The Malmö Symphony Orchestra and Choir performs Clandestine, arranged by Thomas Von Wachenfeldt. In the second act, the band performs the entire album live.
Swedish death metal titans Entombed’s third album, Wolverine Blues, and British legends Bolt Thrower’s The IVth Crusade, reissued on Full Dynamic Range vinyl.
In 2002, much respected-metal veterans Entombed played as the pit orchestra for some kinda fuckin’ ballet. This is the CD document of that live extravaganza.
Entombed have an innate talent for explosive groovy extreme metal, but sometimes they hit the autopilot and go with the first thing that pops into their heads.
It’s Troma, so unless you rent only from Blockbuster, you know this is some sexy, gross, weird and wild shit. Get this soundtrack cuz every band is a someone.
From Sabbath’s ’76’s “Heaven and Hell” to ’00’s Apartment 26 (could be Kittie or Coal Chamber, really) to faves like Entombed, The Haunted, and Arch Enemy.
Some atmospheric keys and a female vocalist above the Ministry-meets-Meshuggah chug, but Jorgen could say, “how’s it going?” and it’d sound evil as shit.
Tracks nicely, playing as a really strong album. The appropriate way to find out what’s what with one of America’s premier rock/punk/metal/hardcore labels.
How better to offer tribute to a band that criss-crossed punk, hardcore, metal, and reggae than to have a long and diverse comp that’s practically unlistenable?
Entombed came to the States to push To Ride, Shoot Straight and Speak The Truth. It may not match Clandestine, but it stomps like Motörhead on steroids.
An album pulsating with spine-splintering songs and a guillotine-like sharpness in sound. These guys have infused a rock ‘n’ roll feel with their deathy sound.