Cancer
To the Gory End


4.5
superb

Review

by vanderb0b USER (63 Reviews)
August 30th, 2010 | 91 replies


Release Date: 1990 | Tracklist

Review Summary: The musical equivalent to having every bone in your body crushed and enjoying every moment of it.

Imagine being a member of a small squad of four or five people that ventured deep into enemy territory and found themselves holed up in a lone building. With food running low and ammunition even lower, the enemy, armed with artillery and vehicles of war, has very little difficulty advancing. Surrounded by your foes, the shells crash against your only shelter, the weak walls succumbing to the onslaught, and, as the building crumbles, you desperately struggle to escape from the falling debris. Listening to Cancer’s debut, To The Gory End, feels very much like that.

From start to finish, To The Gory End is one precise, directed aural assault. Imperial, titanic riffs explode around the listener like mortars, while bullet-like drum beats fly by and a low, raspy voice narrates your demise. Every once in a while, a shrieking guitar solo pierces the air. It’s true that, occasionally, an ominous string arrangement or a foreboding clean guitar may briefly replace the electric bombardment, but these temporary cease-fires are nothing more than a few wretched moments spent preparing for the approaching barrage.

If the above paragraphs did not imply it well enough, To The Gory End is heavy. Every single riff, whether it’s a speedy, tremolo-picked run or a grinding battery of churning chords, is aimed straight at the listener’s skull, and every single one hits it’s target without fail. Not a single moment is wasted, and every single note feels like it’s absolutely essential to the album as a whole, causing the short opus (it lasts for little more than half of an hour) to feel very calculated.

Truth be told, the above descriptions could apply to numerous old-school death metal albums. If so, what exactly is it that makes To The Gory End so special? Simple: all of the riffs, in their maggoty, disgusting glory, are impossibly infectious. In addition to (or, perhaps, despite) the heaviness, all of the riffs are well-written and rather catchy, as are many of the vocal lines (don’t tell me that after listening to Die Die, you’ll be able to get the chorus out of your memory).

In the album’s twenty years, very few have been able to eclipse To The Gory End, which to this day remains one of death metal’s most essential opuses. Filled to the brim with skull-smashing riffs, this is a release that no fans of the genre should overlook.

4.4/5



Recent reviews by this author
Alfred Schnittke Gogol SuiteSoundtrack (Theatre) Sweeney Todd, the Demon Barber of Fleet Street
Soundtrack (Theatre) Avenue Q - Original Broadway CastAJJ People Who Can Eat People are the Luckiest People
Ulcerate The Destroyers of AllCamille Saint-Saens Danse macabre, Op.40
user ratings (155)
3.9
excellent


Comments:Add a Comment 
vanderb0b
August 31st 2010


3473 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

I was planning to do a Rick Wakeman album today, but I must give it one or two more listens to settle on a rating, which I do not have the time for now. Saw that this didn't have a review, so I made a quick write-up. Not sure if the semi-conceptual first half worked well, my first time (if memory does not fail me) attempting something of the sort.

Jethro42
August 31st 2010


18274 Comments


This is not my cup of tea. Conciliate classical music and metal is a strange thing, and is rather paradoxal. However, many music lovers love both genres with a bloody passion. And you are one of these, my friend. This fact remains a profound mystery to me. I've read your review both in french and english to be sure, and it's a good read as always.

ShinXetsu
August 31st 2010


605 Comments


Great review dude, been meaning to eventually listen to this album.

vanderb0b
August 31st 2010


3473 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thanks!



@Jethro

Yes, I probably could not imagine you listening to this. When I was two or three years old, I was exposed to mainly two artists: Mozart and The Beatles. The former led to a love of classical music, while the latter led to my discovering of rock, then grunge, and finally metal, so I'm able to listen to both genres.

kount
August 31st 2010


1301 Comments


all of em

Relinquished
August 31st 2010


48700 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

gonna be a good movie

rasputin
August 31st 2010


14967 Comments


good but def not that good

Jethro42
August 31st 2010


18274 Comments


Ok I see vander. But I heard somewhere that both genres have more commonalities than we might think, wich probably explain the phenomenon. I'm just questioning myself on why on earth many metalheads love classical music too.

kount
August 31st 2010


1301 Comments


damnit jethro when are u going to learn to not be french

kount
August 31st 2010


1301 Comments


remember when jethro went crazy on your ass


when he was cool

Jethro42
August 31st 2010


18274 Comments


damnit jethro when are u going to learn to not be french

On passe à un autre appel.

Jethro42
August 31st 2010


18274 Comments


fishowitz is not permabanned :/

Hyperion1001
Emeritus
August 31st 2010


25727 Comments


Sounds cool, sweet review man. I'll check this out.

Sowing
Moderator
August 31st 2010


43941 Comments


man you are just pumping out these reviews, it's nice to see

jingledeath
August 31st 2010


7100 Comments

Album Rating: 3.5

album's alright

Inveigh
August 31st 2010


26875 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

yeah it's pretty good stuff



anyone ever tried to buy a physical copy of this? shit's expensive..



good review vander

FistfulOfSteel
August 31st 2010


898 Comments

Album Rating: 4.0

cancer fucking cancerrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrrr

Zettel
August 31st 2010


661 Comments


Jethro:

Classical and metal may be a strange combination, but why paradoxical? I can picture you very easily listening to the most heavy stuff, you have the ear to appreciate it, if the sheer power is not appealing enough. Besides, how can you not listen to an album featuring "imperial, titanic" riffs? I'm sold!

But to be honest, I listen to this type of music less and less as the time goes by.

Good stuff, Vander.

Jethro42
September 1st 2010


18274 Comments


I would absolutely love Meshuggah if the vocals of Kidman would be replaced by some tubular bells or something.

vanderb0b
September 1st 2010


3473 Comments

Album Rating: 4.5

Thanks, everyone!



man you are just pumping out these reviews




I'm trying to get as many up as possible before the school starts and I won't have any time to review (AP Chem, World and French VI will kill me, as will the Biology SAT II). My next review will be my last for a while, in all probability.



You have to be logged in to post a comment. Login | Create a Profile





STAFF & CONTRIBUTORS // CONTACT US

Bands: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z


Site Copyright 2005-2023 Sputnikmusic.com
All Album Reviews Displayed With Permission of Authors | Terms of Use | Privacy Policy