Album Review

Score 7
Written by Erik Thomas
Published on 10/10/2011
I’m not a huge fan of covers, so an entire release of cover songs -- even if it’s by a heavyweight like Dying Fetus -- is kind of a shaky proposition for me. However, Gallagher and company have issued a pretty well-chosen collection of tracks that seem to be split between bands that Dying Fetus admires and bands that are directly part of Dying Fetus’ DNA.
 
First up is a cover of “Faded into Obscurity” by short-lived fellow East Coast slammers Dehumanized, a band that was messing around at the same time that Fetus was coming up, and this track from the band’s lone Prophecies Foretold album is hardly distinguishable from Fetus’s 1998 material -- slammy, brutal, slightly hardcore-influenced death metal.
 
Next up is Napalm Death’s “Unchallenged Hate,” which at two minutes long, is one of the most epic-length songs taken from From Enslavement to Obliteration, but is a blistering number. Another short blast is up in the form of Broken Hope’s “Gorehog”, from their 1991 debut, but as he does with all the tracks, Gallagher makes it his.
 
At this point, Dying Fetus delivers an ‘exclusive’ new song for this release called ‘Rohypnol”, but in reality, it’s a 44-second throwaway track that gives way to the next three covers, which are the best of the bunch, as they are covers of more known, classic tracks rather than of direct influences or of a similar style to Dying Fetus. First, there is Bolt Thrower’s seminal “Unleashed Upon Mankind" from Warmaster, which needs no dissection and seems to find a little groove in Fetus’ rendition; then comes Pestilence’s “Twisted Truth”, and while I respect the choice, it's a slow and repetitive track, barely allowing Dying Fetus to flex their considerable muscle, and it's the weakest on display on this release. Personally, I would have preferred something from Consuming Impulse.
 
The EP closes with a nice redeemer in Cannibal Corpse’s “Born In A Casket”, another classic track from a classic debut album, and Dying Fetus gives it a perfect NYDM sheen to end a release that’s a nice addition to their discography, but is more of a collector's oddity than a must-have.



Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 10/2011 | Reply
Not sure if i wanna buy this album though.
Anonymous's Avatar
Anonymous | posted on 10/2011 | Reply
The most extreme, over the top, indecent, offensive, infamous, metal act is back with another album. How are they over the top? Doe's anybody recall " KILL YOUR MOTHER, RAPE YOUR DOG"?
PolarBear's Avatar
PolarBear | posted on 10/2011
great song
erikt@metalreview's Avatar
erikt@metalreview | posted on 10/2011 | Reply
@Flashlightfrank- thanks- i knew that but hands and brain weren't coordinating as I was listening to Warmaster for a comparison
flashlightfrank's Avatar
flashlightfrank | posted on 10/2011 | Reply
Erik-the cover of the Bolt Thrower song is not cenotaph, it's Unleashed Upon Mankind, first song off Warmaster. A bunch of the covers are actually pretty old, the Cannibal Corpse and Pestilence cover were done yrs ago, as noted in the cd, however when you guys get cds to review, the rec company probably does not give you the full insert. The Bolt Thrower cover is outstanding. The new track was pointless.
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Anonymous | posted on 10/2011 | Reply
Agree 100% with PolarBear, very strange that their last full length wasn't reviewed yet this was. Saying that, thanks for bringing this one to my attention, sounds interesting and I will give it a listen.
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PolarBear | posted on 9/2011 | Reply
No one reviewed their last (pretty damn solid) full-length, but they're forgettable (largely covers) EP will get reviewed? Whaaaaaat?