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Slaughter in the Vatican
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Slaughter in the Vatican
Current price: $38.99
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Barnes and Noble
Slaughter in the Vatican
Current price: $38.99
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Exhorder
's limited success has often been blamed on their sounding just like
Pantera
minus the good songs, but perhaps a more accurate billing would be to call them
minus the major-label backing. While this small but crucial detail offers a little more perspective, naming their debut album
Slaughter in the Vatican
, rather than something slightly more innocuous as, say,
Cowboys from Hell
, certainly didn't help
's cause any. Whatever the reasons behind their divergent paths to glory and obscurity, there's no disputing the striking similarities between these two Southern-bred post-
thrash
outfits when listening to forceful tracks like
"Homicide,"
"Desecrator,"
and
"Legions of Death."
All of them are fueled by that distinctive, volatile blend of
death metal
-style double kick drums, chugging guitar riffs played at both slow and blistering tempos, and, to top it all off, the gruff but very expressive lead vocals of frontman
Kyle Thomas
. Whether spitting out intelligently controversial lyrics over the quasi-epic title track or wallowing in the gratuitous scatology of
"Anal Lust,"
Thomas
' muscular style sounds uncomfortably similar to Mr.
Anselmo
's -- further sparking the debate over who ripped off who. Ultimately, it's
's lack of songwriting diversity that was most responsible for scuttling its chances, but
would face this challenge head on two years later, when they bounced back with their much improved sophomore effort,
The Law
. [
was later paired with its successor,
, and reissued as part of
Roadrunner
's
Two from the Vault
series.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
's limited success has often been blamed on their sounding just like
Pantera
minus the good songs, but perhaps a more accurate billing would be to call them
minus the major-label backing. While this small but crucial detail offers a little more perspective, naming their debut album
Slaughter in the Vatican
, rather than something slightly more innocuous as, say,
Cowboys from Hell
, certainly didn't help
's cause any. Whatever the reasons behind their divergent paths to glory and obscurity, there's no disputing the striking similarities between these two Southern-bred post-
thrash
outfits when listening to forceful tracks like
"Homicide,"
"Desecrator,"
and
"Legions of Death."
All of them are fueled by that distinctive, volatile blend of
death metal
-style double kick drums, chugging guitar riffs played at both slow and blistering tempos, and, to top it all off, the gruff but very expressive lead vocals of frontman
Kyle Thomas
. Whether spitting out intelligently controversial lyrics over the quasi-epic title track or wallowing in the gratuitous scatology of
"Anal Lust,"
Thomas
' muscular style sounds uncomfortably similar to Mr.
Anselmo
's -- further sparking the debate over who ripped off who. Ultimately, it's
's lack of songwriting diversity that was most responsible for scuttling its chances, but
would face this challenge head on two years later, when they bounced back with their much improved sophomore effort,
The Law
. [
was later paired with its successor,
, and reissued as part of
Roadrunner
's
Two from the Vault
series.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia