domingo, 21 de septiembre de 2025

Cemetary "The Beast Divine (Digipak, Germany, Century Media, 77287-2)"

The Beast Divine is the sixth album by Swedish Gothic Metal band Cemetary, released under the moniker Cemetary 1213 by Century Media in May 22nd, 2000.

Tracklist:
  1. The Lightning / Firewire 04:34  
  2. Union of the Rats 04:32   
  3. Silicon Karma (It Just Can't Stay the Same) 03:44  
  4. AntiChrist 3000 04:36  
  5. The Carrier 00:54  
  6. Linking Shadows 03:10
  7. Sunset Grace (Let-Me-Die-Alone) 04:22
  8. Dead Boy Wonder 03:30
  9. Empire of the Divine 00:58
  10. Anthem Apocalypse 09:39  
Time:  39:59  

Released under Cemetary 1213 name although the back cover and spine list only the name Cemetary without the 1213 suffix.

There is a "hidden" bonus track on track 10. Anthem Apocalypse that starts at 7:06 (6:66).

Recording information:
Produced, mixed, and engineered at Interphase Studios.
Mastered at The Mastering Room, Gothenburg, Sweden.











sábado, 20 de septiembre de 2025

Celtic Frost "Into The Pandemonium (Germany, Noise Records, N CD 0067)"

Into the Pandemonium is the third studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released on 1 June 1987 through Noise Records in Europe, and through Combat Records in the US. The album marks the return of bassist and backing vocalist Martin Eric Ain, who had previously appeared on 1984's Morbid Tales, but not on the band's previous album.

The album furthers Celtic Frost's experimental bent, with unlikely covers choices (Wall of Voodoo's "Mexican Radio"), industrial-tinged tracks ("One In their Pride") and gothic rock tendencies. The already traditional Frost-styled orchestral flourishes with female vocals are also present. Initially met with mixed reviews, Into the Pandemonium's acceptance quickly grew and it became the band's most successful record.

The album also marked the end of their tenure with Noise Records. A costly legal battle with the label ensued, due to accusations by the band that Noise sabotaged the album's promotion.

The rehearsals for the album started during the second half of 1986. The band early on discarded the working titles Silent Excess and Monumentum in favor of the familiar Into the Pandemonium.

Noise label boss Karl-Ulrich Walterbach "didn't get" Celtic Frost's new material, and threatened multiple times to defund the recording if they didn't play run-on-the-mill thrash metal. This estrangement with the band's left-field approach continued after the album's release. During Pandemonium's listening party at SPV's offices Walterbach approached Warrior and asked, "Why don't you try to sound more like Exodus or Slayer?" Walterbach's sarcasm infuriated Frost's main composer.

The band had in mind the bold objective to surpass all their previous body of work. The push came largely from being blown away by the freshness of new wave. Every newly discovered record presented other musical vistas, a neverending supply of novel and original ideas. With this broadening of horizons, Celtic Frost were adamant that no set of rules would smother their creativity—especially those of extreme metal. "We hated these unwritten limitations in the metal scene", Warrior reminisced.

Both Warrior and Ain were post-punk devotees, especially of goth acts Bauhaus, Christian Death, Siouxsie and the Banshees and The Sisters of Mercy. Paradise Lost main composer and guitarist Gregor Mackintosh spotted the Christian Death influence on Warrior's new "whiny" vocal style, used throughout the album. In his opinion, it was "lifted straight" from the late Rozz Williams, especially his singing on Only Theatre of Pain.

One particularly controversial portion of the album was the dance-oriented "One in Their Pride", a track built around soundbites from NASA's Apollo program. Its use of sampling and drum machines reminded Belgian EBM group Front 242. Dan Lilker, former Anthrax and Nuclear Assault bassist, confessed his enstrangement with this track. Lilker said this enstrangement was generalized throughout the scene at the time. This was an instance where Tom Warrior acknowledged that the band "went too far" on their experiments. In the long run, he considered this track a mistake. Chuck Eddy compared "One in Their Pride", with its pared-down bass, to Adrian Sherwood's production work for Tackhead and Keith Le Blanc. "Rex Irae", another rhythmic song, was described by Eddy as "a dub/riff mixture" that is comparable to Chain Gang, Ruts DC and A.R. Kane.

Celtic Frost were always fascinated with the rise and fall of ancient civilizations; their own name stands for this idea. Three songs from Into the Pandemonium—"Babylon Fell", "Caress into Oblivion" and "Rex Irae"—deal with the myths and history of the Babylonians, especially those of king Nebuchadnezzar II and Marduk, god-patron of the city of Babylon, capital of the Persian Empire.

"I Won't Dance (The Elders' Orient)" was inspired originally by the Egyptian Book of the Dead.

19th-century poetry was another source of inspiration for the lyrics. For example, significant portions of "Inner Sanctum" are directly quoted from Emily Brontë poems. Martin Ain discovered these on L'Homme devant la mort (The Hour of Our Death.) by French historian Philippe Ariès. On the other hand, the lyrics to "Tristesses de la lune" are borrowed from the poem of the same name in Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal. The lyrics to "Sorrows of the Moon" are an English translation of the same. Moonspell vocalist Fernando Ribeiro discovered Baudelaire through this song.

The cover image is a detail from the right (Hell) panel of The Garden of Earthly Delights, a triptych painted in 1504 by Hieronymus Bosch, part of Madrid's Prado permanent collection. The original idea of using this painting for Into the Pandemonium's cover came through Martin Ain. The LP's inner sleeve was the Les Edwards Tombworld (1980) painting. As to how the band's music can be linked their album art, Tom Warrior explained:
To determine what the album will look like helps us to formulate its musical content. It makes it possible to arrange and design our material according to our feelings and interpretation of the paintings. I don't know whether this is easy to understand or not. As the cover art represents the musical content of our albums, so the musical content reflects the mood of the cover.
In Warrior's recollection, three quarters into production Celtic Forst were forced, by Noise, to do some dates with Anthrax. If they didn't, the label would cut short the funding for Pandemonium. In his defense, label boss Karl-Ulrich Walterbach stated that he simply offered the tour and never pushed it. He knew the timing wasn't ideal for the band. One of these dates was the 1987 edition of the Aardschokdag, a Dutch annual heavy metal festival. Frost played alongside Anthrax, Metal Church, Crimson Glory, Lȧȧz Rockit and headliners Metallica on February 8.

After the album's release, American guitarist Ron Marks was invited to join the band, in part to bolster its live sound.

Celtic Frost did a brief English tour on late October, with Kreator and Virus. They then flew to the United States, to be the opening act to the December leg of Anthrax's Among the Living tour. Frost caught the thrash explosion in the US. In a few months, Anthrax went from playing to 500 people per show to 7,000 or 8,000 every night, without radio play or MTV exposure.

After Into the Pandemonium, Celtic Frost became one of Noise's bestsellers. By the end of the year, the band's third album had sold 100,000 records worldwide. Alongside the 250,000 sold by Running Wild's Under Jolly Roger and the 500,000 sold of Helloween's Keeper of the Seven Keys: Part I, 1987 helped usher a new era for the German label. There were a number of factors that aided this turn of events: SPV's European distribution network, RCA's promotional push behind Helloween and an enthusiastic metal press.

Thomas Gabriel Fischer finally performed Celtic Frost's requiem at Roadburn 2019 with Triptykon, along with the Metropole Orkest. Into the Pandemonium's "Rex Irae" is the opening part; the third, concluding part—"Winter (Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale)"—can be heard on 2006's Monotheist. The second, long-missing second part ("Grave Eternal") was never officially released until these performances. A full, live rendition of the entire piece has been released.

Malcolm Dome called Into the Pandemonium both "metal's most visionary album" and an "avant-garde metal masterpiece". Tom Warrior himself said that it is "the band's most important release". AllMusic reviewer Eduardo Rivadavia considered Into the Pandemonium "one of the classic extreme metal albums of all time". In 1991, Eddy ranked Into the Pandemonium at number 108 in his list of the 500 best heavy metal albums ever.

Into the Pandemonium had a decisive impact on the emerging gothic metal scene of the 1990s. Paradise Lost collectively held the album in high esteem. "It made [us] what we are", said Mackintosh, "and so many other bands [...] too". Rhythm guitarist Aaron Aedy pointed out that Pandemonium's use of orchestration inspired their sophomore album, Gothic. My Dying Bride's Andrew Craighan revealed that adventurous use of violins on Into the Pandemonium encouraged MDB to do the same. Craighan felt something like "we can do that if they're doing it". Moonspell's Ribeiro found Pandemonium "groundbreaking and inspiring". He preferred Celtic Frost's unorthodox approach to heavy metal "than to be bound to an unwritten book of Underground laws to please others instead of our artistic hunger". This particular record made them deepen the connection with their Middle Eastern and African musical heritage, a big part of the folk music from their native Portugal.

Warrior's "goth" crooning on Pandemonium also prove influential to gothic metal pioneers. Paradise Lost singer Nick Holmes said "Mesmerized" was his second favorite Celtic Frost song, partly because of how Warrior sang on it. Anathema's Vincent Cavanagh, later on, would borrow Warrior's moaned-style singing on "Mesmerized" for The Silent Enigma's title track.

Celtic Frost's third album also had a lasting influence on symphonic metal. Therion mainman Christofer Johnsson, in particular, frequently acknowledges its importance. In 2021, it was elected by Metal Hammer as the second best symphonic metal album of all time.

In June 30th, 2017 was reissued and remastered as a digibook.

Track list:
  1. "Mexican Radio" 3:28
  2. "Mesmerized" 3:24
  3. "Inner Sanctum" 5:14
  4. "Tristesses de la Lune" 2:58
  5. "Babylon Fell (Jade Serpent)" 4:18
  6. "Caress into Oblivion (Jade Serpent II)" 5:10
  7. "One in Their Pride" (Porthole Mix) 2:50
  8. "I Won't Dance (The Elders' Orient)" 4:31
  9. "Sorrows of the Moon" 3:04
  10. "Rex Irae (Requiem)" 5:57
  11. "Oriental Masquerade" 1:15
  12. "One in Their Pride" (Re-entry Mix) 5:52  
Total time :   59:38

Recording information:
Recorded from January-April 1987, at Horus Sound Studio, Hannover, Germany.













Celtic Frost "Into The Pandemonium (1993 Reissue, USA, Futurist, 9086-11050-2)"

Into the Pandemonium is the third studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released on 1 June 1987 through Noise Records in Europe, and through Combat Records in the US. The album marks the return of bassist and backing vocalist Martin Eric Ain, who had previously appeared on 1984's Morbid Tales, but not on the band's previous album.

The album furthers Celtic Frost's experimental bent, with unlikely covers choices (Wall of Voodoo's "Mexican Radio"), industrial-tinged tracks ("One In their Pride") and gothic rock tendencies. The already traditional Frost-styled orchestral flourishes with female vocals are also present. Initially met with mixed reviews, Into the Pandemonium's acceptance quickly grew and it became the band's most successful record.

The album also marked the end of their tenure with Noise Records. A costly legal battle with the label ensued, due to accusations by the band that Noise sabotaged the album's promotion.

The rehearsals for the album started during the second half of 1986. The band early on discarded the working titles Silent Excess and Monumentum in favor of the familiar Into the Pandemonium.

Noise label boss Karl-Ulrich Walterbach "didn't get" Celtic Frost's new material, and threatened multiple times to defund the recording if they didn't play run-on-the-mill thrash metal. This estrangement with the band's left-field approach continued after the album's release. During Pandemonium's listening party at SPV's offices Walterbach approached Warrior and asked, "Why don't you try to sound more like Exodus or Slayer?" Walterbach's sarcasm infuriated Frost's main composer.

The band had in mind the bold objective to surpass all their previous body of work. The push came largely from being blown away by the freshness of new wave. Every newly discovered record presented other musical vistas, a neverending supply of novel and original ideas. With this broadening of horizons, Celtic Frost were adamant that no set of rules would smother their creativity—especially those of extreme metal. "We hated these unwritten limitations in the metal scene", Warrior reminisced.

Both Warrior and Ain were post-punk devotees, especially of goth acts Bauhaus, Christian Death, Siouxsie and the Banshees and The Sisters of Mercy. Paradise Lost main composer and guitarist Gregor Mackintosh spotted the Christian Death influence on Warrior's new "whiny" vocal style, used throughout the album. In his opinion, it was "lifted straight" from the late Rozz Williams, especially his singing on Only Theatre of Pain.

One particularly controversial portion of the album was the dance-oriented "One in Their Pride", a track built around soundbites from NASA's Apollo program. Its use of sampling and drum machines reminded Belgian EBM group Front 242. Dan Lilker, former Anthrax and Nuclear Assault bassist, confessed his enstrangement with this track. Lilker said this enstrangement was generalized throughout the scene at the time. This was an instance where Tom Warrior acknowledged that the band "went too far" on their experiments. In the long run, he considered this track a mistake. Chuck Eddy compared "One in Their Pride", with its pared-down bass, to Adrian Sherwood's production work for Tackhead and Keith Le Blanc. "Rex Irae", another rhythmic song, was described by Eddy as "a dub/riff mixture" that is comparable to Chain Gang, Ruts DC and A.R. Kane.

Celtic Frost were always fascinated with the rise and fall of ancient civilizations; their own name stands for this idea. Three songs from Into the Pandemonium—"Babylon Fell", "Caress into Oblivion" and "Rex Irae"—deal with the myths and history of the Babylonians, especially those of king Nebuchadnezzar II and Marduk, god-patron of the city of Babylon, capital of the Persian Empire.

"I Won't Dance (The Elders' Orient)" was inspired originally by the Egyptian Book of the Dead.

19th-century poetry was another source of inspiration for the lyrics. For example, significant portions of "Inner Sanctum" are directly quoted from Emily Brontë poems. Martin Ain discovered these on L'Homme devant la mort (The Hour of Our Death.) by French historian Philippe Ariès. On the other hand, the lyrics to "Tristesses de la lune" are borrowed from the poem of the same name in Charles Baudelaire's Les Fleurs du mal. The lyrics to "Sorrows of the Moon" are an English translation of the same. Moonspell vocalist Fernando Ribeiro discovered Baudelaire through this song.

The cover image is a detail from the right (Hell) panel of The Garden of Earthly Delights, a triptych painted in 1504 by Hieronymus Bosch, part of Madrid's Prado permanent collection. The original idea of using this painting for Into the Pandemonium's cover came through Martin Ain. The LP's inner sleeve was the Les Edwards Tombworld (1980) painting. As to how the band's music can be linked their album art, Tom Warrior explained:
To determine what the album will look like helps us to formulate its musical content. It makes it possible to arrange and design our material according to our feelings and interpretation of the paintings. I don't know whether this is easy to understand or not. As the cover art represents the musical content of our albums, so the musical content reflects the mood of the cover.
In Warrior's recollection, three quarters into production Celtic Forst were forced, by Noise, to do some dates with Anthrax. If they didn't, the label would cut short the funding for Pandemonium. In his defense, label boss Karl-Ulrich Walterbach stated that he simply offered the tour and never pushed it. He knew the timing wasn't ideal for the band. One of these dates was the 1987 edition of the Aardschokdag, a Dutch annual heavy metal festival. Frost played alongside Anthrax, Metal Church, Crimson Glory, Lȧȧz Rockit and headliners Metallica on February 8.

After the album's release, American guitarist Ron Marks was invited to join the band, in part to bolster its live sound.

Celtic Frost did a brief English tour on late October, with Kreator and Virus. They then flew to the United States, to be the opening act to the December leg of Anthrax's Among the Living tour. Frost caught the thrash explosion in the US. In a few months, Anthrax went from playing to 500 people per show to 7,000 or 8,000 every night, without radio play or MTV exposure.

After Into the Pandemonium, Celtic Frost became one of Noise's bestsellers. By the end of the year, the band's third album had sold 100,000 records worldwide. Alongside the 250,000 sold by Running Wild's Under Jolly Roger and the 500,000 sold of Helloween's Keeper of the Seven Keys: Part I, 1987 helped usher a new era for the German label. There were a number of factors that aided this turn of events: SPV's European distribution network, RCA's promotional push behind Helloween and an enthusiastic metal press.

Thomas Gabriel Fischer finally performed Celtic Frost's requiem at Roadburn 2019 with Triptykon, along with the Metropole Orkest. Into the Pandemonium's "Rex Irae" is the opening part; the third, concluding part—"Winter (Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale)"—can be heard on 2006's Monotheist. The second, long-missing second part ("Grave Eternal") was never officially released until these performances. A full, live rendition of the entire piece has been released.

Malcolm Dome called Into the Pandemonium both "metal's most visionary album" and an "avant-garde metal masterpiece". Tom Warrior himself said that it is "the band's most important release". AllMusic reviewer Eduardo Rivadavia considered Into the Pandemonium "one of the classic extreme metal albums of all time". In 1991, Eddy ranked Into the Pandemonium at number 108 in his list of the 500 best heavy metal albums ever.

Into the Pandemonium had a decisive impact on the emerging gothic metal scene of the 1990s. Paradise Lost collectively held the album in high esteem. "It made [us] what we are", said Mackintosh, "and so many other bands [...] too". Rhythm guitarist Aaron Aedy pointed out that Pandemonium's use of orchestration inspired their sophomore album, Gothic. My Dying Bride's Andrew Craighan revealed that adventurous use of violins on Into the Pandemonium encouraged MDB to do the same. Craighan felt something like "we can do that if they're doing it". Moonspell's Ribeiro found Pandemonium "groundbreaking and inspiring". He preferred Celtic Frost's unorthodox approach to heavy metal "than to be bound to an unwritten book of Underground laws to please others instead of our artistic hunger". This particular record made them deepen the connection with their Middle Eastern and African musical heritage, a big part of the folk music from their native Portugal.

Warrior's "goth" crooning on Pandemonium also prove influential to gothic metal pioneers. Paradise Lost singer Nick Holmes said "Mesmerized" was his second favorite Celtic Frost song, partly because of how Warrior sang on it. Anathema's Vincent Cavanagh, later on, would borrow Warrior's moaned-style singing on "Mesmerized" for The Silent Enigma's title track.

Celtic Frost's third album also had a lasting influence on symphonic metal. Therion mainman Christofer Johnsson, in particular, frequently acknowledges its importance. In 2021, it was elected by Metal Hammer as the second best symphonic metal album of all time.

In June 30th, 2017 was reissued and remastered as a digibook.

Track list:
  1. "Mexican Radio" 3:28
  2. "Mesmerized" 3:24
  3. "Inner Sanctum" 5:14
  4. "Tristesses de la Lune" 2:58
  5. "Babylon Fell (Jade Serpent)" 4:18
  6. "Caress into Oblivion (Jade Serpent II)" 5:10
  7. "One in Their Pride" (Porthole Mix) 2:50
  8. "I Won't Dance (The Elders' Orient)" 4:31
  9. "Sorrows of the Moon" 3:04
  10. "Rex Irae (Requiem)" 5:57
  11. "Oriental Masquerade" 1:15
  12. "One in Their Pride" (Re-entry Mix) 5:52  
Total time :   59:38

Re-released in the US by Noise/Futurist in 1993 with bonus tracks "Tristesses de la Lune" and "One In Their Pride (Extended Mix)"

Recording information:
Recorded from January-April 1987, at Horus Sound Studio, Hannover, Germany.








Celtic Frost "To Mega Therion (1988 Reissue, Germany, Noise Records, N 0031-3)"

To Mega Therion is the second studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released in October 1985 through Noise Records. The cover artwork is a painting by H. R. Giger titled Satan I.

"To Mega Therion" translates to the great beast in Greek. It is an expression found in the Bible but was also a nickname used by Aleister Crowley.

The album was highly influential on death metal and black metal, and some consider it to be one of the best albums of the 1980s.

Sam Sodomsky of Pitchfork said To Mega Therion "spread apocalyptic visions over ungodly, vicious thrash metal." He further explained: "As subgenres began to harden into unified aesthetics, this music could not be pinned down: French horns, droning keyboards, and constantly shifting song structures assured that even the most devoted metalheads had never heard anything quite like it."

The album's horn sections have been described as "Wagnerian".

Ned Raggett in his review for AllMusic wrote, "The bombastic 'Innocence and Wrath' starts To Mega Therion off on just the appropriate note – Wagnerian horn lines, booming drums, and a slow crunch toward apocalypse. ... With that setting the tone, it is into the maddeningly wild and woolly Celtic Frost universe full bore, Warrior roaring out his vocals with glee and a wicked smile while never resorting to self-parodic castrato wails. 'The Usurper' alone is worth the price of admission, an awesome display of Warrior's knack around brute power and unexpectedly memorable riffs." According to Raggett, "other prime cuts" include "Circle of the Tyrants", "Dawn of Megiddo", "Tears in a Prophet's Dream", "Eternal Summer" and "Necromantical Screams". Raggett concludes his review by stating that the album "is and remains death metal at its finest".

The album was a major influence on the then-developing death metal and black metal genres.

Canadian journalist Martin Popoff considers the album "a black metal landmark" and "the most consistent example of early death metal that exists". He remarks how "the band had decided to delve more into the extreme" and praised Tom Warrior's "surprisingly accomplished" lyrics and the mix of death, black and doom metal with a pinch of ambient music.

Decibel magazine ranked To Mega Therion #21 in their "Decibel Thrash Top 50" list. Writer Nick Green praises both its "purer" thrash metal tracks such as "Circle of the Tyrants" and the experimental edge of "Necromantical Screams."

Sam Sodomsky of Pitchfork wrote in 2018: "Whatever response they elicited, Celtic Frost never seemed to care much: After all, they reminded us, we’re all going to the same place anyway."

Tracklist:
  1. Innocence and Wrath 01:02   
  2. The Usurper 03:27
  3. Jewel Throne 04:06
  4. Dawn of Megiddo 05:47   
  5. Eternal Summer 04:31   
  6. Circle of the Tyrants 04:38  
  7. (Beyond the) North Winds 03:08   
  8. Fainted Eyes 05:09
  9. Tears in a Prophet's Dream 02:33  
  10. Necromantical Screams 06:02  
Time:  40:23

Issued in a standard jewel case, with a 4-page booklet.

Track 2 (inspired by »Hear The Ballad Of The Swords« and »The Sign Of The Usurper« by Tom G. Warrior)
Track 6 [some] lines inspired by a poem by Robert E. Howard, called »Cimmeria«
Track 10 inspired by the song »Buried And Forgotten«, by Tom G. Warrior, Autumn 1983.

Fourth track is titled "Dawn of Meggido" in booklet.

- Official Video : Circle Of The Tyrants

Recording information:
Recorded, mixed, and mastered at Casablanca Studio, Berlin, 14-28 September 1985.
Horst Müller – producer, engineer, mixing
Rick Lights – assistant engineer
Karl Walterbach – executive producer









Celtic Frost "To Mega Therion (1993 Reissue, USA, Futurist, 9086-11049-2)"

To Mega Therion is the second studio album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released in October 1985 through Noise Records. The cover artwork is a painting by H. R. Giger titled Satan I.

"To Mega Therion" translates to the great beast in Greek. It is an expression found in the Bible but was also a nickname used by Aleister Crowley.

The album was highly influential on death metal and black metal, and some consider it to be one of the best albums of the 1980s.

Sam Sodomsky of Pitchfork said To Mega Therion "spread apocalyptic visions over ungodly, vicious thrash metal." He further explained: "As subgenres began to harden into unified aesthetics, this music could not be pinned down: French horns, droning keyboards, and constantly shifting song structures assured that even the most devoted metalheads had never heard anything quite like it."

The album's horn sections have been described as "Wagnerian".

Ned Raggett in his review for AllMusic wrote, "The bombastic 'Innocence and Wrath' starts To Mega Therion off on just the appropriate note – Wagnerian horn lines, booming drums, and a slow crunch toward apocalypse. ... With that setting the tone, it is into the maddeningly wild and woolly Celtic Frost universe full bore, Warrior roaring out his vocals with glee and a wicked smile while never resorting to self-parodic castrato wails. 'The Usurper' alone is worth the price of admission, an awesome display of Warrior's knack around brute power and unexpectedly memorable riffs." According to Raggett, "other prime cuts" include "Circle of the Tyrants", "Dawn of Megiddo", "Tears in a Prophet's Dream", "Eternal Summer" and "Necromantical Screams". Raggett concludes his review by stating that the album "is and remains death metal at its finest".

The album was a major influence on the then-developing death metal and black metal genres.

Canadian journalist Martin Popoff considers the album "a black metal landmark" and "the most consistent example of early death metal that exists". He remarks how "the band had decided to delve more into the extreme" and praised Tom Warrior's "surprisingly accomplished" lyrics and the mix of death, black and doom metal with a pinch of ambient music.

Decibel magazine ranked To Mega Therion #21 in their "Decibel Thrash Top 50" list. Writer Nick Green praises both its "purer" thrash metal tracks such as "Circle of the Tyrants" and the experimental edge of "Necromantical Screams."

Sam Sodomsky of Pitchfork wrote in 2018: "Whatever response they elicited, Celtic Frost never seemed to care much: After all, they reminded us, we’re all going to the same place anyway."

Tracklist:
  1. Innocence and Wrath 01:02   
  2. The Usurper 03:27
  3. Jewel Throne 04:06
  4. Dawn of Megiddo 05:47   
  5. Eternal Summer 04:31   
  6. Circle of the Tyrants 04:38  
  7. (Beyond the) North Winds 03:08   
  8. Fainted Eyes 05:09
  9. Tears in a Prophet's Dream 02:33  
  10. Necromantical Screams 06:02  
Time:  40:23

Fourth track is titled "Dawn of Meggido" in booklet.

- Official Video : Circle Of The Tyrants

Recording information:
Recorded, mixed, and mastered at Casablanca Studio, Berlin, 14-28 September 1985.
Horst Müller – producer, engineer, mixing
Rick Lights – assistant engineer
Karl Walterbach – executive producer











Celtic Frost "Morbid Tales (1999 Reissue, Remastered, Germany, Noise Records, N 0325-2)"

Morbid Tales is the debut album by Swiss extreme metal band Celtic Frost, released in November 1984. It was originally released in Europe on Noise Records as a mini-LP with six tracks, while the American release by Enigma/Metal Blade added two tracks, bringing it to the length of a regular studio LP. The band retrospectively refers to the LP release as the band's debut studio album.

In 1999, a remastered edition of Morbid Tales was released on CD by Noise Records, which also contained the tracks from their 1985 EP Emperor's Return as well as a 2017 remastered edition released by the same label on CD and vinyl formats.

The album's guitars are tuned to E standard.

The thrash metal intensity of Morbid Tales had a major influence on the then-developing death metal and black metal genres, along with In the Sign of the Black Mark by Bathory and Seven Churches by Possessed. It included elements that were adopted by the pioneers of both styles. The band's bleak and dead serious fashion style was also influential, including their corpse paint face makeup.

In 2014, J. Andrew of Metal Injection wrote: "In a way, Celtic Frost (along with Hellhammer) could really go on any essential listening list for extreme metal. They've been so influential to thrash, death, and black metal that they transcend any tight, genre-specific limitations. And though To Mega Therion is often considered their signature musical achievement, Morbid Tales offers a glimpse into the raw beginnings of what many of us fans now take for granted. [...] Morbid Tales marks an important moment in the mid-1980s where signs of what was to come with extreme music began to emerge."

In 2017, Rolling Stone ranked Morbid Tales as 28th on their list of 'The 100 Greatest Metal Albums of All Time.' Decibel placed Morbid Tales at #14 in their "Decibel Thrash Top 50". Contributor Jeff Wagner wrote about how the LP was "Hellhammer refined, but no less demented", and that it "remains as pure and primal as Celtic Frost would ever be."

In the commentary for Darkthrone's album Panzerfaust, Fenriz cites this album along with Bathory's Under the Sign of the Black Mark and Vader's Necrolust as key riff inspirations.

"Danse Macabre" was later sampled in the demo track "Totgetanzt" from their 2002 demo album Prototype.

Tracklist:
  1. Human 00:41  
  2. Into the Crypts of Rays 03:39  
  3. Visions of Mortality 04:48   
  4. Dethroned Emperor 04:38   
  5. Morbid Tales 03:29   
  6. Procreation (of the Wicked) 04:05
  7. Return to the Eve 04:08  
  8. Danse Macabre 03:52
  9. Nocturnal Fear 03:38
  10. Circle of the Tyrants 04:27
  11. Visual Aggression 04:11  
  12. Suicidal Winds 04:36   
Time:  46:12  

- Bonus tracks 4-5 taken from the album's North American pressing.
- Bonus tracks 10-12 taken from the 1985 Emperor's Return ep.
- Track 1 was originally the unnamed intro to "Into the Crypts of Rays". Here it is identified as a separate named track.
- The duration of some tracks differ quite a bit from what is printed on the release.

Recording information:
Horst Müller – producer, engineer, mixing, mastering
Karl Walterbach – executive producer

Tracks 1-9:
- Recorded and mixed Oct. 8-15, 1984 at Caet Studio, Berlin, Germany.

Tracks 10-12:
- Recorded, mixed & mastered April 8-12, 1985 at Line In Recording Studio, Zurich, Switzerland.

Tracks 1-12:
- Remastered at Oakland Recording, Winterhur, Switzerland.