| | Coroner Punishment For Decadence CD Coroner Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
Most anyone still doubting Coroner's merits as anything but "the band formed by Celtic Frost's old roadies" was likely silenced by their very impressive second album, 1988's Punishment for Decadence. Though not nearly as adventurous as their previous employers early on, the members of Coroner had the clear advantage of being incredibly gifted musicians from day one; and aesthetically, they evidently already aspired to become the thrash metal power trio equivalent of Rush by splitting songwriting duties between guitarist Tommy T. Baron and bassist/singer Ron Ross, while drummer Marquis Marky handled the lyric-writing. The analogy may seem a tad far-fetched, but though Punishment for Decadence's focus was still very much on speed (as if the players are simply relishing the joys of pulling off such complex technical gymnastics in the first place), there's no disguising Coroner's amazing compositional talents to make it all work. To be sure, songs like "Absorbed" and "Shadow of a Lost Dream" stay true to thrash metal's melody-averse philosophy, but careful listeners will notice Baron's solos becoming more musical by the minute -- especially obvious on the frenetic "Arc-Lite," which features a spellbinding workout of Yngwie Malmsteen-like speed and dexterity. More accomplished tracks like "Masked Jackal," "Sudden Fall" and the semi-industrial "The New Breed" all have their moments, but it's the excellent "Skeleton on Your Shoulder" which offers the most hints of the band's incredible output in later years. Plus, many thrash enthusiasts will find Coroner's over-the-top rendition of "Purple Haze" reason enough to investigate this rough-hewn gem. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia
2003 reissue of 1988 release on Noise Records which features a surprising cover of Hendrix's 'Purple Haze'. 10 tracks in all.
Personnel: Gary Marlowe (synthesizer).
Photographers: Marquis Marky; Alex Solca.
Unknown Contributor Role: Zurich.
Coroner: Ron Royce (vocals, bass); Tommy T. Baron (guitar, background vocals); Marquis Marky (drums, background vocals).
Additional personnel: Gary Marlowe (synthesizer); Dexter (background vocals).
Punishment For Decadence Music Coroner Punishment For Decadence Songs Punishment For Decadence Music Review Purchase Punishment For Decadence CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Metal Church CD (1985)
Punishment For Decadence album
$7.39 Much like the English punk movement before it, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal invaded hundreds ...
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Punishment For Decadence CD music
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| | Kreator Pleasure To Kill CD (1986) Remastered
Punishment For Decadence music CDs
$10.45 Metal band Kreator had been around for awhile before ...
| | Kreator Terrible Certainty CD (1988) Remastered
Punishment For Decadence songs
$10.45 Principally recorded at Horus Studios, Hanover, Germany and Musiclab Studios, Berlin, Germany in 1988. Includes liner notes by Mille Petrozza.
Kreator dialed in their modern thrash on Terrible Certainty, the group's third full-length offering. One of the most highly anticipated European metal records of the decade, this 1987 release proves that the previous year's hit, Pleasure to Kill, wasn't a fluke, ...
| | Coroner R.I.P. CD (1987)
Punishment For Decadence album
$10.45 1987's R.I.P. album represented a pretty inconspicuous start for Swiss trio Coroner -- one whose modest ambitions they would quickly outdistance on their way to morphing into one of thrash metal's all-time most adventurous bands. Guitarist Tommy T. Baron and drummer Marquis Marky had only recently quit their jobs as roadies for avant-thrashers Celtic Frost in order to join forces with vocalist/bassist Ron Ross and, their instant musical chemistry notwithstanding, the group was still trying to figure out a way to translate their shared virtuosity as players into comparable levels of songwriting inventiveness. Mere flashes of their potential were revealed here, with occasional, darkly ambient instrumental song snippets making their way among blistering examples of typical '80s thrash metal, ...
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Punishment For Decadence CD music
$13.25 Almost by definition, every musical genre (and the Bay Area thrash metal scene was no exception) is launched ...
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Punishment For Decadence music CDs
$8.39 After his debut on the tiny Brut Records (a short-lived record label of the famous cologne company), ...
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Punishment For Decadence songs
$14.45 An all-female rock band succeeding on a commercial level in the male-dominated heavy metal world is an anomaly. The Canadian hard rock trio Kittie (previously a quartet) has nevertheless managed ...
| | Freddie McGregor Anything For You CD (2002)
Punishment For Decadence album
$13.39 Contains an untitled hidden track which occurs after "A Prayer."
ANYTHING FOR YOU was nominated for the 2003 Grammy Awards for Best Reggae Album.
Many of reggae's greatest singers have aged badly, and many others have died young, not managing to age at all. Very few have gotten better as they've aged. Who would have thought that Freddie McGregor, much of whose earlier output was pleasant ...
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Punishment For Decadence CD music
$10.05 Smooth jazz presents something of a marketing quandary for both its practitioners and the labels that market them. On the one hand, it positions itself in the marketplace as a subgenre of jazz; on the other hand, serious jazz fans tend ...
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Punishment For Decadence music CDs
$27.59 Detals TBA. Lizard. 2004.
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Punishment For Decadence CD music
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