| | Onslaught Force CD Onslaught Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
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Onslaught's 1986 sophomore album displays the group's continued similarity to early Slayer, albeit with murkier, lower-budget production. Still, their musical chops have improved, setting the stage for the more accomplished In Search of Sanity. ~ Steve Huey Onslaught Force Songs | 1. | Let There Be Death | $0.99 | |
| 2. | Metal Forces | |
| 3. | Fight with the Beast | $0.99 | |
| 4. | Demoniac | $0.99 | |
| 5. | Flame of the Antichrist | $1.87 | |
| 6. | Contract in Blood | $0.99 | |
| 7. | Thrash Till the Death | $0.99 | |
| Purchase Force CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Metal Church CD (1985)
Force album
$7.39 Much like the English punk movement before it, the New Wave of British Heavy Metal invaded hundreds of American garages in the early '80s and launched countless bands across the nation. It is interesting to note, however, that while in major cities with thriving punk rock this phenomenon manifested itself in the form of thrash metal (for example, L.A.'s Metallica, New York's Anthrax), in secondary capitals, up-and-coming bands generally boasted a more mainstream metal approach. Such was the case with Phoenix's Armored Saint, Connecticut's Fates Warning, and Seattle's Queensryche, but Metal Church (also from Seattle) seemed determined to cover both angles on their powerful 1985 debut. But while the complex songwriting and aggressive riffing seen on trad metal epics like "Beyond the Black," "Gods of Wrath," and "Metal Church" are about as good as it gets, thrashier moments like "My Favorite Nightmare," "Battalions," and the appropriately named instrumental "Merciless Onslaught" still needed a little ...
| | Possessed Seven Churches CD (1985) Remastered
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$10.69 Often cited as the first true death metal record ever released (Florida's Death had been around just as long but would only make their vinyl debut a few years later), Possessed's Seven Churches took thrash metal's intensity to new levels of brutality. With song titles like "Burning in Hell," "Satan's Curse," and "The Exorcist" (featuring the famous movie's eerie title theme for an intro), the band definitely displayed a strong Slayer influence; but it was Possessed growler Jeff Becerra who first introduced the barely decipherable grunting vocal style which would epitomize the death metal genre. Among the highlights, "Pentagram," "Twisted Minds," and "Fallen Angel" have best stood the test of time, offering glimpses of the trends to follow with their surprisingly mature songwriting. They then close the proceedings in ferocious fashion with the appropriately titled -- you guessed it -- "Death Metal." In the years that followed, Possessed would continued ...
| | Death Scream Bloody Gore CD (1987)
Force music CDs
$7.99 A seminal album that helped establish the death metal subgenre, Scream Bloody Gore may be slightly musically amateurish next to Death's subsequent albums, but it trades polish for savage, gut-wrenching force and speed. Building on the blueprint of Slayer's Reign in Blood, the lyrics match the disturbing, stomach-churning qualities of the music, ...
| | Kreator Terrible Certainty CD (1988) Remastered
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$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, and that Kreator was capable of delivering under pressure. The German outfit cranks up the technical difficulty on Terrible Certainty, executing the tightest performances of their career while maneuvering around some extremely difficult, yet memorable riffs. The guitar flurries of the title track and "Behind the Mirror" hold their own against the best work from Metallica or any other American thrash behemoths. Some might argue that the stateside metal heads even took some cues from Terrible Certainty. It is certain that Kreator's influence isn't limited to stateside artists, as modern European metal has never been the same since the group unleashed a slew of powerful late-'80s discs, Terrible ...
| | Exciter Heavy Metal Maniac CD (1983)
Force album
$11.39 Released in 1983, the debut album from thrash metal pioneers Exciter puts them in league with then-emerging contemporaries Metallica and Slayer. While Exciter may not be on a par with those giants, HEAVY METAL MANIAC packs plenty of punch, mercilessly ripping through a brutal ...
| | Onslaught Power From Hell CD (1990) Reissue; Remastered
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$10.19 Originally released in 1985 and reissued a couple of times since, Onslaught's debut album Power from Hell mines territory ...
| | Guitar Rock: Smokin' 60'S CD (2003)
Force music CDs
$5.95 A brief collection of late-'60s guitar rock, with emphasis on the druggier end of things, this set manages to touch a lot of bases, from the (relatively) rougher side of the Monkees with "Circle Sky" to the everything-in-the-red primitiveness of the Stooges with "I Wanna Be Your Dog." Also included is the most explosive song Love ever did, ...
| | Galactic Heroes Every Sidewalk CD (2004)
Force songs
$11.99 The four years between the releases of Galactic Heroes records has luckily meant no change to their happy-go-lucky indie pop sound. Built around the frantically strummed acoustic guitars of Mike and Ricky, the songs are layered with all sorts of percussion, keyboards, bells, horns, and aural sweets. On top sit the cute but not precious vocals, both Mike and Ricky sing in the open-throated, wide-eyed style of teenage kids discovering pop for the first time, and their harmonies are unremittingly sweet. Maybe the more hard-hearted among us may dismiss this record and the band as twee, but anyone who goes beyond the obvious will see and hear that the band has a passion and highly developed sense of arrangement and craft that propels them beyond amateur status. Songs like the shimmering "Payphone ...
| | Band Of Horses Everything All The Time CD (2006)
Force album
$11.85 EVERYTHING ALL THE TIME is the debut release on Sub Pop from Seattle's Band of Horses. Matt Brooke and Ben Bridwell have abandoned the melancholic slow-core of their previous band Carissa's Weird for a brighter, more straightforward indie rock sound with obvious roots in Neil Young's ragged folk and progressive indie bands like Built to Spill.
EVERYTHING ALL THE TIME benefits from strong songwriting, and the winding, yearning tenor of Bridwell, while the synthesis of introspective folky ...
| | Stefano Di Battista Trouble Shootin CD (2008) (Import) Japan
Force CD music
$40.79
| | Mighty Underdogs Prelude EP CD (2008)
Force music CDs
$9.69
| | John Coltrane Dakar CD (2008) (Import) Japan; 24 Bit Remastered; Super-High Material
Force songs
$45.59
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