| | Slayer Seasons In The Abyss CD Slayer Discography of CDs
(22 Customer Reviews)
Out of print in the U.S.! For nearly 25 years, Slayer have remained the most important and influential Speed Metal band in history. Seasons In The Abyss s their 1990 album featuring 10 tracks including 'War Ensemble', 'Expendable Youth', 'Skeletons Of Society' and more. Warner.
Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass); Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Recorded at Hit City West, Hollywood Sound, California and Record Plant, Los Angeles, California. After staking out new territory with the underrated South of Heaven, Slayer brought back some of the pounding speed of Reign in Blood for their third major-label album, Seasons in the Abyss. Essentially, Seasons fuses its two predecessors, periodically kicking up the mid-tempo grooves of South of Heaven with manic bursts of aggression. "War Ensemble" and the title track each represented opposite sides of the coin, and they both earned Slayer their heaviest MTV airplay to date. In fact, Seasons in the Abyss is probably their most accessible album, displaying the full range of their abilities all in one place, with sharp, clean production. Since the band is refining rather than progressing or experimenting, Seasons doesn't have quite the freshness of its predecessors, but aside from that drawback, it's strong almost all the way from top to bottom (with perhaps one or two exceptions). Lyrically, the band rarely turns to demonic visions of the afterlife anymore, preferring instead to find tangible horror in real life -- war, murder, human weakness. There's even full-fledged social criticism, which should convince any doubters that Slayer aren't trying to promote the subjects they sing about. Like Metallica's Master of Puppets or Megadeth's Peace Sells...but Who's Buying, Seasons in the Abyss paints Reagan-era America as a cesspool of corruption and cruelty, and the music is as devilishly effective as ever. ~ Steve Huey Slayer built a rabid following with faster-than-light thrash metal, eerie, disturbing lyrics, and bassist/singer Tom Araya's screamed vocals. 1986's REIGN IN BLOOD, a blinding metal classic that clocked in at below a half hour in length and was produced by Rick Rubin, put the band on the metal map. Although Slayer was a bunch of longhairs, it wasn't uncommon to see hardcore skinheads slamming away at the band's shows. But 1988's SOUTH OF HEAVEN alienated many of Slayer's punk fans, as the group slowed their speed metal to a Black Sabbath-like crawl. 1990's SEASONS IN THE ABYSS follows its predecessor's formula. The album was embraced by metal-heads everywhere, eventually earning Slayer its first gold-certified record. The furious opening "War Ensemble" is a throwback to Slayer's earlier speed metal direction, while the album-closing title track is a murky, swarming chunk of metal. Other standouts include the chilling "Dead Skin Mask," which dealt lyrically with notorious killer Ed Gein, "Blood Red," "Expendable Youth," "Hallowed Point," and "Skeletons of Society." For fans of extreme-metal, it doesn't get any better than Slayer's SEASONS IN THE ABYSS.
Entertainment Weekly (11/9/90) - "..Very heavy metal of the thrash kind.." - Rating: B+ Seasons In The Abyss Music Slayer Seasons In The Abyss Songs Seasons In The Abyss Music Seasons In The Abyss Music Review Buy Seasons In The Abyss CD Purchase Seasons In The Abyss CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Slayer Hell Awaits CD (1994)
Seasons In The Abyss
$13.39 Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass); Jeff Hannemann, Kerry King (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Recorded at Track Record, Los Angeles, California and Eldorado, Hollywood, California. Digitally remastered by Eddy Schreyer (November 1993, Future Disc). Personnel: Tom Araya (vocals); Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Audio Remasterer: Eddy Schreyer. Photographer: Harold O. When it was released in 1985, Slayer's second full album, Hell Awaits, seemed to many a nearly impenetrable cacophony of sound. However, it proved to be incredibly ahead of its time instead, and has since been confirmed as a mandatory item in the band's remarkable discography. Why? Well, despite its many memorable tunes, the songwriting on Slayer's 1983 debut, Show No Mercy, was firmly entrenched in blues-based punk/metal, and it wasn't until the following year's more excessive Haunting the Chapel ...
| | Slayer Reign In Blood CD (1986)
Seasons In The Abyss
$11.19 Out of print in the U.S.! For nearly 25 years, Slayer have remained the most important and influential Speed Metal band in history. Reign In Blood is their 1986 mind-numbing opus featuring 12 tracks including 'Angle Of Death', 'Necrophobic', 'Altar Of Sacrifice' and more. Warner.
Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass); Kerry King, Jeff Hanneman (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass guitar); Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Widely considered the pinnacle of speed metal, Reign in Blood is Slayer's undisputed masterpiece, a brief (under half an hour) but relentless onslaught that instantly obliterates anything in its path and clears out just as quickly. Producer Rick Rubin gives the band a clear, punchy sound for the first time in its career, and they largely discard the extended pieces of Hell Awaits in favor of lean assaults somewhat reminiscent of hardcore punk (though distinctly metallic and much more technically demanding). Reign ...
| | Slayer South Of Heaven CD (1988)
Seasons In The Abyss
$10.49 Out of print in the U.S.! 1988 release from the most popular Death Metal band of all-time. South Of Heaven was the band's fourth studio album and their final release for Def Jam before following label-head Rick Rubin and moving to his new label, Def America. 10 tracks of brutal strength including 'Silent Scream', 'Live Undead' and 'Dissident Aggressor'. Warner.
Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass); Jeff hanneman, Kerry King (guitar); Dave Lombardo (drums). Recorded in Los Angeles, California. When it comes to death metal, no band is more convincing than Slayer. For other bands, focusing on death, Satanism, the supernatural, and the occult became a cliché; but Slayer's controversial reflections on evil always came across as honest and heartfelt. The group's sincerity is the thing that makes South of Heaven so disturbing and powerful -- when the influential thrashers rip into such morbid fare as "Spill the Blood," "Mandatory Suicide," and "Ghosts of War," they are frighteningly convincing. ...
| | Slayer Divine Intervention CD (1994)
Seasons In The Abyss
$10.49 Out-of-print in the US. Import version of their 1994 album. Warner.
Slayer: Tom Araya (vocals, bass); Kerry King, Jeff Hanneman (guitar); Paul Bostaph (drums). Recorded at Oceanway, Los Angeles, California and Sound City, Van Nuys, California. The rock & roll landscape changed dramatically between Seasons in the Abyss in 1990 and Divine Intervention in 1994. With the rise of alternative rock, many metal and hard rock bands that had been enormously successful at the dawn of the '90s were struggling by the middle of the decade. Instead of doing something calculated like emulating Nirvana or Pearl Jam -- or for that matter, Nine Inch Nails or Ministry -- Slayer wisely refused to sound like anyone but Slayer. Tom Araya and co. responded to the new environment simply by striving to be the heaviest metal band they possibly could. Less accessible than Seasons but equally riveting, Divine Intervention marked drummer Paul Bostaph's studio debut with the band. Bostaph proved to be a positive, energizing influence on Slayer, ...
| | Ozzy Osbourne Ozzmosis CD (1995) Remastered
Seasons In The Abyss
$7.59 + 2 Bonus Tracks. Replaces #Cbs 67091.
Personnel: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Zakk Wylde (guitar); Rick Wakeman, Michael Beinhorn (keyboards); Geezer Butler (bass); Deen Castronovo (drums). Producer: Michael Beinhorn. Reissue producer: Bruce Dickinson. Recorded at Guillaume Tell Studios, Paris, France, Right Track Recording and Electric Lady Studios, New York, Bearsville Studios, Woodstock, New York. Includes liner notes by Phil Alexander. All tracks have been digitally remastered. Personnel: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Zakk Wylde (guitar); Michael Beinhorn (keyboards); Deen Castronovo (drums). Audio Mixer: David Bianco. Recording information: Bearsville Sound Studios, Bearsville, NY; Electric Lady Studios, New York, NY; Guillaume Tell Studios, Paris, France; Right Track Recording, New York, NY. Photographer: ...
| | Ozzy Osbourne The Ozzman Cometh CD (1997)
Seasons In The Abyss
$9.69 THE OZZMAN COMETH is a single CD collection of hits, previously unavailable recordings and one new track. Previously included a limited edition second disc containing 2 of the 4 previously unavailable recordings as well as an interview with Ozzy Osbourne. Personnel: Ozzy Osbourne (vocals); Tony Iommi, Randy Rhoads, Zakk Wylde, ...
| | John Langstaff Songs For Singing Children CD (1962)
Seasons In The Abyss
$13.39
| | Sacred Rite Rites Of Passage CD (2006)
Seasons In The Abyss
$22.15
| | Dollars And Pounds Ironjaw CD (2005)
Seasons In The Abyss
$11.39 Dollars and Pounds is a a breath of fresh air in the ever increasing hip hop scene. With raw, ill lyrics by copeAsetic and krames and headbangin beats from DJ krames on the production, you can't help but to nod ya head. D&P comes with the ill mix of underground and party banger hip hop, and it is obvious that they come correct with it. You may have heard about copeAsetic and krames from their past invovlement in the Unusual Suspects out of Washington D.C. or the many mix tapes both ...
| | Reism Lifestyle Product CD (2005)
Seasons In The Abyss
$17.69
| | Fade To Glory CD (2004)
Seasons In The Abyss
$11.39
| | Collisionkorse CD (2004)
Seasons In The Abyss
$10.15
| | Tri-Star Embodiment Songs Of Groove Power & Domination CD (2005)
Seasons In The Abyss
$10.09
| | Hank Marvin Guitar Man CD (2007) (Import) Import
Seasons In The Abyss
$26.29
| | Ulysses Grant Salett Gospel Anthology 2 CD (2008)
Seasons In The Abyss
$9.35 Ulysses Grant is an aspiring artist out of the Atlanta area. The Gospel Anthology series was formulated when Ulysses decided to let the world know about his personal life struggles, how God delivered him from those struggles, and how others ...
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