NUCLEAR DEATH Carrion For Worm (BLACK VINYL) LP (The Crypt) 25.99This classic blast of outre deathgrind gets plastered on platter anew via The Crypt Records, featuring the original twelve-song track listing and sleeve artwork; it's accompanied by an insert sheet with lyrics, art, and liner notes. It's been awhile since the Nuclear Death releases have been available on vinyl, so it's good to get these pustulent periods of Nuclear Death's evolution into the psychedelic vomit gods we know and love back in our hands again. And man, this stuff still sounds as extreme as ever. Coming out of Phoenix, Arizona in the late 80s, Nuclear Death stood out in the burgeoning extreme metal underground with a twenty-something girl named Lori Bravo on vocals and bass who sounded like hell unleashed, her voice swooping from monstrous guttural growls to bizarre wordless vocalizations to killer falsetto screams. Backed by drummer Joel Whitfield and guitarist Phil Hampson, Bravo led the band through an inchoate nightmare of grinding, ultra-noisy death metal that started off as a more thrash-influenced sound, but which had evolved into one of the weirdest death/grind bands of its era by the release of their legendary 1991 album Carrion For Worm.
It was with 1991's Carrion For Worm that Nuclear Death truly transformed into one of the strangest death/grind bands around, taking the murky, blurred chaos of their previous album and adding in an array of bizarre noises, hideous atonal guitar sounds, counter-intuitive rhythms and some of the most insane vocals that Bravo ever produced for this band. The songs careen through weird tempo changes and stomping off-kilter breakdowns, the blasting deathgrind splattered with Hampson's lysergic solos, which are ten times more crazed and discordant here than on the older Nuclear Death records. On some of these tracks, the band hurtles into passages of such cyclonic violence that it turns into a kind of blackened, gore-splattered noisecore, chainsaw guitars rumbling beneath the overdriven blastbeats and waves of rumbling noise, and Bravo uses extreme delay effects on her voice to produce some truly terrifying psychedelic effects on songs like the discordant, Autopsy-esque sludgefeast "Greenflies". There's a scornful review of this record that was posted by someone on the Metal Observer site that complained about what he perceived as Carrion's utter unlistenability, where he describes the sound of this album to being "like if Blasphemy and Beherit would interpret together some Einst�rzende Neubauten songs, and while I'd certainly question his taste, he might be on to something there. There's a weird, experimental edge to a lot of these songs that shows up in the form of that blasting formless guitar noise and the heavily processed effects that the band uses on their instruments and vocals, and it's clear that Nuclear Death were trying to create something extreme and otherworldly here. They definitely succeeded, producing one of the era's most bizarre and grotesque death metal albums.
An essential collection of some of the most chaotic, brain-scrambling and utterly filthy extreme metal ever unleashed.