any have successfully blended since. Once dubbed "the world's most obstinately technical metal band", CONFESSOR never failed to bewilder their fans with ability to follow huge gut-wrenching guitar harmonies and wailing vocals with intricately woven riffs that could not be assigned time signatures. The band stood alone on an island it had created in a sea of redundant, cookie cutter metal bands until putting their instruments down in 1994. In the years that followed, CONFESSOR was often cited as a principle source of inspiration for bands and individual musicians alike trying to do something unique. Fans of the band have held them in high regard as a seemingly endless stream of one dimensional bands has dumped itself into an unimaginative cesspool of commercially accepted, but soulless metal. With "Nu Metal" now carrying the torch for heavy music, people who have missed some of the heart and groove of their favorite metal bands have had little to cheer about. CONFESSOR has reformed and is ready to show the metal universe what it has missed. Once upon a time the term "heavy" was synonymous with "provocative" and bands labeled as such prided themselves in their ability to challenge listeners' sense of what music should be. The time has come for someone to forsake gothic imagery and all traces of techno and hip-hop for the loftier pursuit of making metal rock again.

Tracklist

1. Cross the Bar
2. Until Tomorrow
3. Wig Stand
4. Blueprint Soul
5. The Downside
6. Sour Times
7. Hibernation
8. Strata of Fear
9. The Secret (Bonus track)


Narod ( Pass : www.thrashmageddon.com )
 

Turbid North - Under The Eight 2008


*Artist: Turbid North
*Album: Under The Eight
*Year: 2008
*Genre: Technical Death Metal
*Country: United States
*Format: mp3@CBR320kbps
*Size: 67MB


Tracklist

1. Under The Eight
2. To the bastard
3. Endless Torment
4. Power Rising
5. Paradigm
6. Unfounded
7. Under the eight reprised

Total playing time: 28:34


Rusfolder
Narod

Bloodshot Dawn - Godless 2012


Country: United Kingdom (Portsmouth)
Album: (debut) Bloodshot Dawn - Year: 2012 (January 26th)
Label: Unsigned
Genre: Technical Death Metal
File: 129MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x720)



Mediafire

Job For A Cowboy - Tarnished Gluttony 2012


Country: U.S.A. (Glendale, Arizona)
Album: (third) Demonocracy - Year: 2012 (April 10)
Label: Metal Blade Records
Genre: Progressive Death Metal/Technical Deathcore
File: 107MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x720)



Mediafire

Foreboding Ether - Revelations 2012


Country: United Kingdom (Kent)
Album: Single - Year: 2012
Label: Unsigned
Genre: Progressive Death Metal/Technical Deathcore
File: 108MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x720)



Mediafire

Adlivun - Archeology 2012


Country: Argentina (Buenos Aires)
Album: (debut) The Grey Can Turn To Black - Year: 2011
Label: Self-released
Genre: Progressive Death Metal
File: 84.7MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x720)


Mediafire

Exotic Animal Petting Zoo - Thorough. Modern 2012


Country: U.S.A. (Chicago, Illinois)
Album: Tree of Tongues - Year: 2012 (June 19)
Label: Mediaskare Records
Genre: Experimental/Progressive/Metal
File: 40.2MB (.MPEG-4, 1280x546)


Mediafire
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