Formats and Editions
1. Stench of Burning Death, The
2. Eaten Alive
3. Acid Bath
4. Slaughter of the Innocent
5. Decomposed
6. Radiation Sickness
7. Splattered Cadavers
8. Festering Boils
9. Pestilent Decay
10. Crematorium
11. Driven to Insanity
12. Six Feet Under
13. Bodily Dismemberment
14. Repultion
15. Lurking Fear, The
16. Black Breath
17. Maggots in Your Coffin
18. Horrified
1. Stench of Burning Death
2. Eaten Alive
3. Acid Bath
4. Slaughter of the Innocent
5. Decomposed
6. Radiation Sickness
7. Splattered Cadavers
8. Festering Boils
9. Pestilent Decay
10. Crematorium
11. Driven to Insanity
12. Six Feet Under
13. Bodily Dismemberment
14. Repultion
15. Lurking Fear
16. Black Breath
17. Maggots in Your Coffin
18. Horrified
1. Armies of the Dead
2. Satan's Whores
3. Crack of Doom
4. Armies of the Dead
5. Six Feet Under
6. Violent Death
7. Lurking Fear, The
8. Crack of Doom
9. Horrified
10. Stench of Burning Death, The
11. Decomposed
12. Slaughter the Innocent
13. Eaten Alive
14. Six Feet Under
15. Crypt of Terror
16. Lurking Fear, The
17. Festering Boils
18. Pestilent Decay
19. Black Nightmare
20. Bodily Dismemberment
21. Horrified
22. Radiation Sickness - (live)
23. Black Breath - (live)
24. Excruciation
25. Helga (Lost Her Head)
26. Rebirth
27. House of Freaks
28. Depraved
29. Face of Decay
30. Something Dead
Details:
2 cd set
More Info:
What kind of introduction could possibly do justice to the most influential grindcore / death metal band of all time? Repulsion is the band that introduced the world to insane blasting drums, bone jarring distorted bass, and the most vile lyrics imaginable. Originally released in Europe during 1989 by members of Carcass on their Necrosis Records label, Horrified is a gnere-pionnering masterpiece that has influenced almost every band playing death metal and is sure to rhapsodize listeners with a guaranteed to scramble synapses and rupture eardrums.
Reviews:
When you think of grindcore—and if you're lurking around this sectionof the magazine you probably consider it often enough—thoughts immediatelyturn to the British institution Napalm Death. Almost tragically, listeners oftenforget about the other two pieces of grindcore's unholy trinity—Boston'sunheralded Siege and perhaps even more importantly, Flint, Michigan's foulestexports, Repulsion. In fact, any member of Napalm Death will tell you just howmuch both of these acts influenced the band.
While Siege may have provided the earliest grindcore blueprints back in 1984,by 1986 Repulsion were the only band on the planet that could challenge Napalmin terms of sheer velocity, plainly evidenced on Repulsion's sole full-lengthrecording Horrified. Yet while Napalm and Siege concerned themselveswith issues both personal and political, Repulsion sung of festering boils andtransvestite zombies, aligning themselves with the soon-to-develop death metalinsurgence.
Nonetheless, only devout underground tape-traders got to hear the band before1989 when Earache Records imprint Necrosis (the label conceived by Carcass'Jeff Walker and Bill Steer) finally released Horrified amid that era'sdeath metal deluge. Reissued in 1992 by Relapse only to be deleted again a fewyears later, this 18-track 29-minute classic still endures against grindingcontemporaries like Pig Destroyer and Nasum despite offering such a gaunt guitarclatter. Instead, Repulsion relied on frontman Scott Carlson's dirty bassbuzz, which Napalm liberally borrowed before even paying tribute to the soundon their 1990 European tour shirts (start your eBay search engines), and thelight-speed drumming of Dave Grave to conduct their primitive minute-and-a-halflong eruptions.
More than a mere historical document, however, Horrified still dismantles eardrumsnearly 20 years after its recording. And with extensive liner notes courtesyof Carlson and a bonus disc of the band's final demo recordings as wellas demo and rehearsal tracks from the pre-Repulsion outfit Genocide, the thirdissue of this essential recording clearly stands as its definitive edition.