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Cryptic Slaughter|Convicted

Convicted

Cryptic Slaughter

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Langue disponible : anglais

Far more than a simple hardcore act, Southern California's Cryptic Slaughter was arguably the ultimate speedcore band. Though age, time, and experience would eventually teach them to slow things down on occasion, their 1986 debut album, Convicted, relies almost exclusively on the dizzying speed of thrash metal. In fact, younger fans listening to these tracks for the first time may hear nothing but metal (and for all intents and purposes, that's pretty much the case on select moments like "Rest in Pain" and "Rage to Kill"), but for those who were there the first time around, what they heard on Convicted was clearly the sound of two very distinct and defined musical lines beginning to blur the lines between them. For these ancient fans, speedcore staples like "M.A.D.," "Sudden Death," "State Control," and the classic "Lowlife" represented the explosive and unprecedented collision between metal and punk: impossibly technical in metallic execution, but ever dedicated to punky political rants. Racing past in one- or two-minute bursts, these enraged anti-establishment diatribes were made all the more potent by the incredible performance of bandmembers Crooks, Evans, Nicholson, and Peterson. And in retrospect, although it was clearly not as fully realized as Cryptic Slaughter's later efforts in terms of songwriting and production, Convicted's uniquely extreme onslaught remains perhaps even more important from an influence point of view. [Relapse Records' 2003 CD reissue rewards collectors to nine delightfully noisy bonus tracks: five from a demo cut in 1985 and four additional tracks recorded at a live show in Houston during 1988.]

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

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Convicted

Cryptic Slaughter

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1
M.A.D.
00:01:24

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

2
Little World
00:01:39

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

3
Sudden Death
00:01:44

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

4
Lowlife
00:02:32

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

5
Rage to Kill
00:01:49

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

6
Rest in Pain
00:03:03

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

7
Nuclear Future
00:04:16

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

8
State Control
00:01:49

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

9
Hypocrite
00:03:02

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

10
War to the Knife
00:01:54

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

11
Nation of Hate
00:01:24

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

12
Black and White
00:02:07

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

13
Reich of Torture
00:02:55

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

14
Convicted
00:01:33

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

15
Flesh of the Wench
00:02:36

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

16
Necessity Supreme
00:02:45

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

17
Life in Grave
00:01:36

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

18
War to the Knife
00:02:17

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

19
Rest in Pain
00:03:34

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

20
Set Your Own Pace (Live)
00:02:19

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

21
Positively (Live)
00:02:29

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

22
Black and White (Live)
00:02:20

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

23
Lowlife (Live)
00:02:59

Cryptic Slaughter, MainArtist

(C) 2003 Relapse Records (P) 2003 Relapse Records

Chronique

Far more than a simple hardcore act, Southern California's Cryptic Slaughter was arguably the ultimate speedcore band. Though age, time, and experience would eventually teach them to slow things down on occasion, their 1986 debut album, Convicted, relies almost exclusively on the dizzying speed of thrash metal. In fact, younger fans listening to these tracks for the first time may hear nothing but metal (and for all intents and purposes, that's pretty much the case on select moments like "Rest in Pain" and "Rage to Kill"), but for those who were there the first time around, what they heard on Convicted was clearly the sound of two very distinct and defined musical lines beginning to blur the lines between them. For these ancient fans, speedcore staples like "M.A.D.," "Sudden Death," "State Control," and the classic "Lowlife" represented the explosive and unprecedented collision between metal and punk: impossibly technical in metallic execution, but ever dedicated to punky political rants. Racing past in one- or two-minute bursts, these enraged anti-establishment diatribes were made all the more potent by the incredible performance of bandmembers Crooks, Evans, Nicholson, and Peterson. And in retrospect, although it was clearly not as fully realized as Cryptic Slaughter's later efforts in terms of songwriting and production, Convicted's uniquely extreme onslaught remains perhaps even more important from an influence point of view. [Relapse Records' 2003 CD reissue rewards collectors to nine delightfully noisy bonus tracks: five from a demo cut in 1985 and four additional tracks recorded at a live show in Houston during 1988.]

© Eduardo Rivadavia /TiVo

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