this article makes me regret not having a chance to see 'slayer' for the fifth time... i hope some of you went to this show.
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The New York Times, Feb 17 2007
Music Review | 'Slayer'
For Some Unmellowed Metalheads, Middle Age Is Nothing to Fear
Who would have thought, back in the 80s, that the clatter of Slayers rhythm section would someday become one of those archaic folk forms worth preserving just as an example of human mastery, like Kansas City swing or flamenco singing?
Rhythm sections, in many kinds of metal, have gone funkier, toward deeper grooves. But Slayers hasnt. Its drummer, Dave Lombardo, still plays the same way he did in the early 80s, in wickedly fast two-beat rhythms that constantly rush the music and do not swing; the only difference now is that his sound is bigger and surer, his fills more impressive.
Its a completely unreasonable music, set at crazy speeds for the endless riffs and strangulated, whammy-bar-heavy solos. The bands lyrics show an equal intemperance: Christ Illusion, its last album, full of holy-war imagery, comes out more vehemently against organized religion one of the bands favorite topics than most of its records have in the past. Mellowing is not on the bands docket.
Yet Slayers show at Hammerstein Ballroom on Thursday night created its own sense of comfort and refinement; it was self-contained, expertly paced, an awesome display of self-knowledge. People do get better at many things in their 40s. The odds were against thrash-metal being one.
Slayer doesnt do much onstage: no pyrotechnics, no leaping, very little ingratiating stage rap. Tom Araya, its singer and bassist, still puts his head down and whips his tresses around clockwise when hes not singing. The two guitarists, Kerry King and Jeff Hanneman, trade off solos, sometimes positioning themselves next to each other. Thats about it.
The group just won its first Grammy, for the song Eyes of the Insane. In part:
These thoughts of mutilated faces
Completely possessed
Fragmented images
Flashing rapidly
Psychotically abusing me
Worming through my head
Did Mr. Araya say: Hey, man, we just won a Grammy! How about that, New York? No. He blazed right through it, on the way to the old song Mandatory Suicide, which he dedicated to the American troops in Iraq. (Its a rendering of war as mad slaughter, but like most Slayer songs, it resists being politically lined up; it keeps reaching for the epic poets point of view.)
The mini-epic Seasons in the Abyss, with its ringing tritone interval at the beginning, its extended solos, its medium tempo, was as close as Slayer got to a groove. Otherwise, this was a set pulled into 90 minutes, with hard-core-punk tempos, arranged blasts of feedback linking songs, and ending abruptly with Angel of Death. The band members did not return. It is logical that they dont believe in encores, either.
-----------------------------------------------
The New York Times, Feb 17 2007
Music Review | 'Slayer'
For Some Unmellowed Metalheads, Middle Age Is Nothing to Fear
Who would have thought, back in the 80s, that the clatter of Slayers rhythm section would someday become one of those archaic folk forms worth preserving just as an example of human mastery, like Kansas City swing or flamenco singing?
Rhythm sections, in many kinds of metal, have gone funkier, toward deeper grooves. But Slayers hasnt. Its drummer, Dave Lombardo, still plays the same way he did in the early 80s, in wickedly fast two-beat rhythms that constantly rush the music and do not swing; the only difference now is that his sound is bigger and surer, his fills more impressive.
Its a completely unreasonable music, set at crazy speeds for the endless riffs and strangulated, whammy-bar-heavy solos. The bands lyrics show an equal intemperance: Christ Illusion, its last album, full of holy-war imagery, comes out more vehemently against organized religion one of the bands favorite topics than most of its records have in the past. Mellowing is not on the bands docket.
Yet Slayers show at Hammerstein Ballroom on Thursday night created its own sense of comfort and refinement; it was self-contained, expertly paced, an awesome display of self-knowledge. People do get better at many things in their 40s. The odds were against thrash-metal being one.
Slayer doesnt do much onstage: no pyrotechnics, no leaping, very little ingratiating stage rap. Tom Araya, its singer and bassist, still puts his head down and whips his tresses around clockwise when hes not singing. The two guitarists, Kerry King and Jeff Hanneman, trade off solos, sometimes positioning themselves next to each other. Thats about it.
The group just won its first Grammy, for the song Eyes of the Insane. In part:
These thoughts of mutilated faces
Completely possessed
Fragmented images
Flashing rapidly
Psychotically abusing me
Worming through my head
Did Mr. Araya say: Hey, man, we just won a Grammy! How about that, New York? No. He blazed right through it, on the way to the old song Mandatory Suicide, which he dedicated to the American troops in Iraq. (Its a rendering of war as mad slaughter, but like most Slayer songs, it resists being politically lined up; it keeps reaching for the epic poets point of view.)
The mini-epic Seasons in the Abyss, with its ringing tritone interval at the beginning, its extended solos, its medium tempo, was as close as Slayer got to a groove. Otherwise, this was a set pulled into 90 minutes, with hard-core-punk tempos, arranged blasts of feedback linking songs, and ending abruptly with Angel of Death. The band members did not return. It is logical that they dont believe in encores, either.