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State of Insurgency

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Download links and information about State of Insurgency by Hexen. This album was released in 2008 and it belongs to Rock, Metal genres. It contains 13 tracks with total duration of 55:58 minutes.

Artist: Hexen
Release date: 2008
Genre: Rock, Metal
Tracks: 13
Duration: 55:58
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Blast Radius 4:08
2. Gas Chamber 4:10
3. Past Life 5:14
4. Knee Deep in the Dead 4:01
5. Chaos Aggressor 5:08
6. Bedlam Walls 3:59
7. The Serpent 3:18
8. No More Color 3:32
9. Mutiny and Betrayal 4:49
10. Seditions in Peacetime 5:36
11. Desolate Horizons 5:03
12. State of Insurgency 5:05
13. Outro 1:55

Details

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In case you're wondering, the cover art for State of Insurgency — Hexen's sophomore album and first for Old School Metal Records — was indeed illustrated by legendary artist Ed Repka, renowned for his creations for a slew of classic albums by the likes of Megadeth, Nuclear Assault, and many more, over 20 years earlier. Now that we've gotten that little trivia question out of the way, is there any lingering doubt as to what specific kind of heavy metal this Los Angeles-based quartet performs? Yes, thrash, but not just thrash (see "Gas Chamber," "Bedlam Walls," and "No More Color," for that), but a balanced mixture of thrash and mid-paced traditional '80s metal (best exemplified by "Past Life" and the title track), akin to such bands as Omen, Hallows Eve, and Helstar. Unfortunately, Hexen vocalist/bassist Andre Hartoonian winds up shattering the complete illusion of trad metal authenticity with his coarse, unmusical, albeit still effective delivery (clean singing was a virtual must for these sorts of bands 20 years before), but there's little else wrong, instrumentally speaking, with standouts in this vein like "Blast Radius" and "Chaos Aggressor." State of Insurgency also benefits from consistently stupendous guitar solos from axemen Ronny Dorian and James Lopez (see "The Serpent" and "Mutiny and Betrayal" for prime examples), who also really let their hair down on the sublime instrumental showcase "Desolate Horizons," also featuring acoustic guitar from drummer Carlos Cruz. Wrap all of the above with strong songwriting throughout, and Hexen appear to have a leg up on most of the less versatile retro-thrash bands that have transformed the late '00s into a confusing game of wack-a-mosh.