Reek of Putrefaction
Reek of Putrefaction is the debut album by British extreme metal band Carcass. It was released by Earache Records in July 1988. It is considered the first release in the goregrind genre, which the band pioneered. Recording and productionReek of Putrefaction was recorded in four days at Rich Bitch Studios in Birmingham. According to guitarist Bill Steer, the studio's engineer "ruined" the record, especially its drum tracks. Carcass had only had a few hours available of mixing, so they had to release the LP as it was to meet the label's deadline. The band were "everything but happy" with the result, declared Steer.[2] When the master recording was first sent to the pressing plant, the original vinyl LP had to be pressed at lower volumes, because the bass frequencies were so low (sometimes reaching 25 Hz) that they were in danger of rendering higher frequencies inaudible.[3] MusicGuitarist/vocalist Bill Steer retrospectively said that "The first album wasn’t very focused, it was just about being fast and heavy..."[citation needed] He went on to say that the band did not intend the muddy sound present throughout the album: "The first one obviously is a crazy accident. It’s got a small following but we did not intend to make that record the thing that people hear now. We had different ideas and we just couldn’t execute them. We were too young, too naïve, and inexperienced. From 'Symphonies' onwards, we got better at achieving the things we wanted to achieve in the studio."[citation needed] Invisible Oranges wrote: "Carcass’ 1988 [debut] set new standards for auditory dismemberment, channeling the sound of Napalm Death through a vomited, gore-encrusted wormhole backwards. This is the aural nightmare of the dissecting table pushed beyond the extremes previously explored by the tinny sounds of blackthrash with bowl-rupturing, gurgling low end. Ken Owen flails about so nightmarishly you can’t even really distinguish if he’s even playing drums or has merely taken the contents of mortician’s tools of the trade and thrown them out of the window of morgue into the biohazard-labeled dumpster."[4] Release historyReek of Putrefaction was first released in 1988. When released, Reek of Putrefaction reached No. 6 on the UK Indie Chart, establishing Carcass' earlier grindcore sound.[5][6] The late BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel declared it his favourite album of 1988, in an interview for British newspaper The Observer.[7] Reek of Putrefaction was re-released in 1994.[8] In 2002, the album was reissued.[citation needed] The album was re-released in 2008 as part of an ongoing series of Carcass reissues to tie in with their reunion. The main album, along with the demo Flesh Ripping Sonic Torment, is presented as one side of a dualdisc, while the DVD side features the first part of an extended documentary titled The Pathologist's Report Part I: Incubation. Later editions contain the album on a CD and the documentary on a separate DVD. The album is presented in a 12-panel digipak with full lyrics and artwork and is sealed in a white medical bag with sticker, to hide the controversial cover art.[citation needed] ArtworkThe original album cover consisted of a collage of autopsy photographs collected from medical journals.[7] It has been said that the cover artwork "feature[s] real life abnormalities, grotesqueries and decomposition," and that "it's like a Where's Waldo? of gore... You find something new every time you look at it!"[9] Reek of Putrefaction was re-released in 1994 with a "clean" cover.[8] In 2002, the album was reissued with a censored outer cover proclaiming "Original artwork contained inside".[citation needed] LegacyIn 2017, Chris Dick of Decibel wrote: "Though we’ve had almost 30 years to adjust to Reek of Putrefaction’s scraping, blood-caked production, it still causes our ears to curl and hair to stand on end."[10] Track listing
Personnel
Charts
References
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