World Downfall

World Downfall
Studio album by Terrorizer
Released November 13, 1989 (1989-11-13)
Recorded May, 1989 at Morrisound Recording, Tampa, Florida
Genre Grindcore
Length 36:14
Label Earache, Relativity
Producer David Vincent
Terrorizer chronology
World Downfall
(1989)
Darker Days Ahead
(2006)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

World Downfall is the debut album by American grindcore band Terrorizer. It was released by Earache Records on November 13, 1989.

Background

World Downfall is regarded as one of the most influential grindcore albums ever: it showcases crunchy, heavily distorted guitar riffs and extremely fast and precise blast beats in addition to growling, harsh vocals and lyrics dealing with social issues, features that would become a standard among grindcore music, as of the cover art, which is similar to Napalm Death's Scum depicting a collage of Islamic terrorists, nuclear power plant, dead bodies and Jesus rising. About a third of the songs were actually Nausea material, the previous band of vocalist Oscar Garcia. The album was released in 1989 when the band had already split up, with Jesse Pintado joining Napalm Death, and David Vincent and Pete Sandoval joining Morbid Angel.

The song "Fear of Napalm" was featured in the video game Grand Theft Auto IV: The Lost and Damned, and the song "Dead Shall Rise" was on the soundtrack for the video game Splatterhouse.

Track listing

No. Title Length
1. "After World Obliteration"   3:30
2. "Storm of Stress"   1:28
3. "Fear of Napalm"   3:01
4. "Human Prey"   2:08
5. "Corporation Pull-In"   2:22
6. "Strategic Warheads"   1:38
7. "Condemned System"   1:22
8. "Resurrection"   2:59
9. "Enslaved by Propaganda"   2:14
10. "Need to Live"   1:17
11. "Ripped to Shreds"   2:52
12. "Injustice"   1:28
13. "Whirlwind Struggle"   2:16
14. "Infestation"   1:56
15. "Dead Shall Rise"   3:06
16. "World Downfall"   2:37
Total length:
36:14

Personnel

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Saturday, March 19, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.