Absent In Body "Plague God" LP
- Unit price
- / per
Absent in Body make their Relapse Records debut with the terrifying new album Plague God. Featuring current and former members of Amenra, Neurosis, and Sepultura, Plague God is bound by the same ideals of unity and fearlessly uncompromising honesty of expression that have driven their respective bands to imperious heights of reverence and groundbreaking sonic deliverance. Plague God is by turns devastating and sublime, drawn from musicians for whom life and art are inextricably bound. From the opening "Rise From Ruins" with Sepultura drummer, Igor Cavelera's tribal beat emerging from foreboding, near-subsonic oscillations to explode in a tide of corrosive riffs and feral howls, through "Sarin's" steadfast, procession-through-purgatory groove, to "The Half Rising Man's" matrix of organic/mechanic evolution, it's an album in constant dialogue between the animalistic, the human and the industrial, and a hunger to distill a truth, something unpolluted from the fray. Plague God doesn't just give voice to these moments of truth, but in the band's deep kinship integral to every claustrophobic judder, every stretch of atmospheric dread and helpless alias assumed, lies a freedom we both forget and attain at our peril.
Absent In Body "Plague God" LP
- Unit price
- / per
Adding product to your cart
You may also like
Absent in Body make their Relapse Records debut with the terrifying new album Plague God. Featuring current and former members of Amenra, Neurosis, and Sepultura, Plague God is bound by the same ideals of unity and fearlessly uncompromising honesty of expression that have driven their respective bands to imperious heights of reverence and groundbreaking sonic deliverance. Plague God is by turns devastating and sublime, drawn from musicians for whom life and art are inextricably bound. From the opening "Rise From Ruins" with Sepultura drummer, Igor Cavelera's tribal beat emerging from foreboding, near-subsonic oscillations to explode in a tide of corrosive riffs and feral howls, through "Sarin's" steadfast, procession-through-purgatory groove, to "The Half Rising Man's" matrix of organic/mechanic evolution, it's an album in constant dialogue between the animalistic, the human and the industrial, and a hunger to distill a truth, something unpolluted from the fray. Plague God doesn't just give voice to these moments of truth, but in the band's deep kinship integral to every claustrophobic judder, every stretch of atmospheric dread and helpless alias assumed, lies a freedom we both forget and attain at our peril.
You may also like
You may also like
Recommended products
By completing this form, you are signing up to receive our emails and can unsubscribe at any time.