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From Our Cold, Dead Hands

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Download links and information about From Our Cold, Dead Hands by Infanticide. This album was released in 2010 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 21 tracks with total duration of 26:12 minutes.

Artist: Infanticide
Release date: 2010
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal
Tracks: 21
Duration: 26:12
Buy on iTunes $5.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Domestic Warfare 2:23
2. Inside the Box 0:44
3. Millitant Resentment 1:19
4. Change! 1:05
5. Lifeless 0:52
6. Illusion of Purpose 1:22
7. Puzzles of the Flesh 0:56
8. A Worse Today 1:05
9. Tvärvägra 0:33
10. Shock and Awe 2:22
11. Shitfaced and Armed to the Teeth 0:40
12. Crisis Point 1:10
13. Within Inches 0:38
14. #(&%# ?7 0:38
15. Demerol Deity 1:27
16. Dödligt Självförsvar 0:48
17. Under Dumhet Digna Ned 2:08
18. A World of Opportunities 1:41
19. It Ends Here 1:22
20. The Alliance 1:27
21. Alone With God 1:32

Details

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Listening to the second full-length (if that term applies to a disc that packs 20 songs into 24:59) from Swedish grindcore act Infanticide is like standing in the middle of a hurricane in a gravel pit — it's somewhat unpredictable, and it hurts a whole lot. The stylistic parameters that existing fans know to associate with the term "Swedish grindcore" are definitely present — the bass is a thick, distorted rumble; the drums offer more of a D-beat/crust-punk swing than a death metal avalanche; the guitars are downtuned and just as distorted as the bass; and the vocals are a hoarse, furious roar. But Infanticide throw just enough surprises at the listener, like opening with the longest track (a marathon at 2:23) and making the first half of that song a slow-burning, doomy instrumental, to vault them out of the pack of Nasum and Regurgitate clones. They demonstrate some compositional imagination, too, blasting through riffs that wouldn't sound out of place on a Prong album. The lyrics are the usual grindcore blend of political rage and general nihilism, with a dash of black humor showing up in song titles like "A Worse Today" (as opposed to a better tomorrow, one assumes) and "Shitfaced and Armed to the Teeth." The album cover, depicting a gas mask-wearing homeless person with a shopping cart full of assault weapons, is another good joke, one that recalls early-'80s hardcore's collage aesthetic. This isn't the most innovative album of 2010, but it's a fun listen.