Digestor, guitar, vocals: Son of a mad trappist monk and a syphilitic gipsy, born in Bergen, Germany.
Dissector, guitar, vocals:
Dissector was given birth by the
Swamp Hag in Creepsylvania (Romania). It’s a horrible larva that feeds on the festering remains of
Ghoul's other members.
Cremator, bass, vocals:
Bastard born from a prostitute in the catacombs of
Paris, Cremator was raised by a one-armed toothless blacksmith.
Fermentor, drums: Fermentor was found near dead in a vineyard by some retarded grape stealer in Yugoslavia. It is thought that is the result of an abortion that went wrong.
This is the curriculum vitae of
Ghoul’s members that you can find with more ample and crusty details on the band’s website. With such prerequisites, needless to say that
Ghoul are taken themselves too seriously.
Ghoul are the gathering of musicians already gathered (sic) since except for a change in moniker, it is almost the exact same line-up that constitutes two legendary US Death
Metal monsters:
Impaled and Exhumed.
And what is the common denominator for two bands like
Impaled and Exhumed? Their limitless passion for an album that keeps on creating vocations:
Carcass’ Symphonies of
Sickness. Those famous
Carcass clones, more numerous than the present population of Swaziland, who, each in their own way, help keep the legend alive, the most glorious hours of what they all deem the undisputed summit of Death
Metal.
Let’s just skip for now the almost infinite list of
Carcass clones but let’s not forget that nonetheless copyists do sometimes equal their master and some may even do better on occasions. Albums like '
Anatomy is
Destiny' or 'The Last Gap', respectively from Exhumed and
Impaled, are more than offerings aimed at indulging some old adolescent passion but are really unique works that do not only perpetuate the myth but rather keep on building it.
That’s just great… What about
Ghoul then?
Ghoul are no exception to the rule. Well, let’s say that they kind of go round the rule, slightly. Exhumed or
Impaled have always served the cause of the « Symphonies Of
Sickness / Necroticism – Descanting the
Insalubrious » era whereas
Ghoul are more retrograde and juvenile and focus more on the « Reek Of
Putrefaction / Symphonies Of
Sickness » ear.
For those not yet introduced to the
Carcass legend, it means in other words that they play tracks that are more goregrind in essence than the stricto senso Death
Metal era of
Carcass that reached its apex with 'Necroticism – Descanting the
Insalubrious’. Tracks are relatively short, three minutes on average, and 'enjoy' a production that would have satisfied any
Carcass head back then.
Thrashy riffs with a groove that smell of 80’s speed metal, lyrics festering with pus and gore sung by a hellish trio that Steer and Walker would have hired as backing vocals, devilish soli almost melodic (well it’s goregrind, remember…). All the ingredients are there to make it a perfect recipe on each track. Let's also put in the legendary intros of
Carcass Records releases and you’ll get the one album that could have released in between RoP and SoS.
If you enjoyed banging your head on tracks like Pyosified (
Rotten To The
Gore),
Genital Grinder or
Oxidised Razor Masticator, you will most likely finish your neck on
We Came for the Dead which, unlike its older counterpart, enjoys excellent production.
With this (muco-)succulent tribute to the Founding Fathers of Goregrind,
Ghoul and their legions of
Ghoulunatics show us that they’re not one more simple copy/paste tasteless product derived from their spiritual leaders but they’re most and above all a Death
Metal that proclaims with no shame their lack of identity! In a few words: go buy this!
PS: the final track is a cover of
Megadeth’s '
Skull Beneath The
Skin' ... Yummy yummy...
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