Showing posts with label Goregrind. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Goregrind. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 11, 2025

Knife Fight interview 2025

 Knife Fight, an international two-piece slamming brutal beatdown project, have been making splashes in the underground scene with 2 EPs that have raised the bar for HEAVY.  I caught up with Vocalist BT and Instrumentalist Sebastian in the below interview.  Enjoy, get familiar, and click the links at the bottom!!


CEREBRALREVIEWMENT - Thanks for taking some time to answer some questions! 

Who are we talking with and what is your role in Knifefight?

BT - Hey, of course, thanks for doing this interview with us! I'm BT, Knife Fight's vocalist and I also unofficially handle mixing duties.



What is the origin story of Knifefight?

The idea for a project like Knife Fight's been on my mind for many years with me being as big of an extreme metal fan as I am. And it was all just about finding the right kind of people to do heavy, heavy slam/slamming beatdown with and people that'd agree to start a project like that together with me. 
I started searching a bit more actively last year and after a few rejections and other people that didn't really vibe with the idea of us being fully online, it was around the middle of summer that I found our guitarist/instrumentalist, Sebastian. I first got in touch with him and started talking to him because of a challenge in a Discord server where there was an instrumental provided that was made by him and everyone had to send their vocals to him so that he can throw those vocals on the track, mix it, and at the end people in the server can vote on who had the best vocals (spoiler alert/random trivia: I didn't end up winning). After that I threw at him the idea for this kind of project I had in mind and to my surprise he actually agreed to do it with me. So we started writing stuff together and after going through some name changes that's how Knife Fight was born!

So far there are 2 Knife fight EPs, both incredibly heavy and speaker blowing. 
The most recent release is very collaborative. Can you tell us about how that idea came about and what the process of picking artists to work with was like?

The idea for us having features is something that's always been there. Not once has there really been a point where we've not wanted to have features on *some* material of ours. We wanted the debut EP to be feature-less to showcase what both of us are capable of as musicians without having to rely on others, but anything after that, we've always wanted to have someone. And for our latest release, "Homicidal Instincts", it all started with the first feature, Azeratè Nakamura from Ungraceful, Radiologist, Messmer the Impaler and many other bands. Both of us are huge fans of his vocals and how absolutely rancid and vile they are, plus we're also friends with him, so naturally we hit him up. And shortly after we hit him up he told us he can get us in touch with the other two features on the EP, Hugo Ojeda from Esophagus 08 and Larry Wang from Fatuous Rump, Gorepot and a ton of other bands. So, of course, we agreed since we're both huge fans of both of them too and that's how we got them on the EP as well.



So Knife Fight is only 2 people?  Have you talked about adding more, or playing live?  Do you live close to each other at all?

Yep, Knife Fight is indeed just me and Sebastian, our instrumentalist. We have considered playing live before, but the answer to that more so leads me to your next question, which is that we don't live close at all. We're about 10,000km (6,200 miles in freedom units) away from each other. So obviously us two playing together is almost impossible. We have considered maybe getting some other people that are more local to us to play live shows, but it's not really a thing we've taken too seriously. It just isn't the same if it's not the original members. Plus, I have horrible stage fright and have had it my entire life which further complicates and basically completely eliminates the idea of us playing live. 


What were the original name ideas before Knife Fight?

The first name I threw out was Vomit Cocktail. Then we also had Wormvomit, Parasitic Cranial Rot, Teeth Meet Concrete and I think a few more that I can't recall off the top of my head. We initially settled on Wormvomit for a little bit before I suggested Knife Fight. We were pretty unsure about it for a moment because, and this is something very few people know, Knife Fight was supposed to initially be a gorenoise/goregrind project. We recorded one song that we never really gave a name to, nor even made it into anything more than a proper demo. So initially we were thinking of more gorenoise/grind oriented names. But then when we made the switch to go more slam/slamming beatdown we reconsidered things and settled on Knife Fight

Who is the main creative director?  or is it all discussed with you both?  Like the music, then the art, who runs socials, etc....

Both of us contribute to the making of the music. Since I'm the one who's more into slamming beatdown stuff and slam in general, since I've been listening to that sorta music for the better part of a decade now, I'm the one that recommends the suggestions and ideas for the material we write. I take certain parts from some releases that I like and maybe throw a few other suggestions that I think would go hard as hell and then Sebastian throws his suggestions and ideas into the mix if he has any and from there we just write the songs as a sort of mish-mash of ideas we have. The artwork for the releases is also something both of us are involved in, even though it's mostly Sebastian who's contacting the artists. And as far as socials go, for the most part, I'm the one who manages them. I run our Youtube channel, Bandcamp and almost everything that gets posted on Instagram (which is where we're most active) is posted by me. Though when it comes to promoting stuff it's both of us sending our material to everyone we know.


How old are you guys?

Both of us are young! I'm 22 and Sebastian is 17. And, fun little trivia: I'm born on Halloween!



BT, what other bands or projects have you been apart of?

 I've gone through a *lot* of projects but I'll try to list all of them off. The first one I had was an ambient project called Abyssal Darkness that I started in very late 2019, just a few months before COVID. I just made super, super long songs with that one, sometimes even going on for more than an hour. The longest one I ever made was about three and a half hours off an album that never saw the light of day because I ended the project around 2021 or 2022. Then I had a super short lived project called Rotten that I called noisegrind when in reality it was just noise. Everything on there was recorded with a broken guitar cable that I had plugged straight into my PC, since I didn't have an audio interface, and I was just messing around and trying to make riffs on a 6-string Jackson. But in reality it was mostly just incoherent garbage and it's the project I hate the most. Then I had a hypertone project called Blvck that gained me some of my first "popularity" in music, since I was making songs with BPMs that people had never even thought were possible. Or so everyone thought, because I was just straight up blatantly lying about the BPM and I admitted to it afterwards and then killed the project. I "revived" it once and then killed it again for good and that's been dead since around 2022 too. Then I had my first band called Inherit Dissection which was a brutal death metal band I made with someone that I met online that could legitimately be my dad. That's how big the age gap was. I was 16 and he was in his 40s. That's also the first band I ever did vocals for. We released one song which is now private everywhere and then called it quits. Then I was in a goregrind project called EOTBBIYAA, which is an abbreviation of the full name, Exacerbation Of The Bitter Bacteria Inside Your Annihilated Anus. That one I also didn't really have a lot of fun in and even though it lasted longer, I only ever recorded vocals for I think two songs. Then I started a downtempo project called Kirai. And that's sorta where I personally like to pretend my career started because that's sorta where I started making music that I genuinely liked. Since I couldn't, and still can't program drums, everything on there was only recorded on guitar. But not a real guitar like the one in Rotten. I have a 9 string guitar plugin and a pitch shifter. And so I was literally making the slowest, lowest tuned songs ever. The lowest tuning I got to was a C#-7. I released two full-lengths with that one before calling it quits in 2024. Then I started a project called Noosehanger. And that's the earliest project that I started that's still semi-active. And say semi-active because it's currently on a little bit of a hiatus. I initially tried making deathstep with it, but later I decided to make it sort of a "successor" to the first project I mentioned, Abyssal Darkness. So I took the concept of that project, tweaked around some things and just started making the most unsettling ambient music I could muster up. I've still got songs I'm sitting on and I promise those will be out at some point. Then I formed Knife Fight around summertime last year, though we didn't start writing anything until around September. And then finally there's my newest project,
 . That one's blasting brutal death metal/goregrind and also still active, in the process of writing some new music as we're speaking, actually. So yeah, those are all of my projects over the last five and a half years, all nine of 'em.





Can you talk about some of your influences?  Whether it's art, music, movies, or anything in your life!
A huge chunk of my influences are from brutal death metal and slam. Obviously some of them aren't really influences anymore and were more influential to younger me when I initially started, but the first ever influence I ever got was Chris Barnes. I always wanted to have my vocals be as low as his and lower. Then when I moved onto deathcore, some of my influences were Mitch Lucker, Rheese Peters, Ben Duerr, Ben Mason, Alex Terrible (I know that aged horribly), Alex Teyen, etc. But as far as my current influences go they're Angel Ochoa (Cephalotripsy, Abominable Putridity), Andrew LoMastro (Cerebral Incubation, Nemesism), Kyriakos Destounis (Embryectomy), Brandon Smith (Agonal Breathing, Incestuous Impregnation, etc.), Hugo Ojeda (Esophagus 08, Puthroatfucktion, etc.), Azerate Nakamura (Ungraceful, Radiologist, etc.), Ricky Sotelo (Flesh, Messenger of the Covenant) and Joe Wolfe (Heinous Killings, Sick Hymns) James Shuster (Delusional Parasitosis, Ineffable Demise, Necessary Death), Justin Boehm (Orchidectomy, Gutvoid), Larry Wang (Gorepot, Fatuous Rump, etc.), Mikko Friberg (Torsofuck, Limbless), Jossi Bima (Abhorrently, Dissanity), Martin Funderud (RIP) (Kraanium, Psychosomatic Self Mutilation, etc.) and Benjamin Wingmark (Diphenylchloroarsine)

SEBASTIAN - A few of my musical influences stem from movies. Especially psychological movies such as The Cube film series. I find them to be useful for creating musical themes for my projects and it ultimately fuels a big part of my creative process. Another major influence is my older siblings, who have been part of the rock and power metal scene for over two decades. They have been incredibly supportive and have shaped me into the musician that I am today. While they do not make slam, their rock project Part Time Apes is worth checking out.

How long have you been doing vocals?  Always extreme vocals?

 Truthfully, I'm not sure when I started. Because the earliest footage I have of me doing vocals is from around May 2019, but back then I sound like I've been doing vocals for a decent amount of time already, at least over a year. But I can't find any recordings of myself from before then. So at the very least, I've been doing vocals for 6 years, but in reality it could be close to 7-8 in total

Can you give us 3 albums by 3 different bands that have really inspired you?

Cephalotripsy's Uterovaginal Insertion of Extirpated Anomalies. My favorite slam album of all time, been that way since I started listening to slam. Heinous Killings' Hung With Barbwire. The reason I love predator vocals so much and why I wanted to learn them. And lastly, Cystgurgle's Ubi pus, Ibi fermento. The most extreme album I've heard in all of metal and it's not even close. Unmatched brutality

Three albums that inspired me are Metropolis Pt. 2: Scenes from a Memory by Dream Theater, Molesting the Decapitated by Devourment, and L.D. 50 by Mudvayne. These albums have taught me so much about what I know about music now. Although they are vastly different in style, I have always taken elements and put them in a way I see fit, turning odd ideas into digestible riffs, if you will. These records helped me become a better musician and instrumentalist, enabling me to create instrumentals for projects like Knife Fight, Unrecognizable, and Gurgling Fluids.


I know we are just coming off of a crazy heavy EP release, but are there any other plans for KF's future yet?

 Yeah, we're constantly thinking of new stuff! We even had a talk earlier today about some potential stuff we can do for the next release. Both me and Sebastian are really creative and constantly have ideas running through our heads so we've definitely thought of some stuff for the future. We're thinking about what direction we wanna take Knife Fight going forward and we've already got a pretty good idea. And we may not be done for the year just yet. Just maybe. That's all I'm gonna say.

We have talked about future music but nothing is currently set in stone.

Thanks again for creating such heaviness and answering some questions!!!!  
Anything you would like to say?
 
Thank you as well for this interview, we really appreciate it! Nothing much I can say other than just go and stream the new EP and everything else we have, destroy your sound system/speakers/headphones, share it around with your friends, keep supporting the bands you love and keep an eye out for us. This is only the beginning!

Thank you for the interview! Hopefully, people enjoy Homicidal Instincts as we have worked hard on it. I would like to give a special shoutout  to Azerate Nakamura, Hugo Ojeda, and Larry Wang for their incredible contributions on this new release. Homicidal instincts would not have been possible without them. I also want to thank all of our supporters who have been with us since our debut EP Disfigurement, and all of the new fans and listeners we have gained due to the new release. It has been a crazy journey so far, and I am excited to see what the future holds!

----------------------------------------LINKS----------------------------------------

Friday, February 21, 2025

Exfeciate Interview 2025

The BDM world will be blessed on March 7th.  Yes, folks, we are a mere 3 weeks away from a brand new full-length release from one-man German machine Exfeciate.
I have been lucky enough to have been spinning the new album, gorgeously titled "Enthroned In Desiccation" for the past couple of weeks, and I can say with certainty that you will not be disappointed.  Slams, chugs, grind, gurgles, interesting tempos and rhythms, it's all here.  Make sure to follow Exfeciate so you will catch this release when it's out!  Cerebral Reviewment will be sharing the fuck out of it also!!!!
Enjoy the brief interview below:

CEREBRAL REVIEWMENT:

Who is Exfeciate?  

PARWEZ:

Just me, Parwez, a one-man brutal death unit from Germany. I write, record and mix everything. My neighbors hate me.

What is the history of Exfeciate?

I used to write riffs and record countless ideas but never bothered to finish a song. Then, in late 2023, I figured I might as well make it official and start ruining eardrums. Since then, I’ve been diving deep into recording and production—learning as I go and finding the sound I'm looking for along the way. 

What other bands are you a part of?

None. However, I played guitar for Endometritis over a decade ago and  dabbled in different genres for a while. My legendary former bandmates Rafael (now Figging, Theatre's Kiss) and Andree (now Verachtung, Genital Mutilation, ex-Stillbirth) have supported me a lot in realizing Exfeciate. 



How did you first get into this kind of music?

It all started when a friend sent me a YouTube video of the German classic "Cock and Ball Torture - Aphrodisianius" when I was about 15 years old. I didn’t even know music like that existed. From there, I dove into the MySpace rabbit hole, constantly searching for more underground sound.



I am beyond pumped for the new full-length to come out!  Can you share a little about the writing of "Enthroned in Desiccation " and the concept behind the album?

Thanks! I started writing ‘Enthroned in Desiccation’ in August 2024. After my last releases, which were mostly thrown together within a couple of weeks with me locking myself in a room, I wanted to change my approach. This time, I really took my time with the writing process and tried to focus on crafting something more cohesive.

‘Enthroned in Desiccation’ tells the tale of a dark emperor ruling over a fallen civilization. Obsessed with immortality, he uses a grotesque mix of ancient bones and machinery to transcend death, resurrecting the deceased and merging flesh with machine. His empire is empty, but through these rituals, he expands his cult and achieves a twisted form of enlightenment.



Who did the artwork?

The art itself is made by Fear Of Napalm. My brother Hudana put it all together and is currently in the process of creating the design for my physical release. 




Can you recommend any up and coming bands from your area?

You should definitely stay tuned for the upcoming  'Figging' album. Finest vomit blasting deathgrind



Who are some artists that have inspired you that may surprise people?

Apart from Yoko Ono, whose avantgarde screeching is basically proto-pig squeals, I’d say Balkan music has some seriously intricate rhythms, especially with all the odd time signatures and unpredictable syncopation. 

In fact, I actually used a Balkan-inspired tune as the outro for the first track—it adds a wild, unexpected twist to the brutality.



Thanks so much for doing this!

Anything to say to fans?

Thank you so much for the support! It truly means the world to me as fans and reviewers like you are the ones who keep the underground spirit alive and thriving.

Much love from Germany!

Greetings

Parwez 




LINKS

EXFECIATE

FEAR OF NAPALM

GLDCHN STUDIOS

SIGIL OF MACABRE ART RECORDS

THEATRE'S KISS

GENITAL MUTILATION

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Clit Commander - Tex Mex Ass Blast - Promo 2013


Artwork by Sidjime Art



GGGRRRRR..........PENIS...... GRRRRRRR......IN A HIVE......GGRRRGRRRRR!

If that doesn't have you giggling, you need to lighten up a bit.  The song however, "Penis In A Hive," is far from funny.
A steady, pounding, and well-paced track that, is really just one riff over and over again, somehow manages to be pretty catchy.  Now, if your band's name is Clit Commander, and you are releasing a promo under the moniker "Tex Mex Ass Blast," I figure you've got your work cut out for you to stop me from laughing long enough to even listen.
Congratulations to Clit Commander on a job well done; I am carefully listening.  You've caught my ear.  This five piece from Switzerland are packing quite the punch, and apparently commanding clitorises to do whatever they need done.  Okay, seriously now, all joking aside, these three songs really are good.
The band features two vocalists: Dave "Guttural" Apel (Incinerated Flesh) and René "Pussyshredder" Barthoulot (Ex-Cropment, Carnal Decay, Slamentation.)  For me, having two vocalists in this sort of music usually sounds the same as one but looks twice as stupid.  After all, who wants two guys standing on stage just growling and grunting their faces off?  I am happy to say that Clit Commander pull it off quite nicely.  I can here the added diversity in the vocals, which include those ultra-low gutturals that these sort of slams need, some Kraanium-esque, airy mids, some really great predator vocals (think Heinous Killings,) and even some actual shouting.  All of these mixed together are extremely powerful.  Even during some of the lowest of the lows you can still make out what is being said.


What really helps Tex Mex Ass Blast stand out from every other promotional 2-3 song release is its production.  Some real time and energy has been put into the recording, mixing, and mastering of this very short release.  Everything is tweaked just enough to be perfectly audible, even hammer-ons and pull-offs from Utti, the bass guitarist.  I also quickly noticed every drum having a really nice, welcoming tone.  Drummer, Cornel Betschart, displays an array of comfort and ease playing at different tempos and switching around patterns.  I also heard a reverse snare in there, something I hadn't  heard used since the last Raped By Pigs release.  Some electronic, technical touches such as that, and a couple on the vocals, are done in great taste and shouldn't steer you away from this promo.

Overall, Tex Mex Ass Blast is a three song promo that shows a renewed Clit Commander, with far better production and song writing than on there 2011 demo recordings.  Definitely worth checking out.
They also have some cool merch to check out!

CLIT COMMANDER FACEBOOK

CLIT COMMANDER

BIGCARTEL


Friday, August 23, 2013

Interview with Andrew Ferris of Analdicktion - 2011




I was lucky enough to have a very quick interview with Andrew Ferris, guitarist and vocalist in Analdicktion.

———————————————————————————————————

Cerebral Reviewment- First of all, thank you for taking the time to answer some questions!
Can you explain a little about your writing process?


Andrew Ferris- Thanks a lot for having us! Well, I write the songs and send the guitar tracks to everyone online. And then see how they go when we try to play them in the studio. If they don’t turn out so well, then we just throw the song away and move on to the next one. We must have written about 26 songs before the album and only chose 14. We’re very fucking picky. There’s at least 2 songs on the album we would have rather of not been on there and never play live haha!

CR-  Your new album, “SLUTS” is really great!  Any future touring plans?  Any U.S. visits coming up?  Can you guys say anything about the ep you are working on?

AF-  Thanks a lot man! As for touring, we will be hitting up Indonesia for 3 days, and then a date in Malaysia a week after.  We will also be playing Bangcock Deathfest in Thailand in December.  As for a U.S. tour, it’s highly unlikely anytime soon because most of us are still trying to stabilize our lives.  I’m currently in school in Thailand and next year Ash will have to join National Service Army (mandatory in Singapore) for 2 years, so it would be difficult to travel so far for too long.  But it is too early to say whether or not we will.  We’ll just see how it goes, but we will definitely be going to the U.S. (and everywhere else) in the future.  I especially would love to play CIM since I was born in Illinois and it was the first Brutal Death Metal/Grind show I ever saw (back in 2006).
The EP we are working on…it’s gonna be a split 7” with Indonesian Grindcore band Proletar.  We’re gonna be doing 4 songs for it.  The songs will showcase more of our Deathgrind/Goregrind side than anything else and we’re straying away from anything that comes off as too misogynistic or generic gore.  It’s more gonna be like an assault on scene bullshit that pisses us off or that we just find plain humorous.  We also recorded a Disrupt song (Human Garbage) for a Disrupt tribute album. It should be out in December from Power It Up Records.





CR-  How did your relationship with Scrotum Jus develop? How about Rotworks? Rotworks truly has some amazing artwork!

AF-  We were about to self-release an E.P. of 5 songs or use them for a split.  I guess word got out that we were looking to release with a label.  Aziz from the label contacted us.  When we met up, he told us we should record a full-length album at a different studio instead.  We agreed and started writing new songs for the album, entered the studio in December 2010 and recorded the album.  He got the album out as a split release with Sevared Records.  We owe a lot to Aziz.  If not for him we wouldn’t have made this much progress in such a short time…we’d be stuck with some self-released 5 song CD-R wondering where to go next hahaha!  We’ve been good friends with him since, he’s a blast to drink and talk shit with! :D
As for Rotworks, Rotworks is Arif from Wormrot, whom we are very close to.  He also did our logo too.  It was a no brainer to get a shirt design from him.  His shit is always sick!

CR-  A lot of different influences can be heard on the new album. Can you give us a few of your favorite bands, of any genre?

AF-  The different influences…that has mostly to do with our indecisiveness of what kind of band we want to be.  The earlier songs we wrote were more Slam orientated and the newer ones more Deathgrind/Goregrind/Powerviolence so everything really got mixed up for the album.

For Brutal Death/Slam: Short Bus Pile Up, Pus Vomit, Down From The Wound, Aversion To Life, Gorevent…for Grind/Powerviolence: Pulmonary Fibrosis, Captain Cleanoff, Circle Of Dead Children, Wormrot, Spazz, Jig-Ai, BruceXCampbell, Jesus Crost, Looking For An Answer, Wormrot, Squash Bowels, Cock and Ball Torture…ah and so much more!  Sludge band Black Sheep Wall had some impact on us like their low-tuning and over-lapping chords with single string notes for extra heaviness. Sonic Youth and various Punk Rock/Noise shit for noise and pick-scratches/feedback!
As for our personal favourite bands, we honestly don’t listen to much stuff related to the genres we are playing.  Personally, I’ve been listening to Tyler, The Creator, Mac Miller, Wu-Tang Clan, The Beatles, Lagwagon, The Wonder Years, Pianos Become The Teeth, Electric Light Orchestra, The Postal Service, and Westbound Train.  I try not to listen to too much stuff that’s related to the music we play, because it will make me think too much of what we should be doing.  Like I can’t just chill and listen to Brutal Death/Grind because I’d be thinking ‘Oh fuck, that part is sick, I need to write something like that’…kinda frustrates me at times haha!



ANALDICKTION

PROLETAR

POWER IT UP RECORDS

SCROTUM JUS RECORDS

ROTWORKS





Analdicktion - Sluts - 2011 Scrotum Jus Records






Analdicktion is a four piece Singaporean band with many influences thrown in.

Ash Azman-Vocals

Andrew Ferris-Guitar,Vocals

Irwan Shah-Bass

Aidil Ismail-Drums

Possibly the most creative, brutal, entertaining, all around fun to listen to brutal death/Slam/Grind/Gore/PowerViolence/Whatever album of it's year, 2011.  So many different elements seem to effortlessly flow together for Analdicktion.  Oh and that name!

If I HAD to label them to some sub-genre, I would be tempted just to say Experimental Brutal Death.  Thankfully, everything that anyone ever says is an opinion that has been made up of countless other opinions.  They call call themselves Death Grinding Gore-Violence.  Sounds great to me!  I highly recommend buying this album!  If you are even a slight fan of any of the aforementioned types of music, this album is for you!  Every genre that people are calling this album, or want to call it, is flawlessly performed and unexpectedly flows to the next.



"Fingerbang Abortion" starts with an intro riff reminiscent of Short Bus Pile Up.  Then you hear the disgustingly powerful gutturals lead you into a groovy slamming riff punctuated my creative drum fills.  I particularly love the pinch harmonics around 1:10.  Short song, great album opener.

Then comes “Whoreaphobic”, which immediately slows down to a straightforward slam with everything coming together very nicely.  Fast part around 1:30 is a welcome and creative change leading right into the best part and closing riff of the song.  Vocalist Ash Azman does a beautiful job here of presenting vocals BEHIND the riff and not in front, thus only enhancing it’s clarity and fullness.

"Gagged and Grinded" is a nice mix of thrash and grind with some pretty straightforward shouting vocals.  I love it.  It reminds me that this genre is supposed to be fun and doesn’t always need to sound "brutal".  Actually, if done right like it is here, boundaries can be pushed rather far while still maintaining the same feeling and returning to the original brutality of Analdicktion, or whatever band.


"Phrenetic Impaled Vaginal Dissection" starts by grinding your face off while throwing a very awesome mix of vocals in and a slammy ending.  Another very fun and catchy short tune.
 "Quantity of a Human Defilement" starts out with a catchy riff and plays off of it until it slows down to an even catchier, simpler riff thirty seconds in.  Then the track gets peppered with harmonics and sliding, groovy guitar work only to lure you in to it’s sudden end.  This is also the longest track at 3:30, I love that this is full of short songs.  This genre can get boring, but not here.  Proof is evident that this band can grind out fast songs and longer ones, and never sacrifice good writing.

Next up is a cover of the Nirvana song “Anorexorscist” which I do not need to say anything else about.
The song “Semen Covered Butchered Whores” is rightly named and is over before you are done wrapping your brain around the words semen covered butchered whores.  It is relentlessly awesome and has some hardcore elements to it that leave the listener wanting more.

Currently my favorite track has to be “Too Kvlt To Fvck”.   Atmospheric climbing harmonic riffing leading up to….black metal?  Am I fvcking with you?  No, and just wait for the ending.
"Teenage Assault Bukkake Ceremony".  Super low goregrind vocals that I didn’t like as much at first but they don’t get boring and they grew on me.  Simple, short song.

"Campaign For Emo Destruction" is 38 seconds of exciting grindcore thrash with gutturals and gang vocals and a great sample at the end.  Ready or not, you are propelled directly into "Severed Scene Slut", a brutal, comfortable return to their specific brand of slamming brutal death, ending with their slowest slam yet.  Could have done without the sample at the end here.  I am over it though, great song.
"Genetically Abused Youth" keeps a steady pace and plays around one main riff until the 1:10 mark where it holds it’s pace but alters into a super groovy riff that I love!  Perfect way to end this album starting at 2:20.  Everything slows down to an energetic slam and then speeds back up, sending this album out with a bang.

To summarize, "SLUTS" is a must have album for you fans of extreme, brutal, grinding death and more importantly, unforgettably creative music.  Each member that makes up Analdicktion has mastered their craft.

"SLUTS" was released on the now defunct Scrotum Jus Records.  They are now signed to Solvent Abuse Records

Get "SLUTS" free from the band 
HERE!

SOLVENT ABUSE RECORDS