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venom metal black
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by Raziq Rauf
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 20/03/2006
  • Label: Sanctuary
  • Info: return from the original black metallers

When it comes to classic trailblazers, true pioneers of a genre, the pool is small and the company few. Venom sit comfortably in the middle having inspired the mighty Metallica, Slayer and, of course, the majority of heavy Scandinavian metal. Last year was the band’s silver jubilee and the only member left is singer and guitarist Cronos. Yes, it’s probably his fault there are so many laughable names around the pantomime world of black metal. Completed by ex-Carcass guitarist Mykvs and Antton, Cronos’ brother, on drums, the Geordies are definitely harking well back to the old school with this, their first new material in over five years.

Cronos was last seen opening up Dave Grohl’s 2003 metal collaboration, Probot, and it was clear then that time had not taken its toll on him. The album title is a clear reference to what they started in 1980 with their celebrated second album, Black Metal and fittingly this record seems to have a sense of regression about it. All the songs are simple, almost to the point of being crude, in both lyrics and titles. An example of this found in standout track, ‘Burn In Hell’, where the same lines are merely reiterated over and again. This is a common theme, so clearly they are relying on straightforward, uncomplicated repetition to hammer their point home. That’s if it wasn’t clear enough from the song title.

If this is a reaction to the current spate of thrash-styled, nu-school metal bands then there is no doubt that Venom have created a record which is more immediate, more direct and has lashings more credibility about it. There are no gimmicks here. There is no room for rapid-fired double bass drum here as an easy route to making the music sound heavy. It still sounds fast. It still sounds heavy. There are no screeched, falsetto vocals, just pained, throat-ripping growls and howls matched by constant and bludgeoning riffs. It still sounds angry. Oh my, does it sound angry.

Somehow, ‘Metal Black’ seems like the best material Venom have produced for two decades. Their strategy here is to hit the listener hard and fast and they achieve it with ease. If they wanted to recapture their old form and then update it then they succeeded in making a record more current and more formidable than any of the young pretenders out there now.

  • Venom 9 / 10
Words: Raziq Rauf

does still sound like it was recorded in their mates shed

like black metal and welcome to hell did ?


of course


hurrah!


Wasn't Cronos

an accountant during the 90s? Bet senior management wondered why the books were always £666 over, or why there were so many expenses claims for "goats' heads, pentagrams, misc. occult paraphernalia"


I remember

buying Welcome To Hell and Black Metal and thinking these were the best records ever made(i was young though).

Will have to check this one out.


Games

Don't know if he was an accountant but he did take a course in software game development. He fell and hurt his neck and spent a long while in a neck brace (crappy deal for someone who likes to walk about banging and shaking his head a lot)so he did software stuff to pass the time.


tockle

venom are the bad news of death metal he he anyone remember them on the tube (i do showin my age)

anything by slayer kinda makes these guys look amateur there is no way they inspired metallica or slayer.

metallica influence=nwobhm(new wave of british heavy metal)

slayer influence= us hardcore(minor threat etc)

sayin that i have autographed copy of possessed if any true venom fan wants to buy it?


Immature

Not sure what Raz is listening to but Metal Black sounds like it was recorded in a peat bog on an old stereo cassette recorder. The lyrics made me cringe, the songs sound like a bunch of ideas and unfinished demos, and I felt cheated out of my ten quid. I became a wee Venom fan when I was about 14 (16 years ago actually), I lost interest when I saw them live coz Cronos looked like someone dressed up to take the mick out of the heavy metal image, I moved on to Metallica, Pantera, Slayer... and MOTORHEAD etc. Came back to this album for a blast of nostalgia, wish I hadn't now.