The Grudge
Download links and information about The Grudge by Mortiis. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 10 tracks with total duration of 46:38 minutes.
Artist: | Mortiis |
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Release date: | 2004 |
Genre: | Electronica, Jazz, Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal, Alternative |
Tracks: | 10 |
Duration: | 46:38 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Broken Skin | 5:30 |
2. | Way Too Wicked | 4:37 |
3. | The Grudge | 5:35 |
4. | Decadent and Desperate | 3:24 |
5. | The Worst In Me | 7:09 |
6. | Gibber | 4:18 |
7. | Twist the Knife | 4:13 |
8. | The Loneliest Thing | 4:53 |
9. | Le Petit Cochon Sordide | 4:33 |
10. | Asthma | 2:26 |
Details
[Edit]Mortiis continues to expand the musical frontiers of his black metal style on what he calls "Mortiis Four," The Grudge. (Mortiis One-through-Three, presumably, being 1993's Født Til Å Herske, 1999's Stargate, and 2001's Smell of Rain). Or perhaps one should say "they," since on this album Mortiis is credited as a band consisting of singer and synthesizer player Mortiis himself, guitarist Levi Gawron, guitarist Asmund Sveinunggard, and drummer Leo Troy. In any case, the sound continues to be a combination of heavy metal and electronic dance-rock, with the styles sometimes alternating back and forth, as they do in the opening track, "Broken Skin." Singing in English, but in a heavily processed voice, Mortiis rails over the relentless rhythms and synthesizer patterns about his own failings and those of someone he criticizes without letup. "I've gone too far," he confesses in "Broken Skin," but that's nothing compared to what "you" have done, as he makes clear in one song after another, condemning his victim as an "emotional heretic" in the title song and complaining, "You bring out the worst in me" in "The Worst in Me." Grudge is an album of rage set to complex musical textures and thundering beats, and expressed in a torn and anguished voice. "I'm the one you fear," he declares in "Gibber," and no wonder.