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The Codex Necro
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The Codex Necro
Current price: $14.99
Barnes and Noble
The Codex Necro
Current price: $14.99
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Size: CD
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Anaal Nathrakh
introduced the world to their devastating maelstrom of black and death metal, grindcore and industrial music with 2001's astonishing
The Codex Necro
, almost singlehandedly pushing England back into the forefront of global musical extremity in the process. More astounding still, this incredibly radical and complex sonic vision (think
Ministry
on crack, piped up straight from the very depths of hell) was the work of but two men: the demonic duo of vocalist
V.I.T.R.I.O.L.
(aka
Dave Hunt
, of
Benediction
and
Mistress
) and self-sufficient songwriter, guitarist, bassist, and drums/keyboards programmer
Irrumator
Mick Kenney
of
Frost
,
Exploder
, etc.), both of whom had spent the better part of three years orchestrating this inexorable, sensory-overloading debut. Indeed, there are so many things going on during any given track here that simple stamina quickly becomes the skeleton key to deciphering (and withstanding)
The Codex Necro'
s "anything (heavy) goes" stylistic potpourri. This in spite of the especially raw production standards employed throughout (noticeably rawer than
Anaal Nathrakh'
s later-day efforts), thus forcing listeners to earn their sonic just desserts amid the densely layered guitar parts, rumbling roars, and nails-on-chalkboard screeches, blastbeat after blastbeat, needlework synthesizer patterns, and abundant spoken word dialogues taken from this film or that. Before it's all said and done, insanity is a distinct possibility -- as are widespread plaudits placing
on many metal publications' "best album of the month," "year," even "decade" lists -- and deservingly so. [The 2006 reissue of
by
Earache Records
tacked on four rare live performances from a 2003
BBC Radio 1
session curated by the legendary
John Peel
; quite a treat considering that
very rarely take their music beyond studio walls.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
introduced the world to their devastating maelstrom of black and death metal, grindcore and industrial music with 2001's astonishing
The Codex Necro
, almost singlehandedly pushing England back into the forefront of global musical extremity in the process. More astounding still, this incredibly radical and complex sonic vision (think
Ministry
on crack, piped up straight from the very depths of hell) was the work of but two men: the demonic duo of vocalist
V.I.T.R.I.O.L.
(aka
Dave Hunt
, of
Benediction
and
Mistress
) and self-sufficient songwriter, guitarist, bassist, and drums/keyboards programmer
Irrumator
Mick Kenney
of
Frost
,
Exploder
, etc.), both of whom had spent the better part of three years orchestrating this inexorable, sensory-overloading debut. Indeed, there are so many things going on during any given track here that simple stamina quickly becomes the skeleton key to deciphering (and withstanding)
The Codex Necro'
s "anything (heavy) goes" stylistic potpourri. This in spite of the especially raw production standards employed throughout (noticeably rawer than
Anaal Nathrakh'
s later-day efforts), thus forcing listeners to earn their sonic just desserts amid the densely layered guitar parts, rumbling roars, and nails-on-chalkboard screeches, blastbeat after blastbeat, needlework synthesizer patterns, and abundant spoken word dialogues taken from this film or that. Before it's all said and done, insanity is a distinct possibility -- as are widespread plaudits placing
on many metal publications' "best album of the month," "year," even "decade" lists -- and deservingly so. [The 2006 reissue of
by
Earache Records
tacked on four rare live performances from a 2003
BBC Radio 1
session curated by the legendary
John Peel
; quite a treat considering that
very rarely take their music beyond studio walls.] ~ Eduardo Rivadavia