CATTLE DECAPITATION United States
CATTLE DECAPITATION - Manufactured Extinct
Info / Bio / Diskografie / Video / Komentáře
Info
U téhle kapely vynecháme tradiční hudební úvod a medové řečičky. CATTLE
DECAPITATION jsou jednou z nejznámějších death metal / grind kapel,
která propaguje bez jakýchkoliv kudrlinek a vedlejších úmyslů
vegetariánství a práva zvířat.
Jejich brutální obaly jsou světoznámé i mimo hudební svět. Stejně jako
je brutální jejich grafika, tak hrubá je i produkce. Léčba šokem!
Totální death / grind masakr! Kde jinde by měli v Čechách a na Slovensku
vystoupit než právě na Obscene Extreme Festivalu v Trutnově!!!
Bio
Compromise is not a concept Cattle Decapitation are willing to
entertain. Ever. Over the course of nineteen years and six full-lengths
the San Diego quartet have more than proven this, defining themselves as
one of the most vital, brutal, and relentless forces in extreme music,
and with The Anthropocene Extinction they have delivered a volatile,
apocalyptic beast that is as hideous as it is compelling. "I feel that
something rare happens with our band in that we get better and better
with each release rather than going in the opposite direction, which
happens to a lot of bands," states vocalist Travis Ryan. "As we get
older we feel we have less and less to lose, which is freeing, and we
really want to go as far out on a limb as we can without losing the
extremity that has always driven us."
With 2012's Monolith Of Inhumanity Ryan, guitarist Josh Elmore, bassist
Derek Engemann and drummer Dave McGraw delivered a sledgehammer blow,
maintaining their position at the most violent end of the death metal
spectrum yet expanding their sound, allowing a little more melody in
without losing any of their intensity. As always tied together by a
central concept, Ryan's bleak lyrics bluntly illustrated the fate of the
human race if allowed to continue pillaging and destroying the planet.
With The Anthropocene Extinction he extrapolates on this subject,
looking back at the world in the aftermath of such ecological and
environmental devastation, with its focus largely centered on the
Pacific Ocean. "The Anthropocene Era is the era that humankind has
inhabited, and it encompasses all of the ages that have come and gone
during that period, and the record focuses on how we have managed to
bring that era to an end. As our technology has advanced we have
degraded the Earth. When you look to the oceans the footprint we have
left comes in the form of all the junk and plastic that has made it out
there because we let that happen, and the effect that has, because when
you start breaking down eco-systems it's a domino effect and will one
day end up doing us in. The Anthropocene Extinction is set in the world
that we destroyed, and it's certainly the most depressing record I've
written."
Of course, rather than taking such themes and applying them to
introspective, navel-gazing music they weld them onto a soundtrack of
all out savagery. Dominated by their blistering death-grind attack,
shades of caustic black metal seep in across the record, and they
further expand on the more epic and melodic aspects of its predecessor,
at the same time making for a far more cohesive listening experience.
"We've never actively said "let's do a black metal part" or
"let's do a brutal blastbeat part!" We base everything on feeling,
but we definitely focused much more on fluidity within the songs and
making the record flow much more than on some of our earlier releases."
With doom drenched opener "Manufactured Extinct" they set the scene, the
monstrous "Clandestine Ways (Krokodil Rot)" - which turns the tables on
the vivisectionists working in the cosmetic industry - and "Not
Suitable For Life" perhaps the most intense and violent music the band
have yet put their name to. Alongside these sit brooding instrumental
"The Burden Of Seven
Billion" and the melancholic "Ave Exitium",
and across the record Ryan's mutated, high pitched melodic shriek -
which could never be mistaken for 'clean' vocals - gets more space to
breathe. This provides The Anthropocene Extinction with its catchiest
parts, though dispensed sparingly and never forced, taking "Mammals In
Babylon", "Apex Blasphemy" and closer "Pacific Grim" into somewhat
tragic, desperate territory. "I think we came out with something pretty
damn catchy, which I know isn't a common trait of this kind of music,
but then again we're not trying to be like everybody else, or anybody
else. When you have four drastically different opinions in a band that's
where I think actual magic happens. We're all into very different
things, and sometimes that can lead to conflicts, sometimes that can
lead to greatness."
Reenlisting Monolith Of Inhumanity producer Dave Otero (Allegaeon,
Cephalic Carnage), the band returned to Flatline Audio in Denver, CO,
eager to revisit the close collaboration that helped bring that record
to life. "Dave is a bonafide producer, he's got a lot of great ideas and
this time we heard him out pretty religiously because making Monolith
had worked out so well. We've always kind of co-produced our records
with whoever we brought in, but these last two we did a lot more
listening to what he had to say rather than just sticking with what we
were saying. Sometimes we shot down his ideas and vice versa, but that
discussion was always beneficial. He basically becomes the fifth member
of the band at that point, and I think that kind of relationship is the
best way to get anything out of anybody." The Anthropocene Extinction
also features contributions from some notable guests, with Tristan Shone
(AKA Author & Punisher) contributing to "Plagueborne", Bethlehem's
Jürgen Bartsch providing a spoken word part - in his native German
tongue - for "Pacific Grim", and Phil Anselmo lends his sandblasted
larynx to "The Prophets Of Loss". "We originally didn't plan on having
any guest appearances, but when the opportunities presented themselves
while we were in the studio, they just seemed to fit perfectly and it
was great we were able to actually get them involved. We had played the
Housecore Horror Film Fest in Austin and we shot the shit with Phil,who
is a very cool guy, but it was our friend John Jarvis (Pig Destroyer,
Fulgora) who reached out to him - without telling us - and then told us
he wanted to be on the record!" Ryan laughs. "The part you hear him do
on that song is exactly what popped into my head as soon as we learned
he was going to do something with us, and really all of those guys
contributed something so cool to the finished product."
The Anthropocene Extinction also sees the band extending their
collaboration with Wes Benscoter, who has handled the artwork for every
release since 2002's To Serve Man. "As with the case of Dave Otero, when
we work with Wes he becomes a member of the band, and this also applies
to Mitch Massie [who directed the notoriously NSFW video clip for
Monolith Of Inhumanity's "Forced Gender Reassignment"]. I care about
their opinions just as much as my own, and it's about putting the ball
in the court of these guys as much as possible without sacrificing our
artistic integrity." As usual, Benscoter formulated striking imagery
that conveyed the record's themes in unflinching style, the cover
featuring a bloated and distorted corpse washed up on a beach, its torn
abdomen disgorging a mass of waste plastic. "It harkens back to what's
going on with the albatrosses they have been finding on Midway Island
for years. They're mistaking plastic for krill, ingesting this and
dropping dead on the island, and as they decay the plastic inside them
spills out. It paints a vivid picture of what's going on out there, and
we're taking that and putting that within a human context, because, as I
said before, it's a domino effect that ultimately leads back to our own
downfall."
Bio written by Dan Slessor
Travis Ryan - Vocals
Josh Elmore - Guitar
Derek Engemann - Bass
Dave McGraw - Drums
Discography
Datum vydání | Název nahrávky | Média |
---|---|---|
2015 | The Anthropocene Extinction | CD, LP |
2012 | Monolith of Inhumanity | CD |
2009 | The Harvest Floor | CD |
2006 | Karma.Bloody.Karma | CD |
2005 | Cattle Decapitation / Caninus- split | EP |
2004 | Humanure | CD |
2002 | To Serve Man | CD |
2000 | Homovore | CD |
2000 | Decapitacion | EP |
1999 | Human Jerky | EP |
1996 | Ten Torments of the Damned | DEMO |