Darkest Day Obituary

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Vinyl LP - Special Edition

  • Release Date: 07/07/2009
  • Sales Rank: 77,495
  • Label: AIS
  • UPC: 803341251274
More Formats 
CD$12.19
CD - Special Edition$12.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
Click on LISTEN or link to hear an audio clip.
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Darkest Day

1LISTENList of Dead 3:34
2LISTENBlood to Give 3:34
3LISTENLost Inside 3:54
4LISTENOutside My Head 3:52
5LISTENPayback 4:29
6LISTENYour Darkest Day 5:06
7LISTENThis Life 3:45
8LISTENSee Me Now 3:22
9LISTENFields of Pain 3:17
10LISTENViolent Dreams 1:59
11LISTENTruth Be Told 4:49
12LISTENForces Realign 4:37
13LISTENLeft to Die 6:20

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Once upon a time, Obituary were one of the very few genuinely frightening metal bands. Vocalist John Tardy wasn't even forming words, for hell's sake; on the group's 1989 debut, Slowly We Rot, he just babbled and shrieked like the crazy guy nobody wants to sit beside on the bus. Meanwhile, the band ground out riffs that mixed the high-speed staccato assault of death metal with a swampy downtempo side that sounded like Black Sabbath sinking into soupy mud. Beginning with the 1990 album Cause of Death, their membership pretty much solidified around a core of Tardy and his drummer brother Donald, guitarist Trevor Peres, and bassist Frank Watkins. When Allen West joined on 1992's World Demise, they had the lineup they'd stick with until 2007's Xecutioner's Return, when Ralph Santolla (Deicide, Iced Earth) replaced West. On this, their third album since reuniting, the formula remains basically the same as it's always been: churning, brutal guitar riffs, lyrics about death and violence (yes, there are lyrics at this point), pummeling drums. Santolla's melodic guitar solos add some much-needed flair and style to the band's songs, and the result is a fierce album that demonstrates why Obituary remain a band to be reckoned with in death metal, even 20 years after their debut album. ~ Phil Freeman, All Music Guide All Music Guide

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