When Fire Rains Down from the Sky
Download links and information about When Fire Rains Down from the Sky by Anaal Nathrakh. This album was released in 2003 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 40:40 minutes.
Artist: | Anaal Nathrakh |
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Release date: | 2003 |
Genre: | Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal, Alternative |
Tracks: | 9 |
Duration: | 40:40 |
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Buy on iTunes $8.91 |
Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | Cataclysmic Nihilism | 4:47 |
2. | How the Angels Fly In (We Can Never Be Forgiven) | 2:49 |
3. | Never F*****g Again | 4:12 |
4. | Genesis of the Antichrist | 4:28 |
5. | Atavism | 6:07 |
6. | When Fire Rains Down from the Sky Mankind Will Reap As It Has Sown | 4:24 |
7. | Human All Too F*****g Human (BBC Rock Show Session) | 6:13 |
8. | Swallow the World (BBC Rock Show Session) | 3:01 |
9. | Do Not Speak (BBC Rock Show Session) | 4:39 |
Details
[Edit]Two years on from their landmark debut, Birmingham, England's Anaal Nathrakh (that's simply Merlin's magic charm for "serpent's breath," for you perverts out there) reappeared with 2003's expansively named EP When Fire Rains Down from the Sky, Mankind Will Reap as It Has Sown, boasting six new expressions of industrialized black metal captured with distinctively cleaner fidelity than its predecessor. Some purists actually looked down upon such refinements, but the vast majority of the paying public was only too happy to get its ass kicked by new music from Britain's most daring and promising new extreme metal export in years. And along with the greater attention to production standards, new offerings like "Cataclysmic Nihilism" (which pretty much defined the group's mission statement), "How the Angels Fly In" (a study in controlled dissonance with Aborym's Sethlans Teitan guesting on guitar), and "Atavism" (a relative rocker, featuring vocals by Attila Csihar) sprinkled in greater dynamic variety and slower tempos into the previously unilaterally blastbeaten songs of yesteryear. Have no fear, though, since the relentless title track, the eyebrow-raising "Never F*****g Again," and the absolutely murderous "Genesis of the Antichrist" (a remake of an earlier song originally bearing the band's name) all consisted of totally unhinged brutality, primed to hunt down, kill, and skewer any remote notion of commercial accessibility. Just what the doctor ordered for fans of Anaal Nathrakh, in other words. [This EP's 2006 reissue by Earache Records added three tracks recorded during a BBC Rock Show performance in 2005.]