Upon
switching their name from Xecutioner to Obituary,
the career of one of the most successful and influential
Death Metal bands began. Hailing from Florida and featuring
John Tardy (vocals), brother Donald Tardy (drums), Trevor
Peres (guitar), Allen West (guitar), and Daniel Tucker
(bass), the band signed to Roadracer Records, a now defunct
division of Roadrunner, for the recording of their debut
album—the immense and immeasurably heavy “Slowly We Rot”
(1989). The album was engineered by the legendary Scott
Burns at Morrisound Studio, which would come to be the
most sought after facility for production of albums during
1990's rise of the Death Metal genre. Unlike much death
metal preceding it, the album had a sludgy feel and integrated
devastatingly slow passages along with obliterating overtures
that reached far beyond any point of mayhem that metal
had yet to reach; the result was a carnal pleasure for
doom, death and thrash fans alike coupling the adrenaline
of a speedball with the slow, degrading measures of a
sewer at dusk. Like them or not, Obituary was unlike anything
anyone had heard before.
“Slowly We Rot” was chaotic, bass
heavy mix of manic guitar solos and crashing drums, but
it was undeniably characterized by vocalist John Tardy's
disarmingly horrific, gargling style, that created guttural
chasms of dread which though often strived for, to date
have been paralleled by none. The ability to augment tempo
so drastically became the band's trademark along with
Tardy's unique vocal style, which distinguished them clearly
from the rest of the emerging Florida Death Metal bands;
nowhere is this more apparent than on the prophetic title
track of their debut. The fact that Obituary refrained
from printing lyric sheets with their albums led people
to believe that they didn't actually write any lyrics.
Some may question the verbosity or absence of documented
lyrics, however, any true fan has each grunt, growl and
howling grimace committed to memory like an utterance
from God in painstaking form—what does not exist can not
be remembered, and an Obituary show is testimony to the
re-creation of what your ears couldn't believe in the
first place. Once again bringing augmentation to irony,
Live and Dead worked quite well for the quintet, dividing
your conscience yet leaving much to the imagination; not
since birth have your senses been so graphically assaulted
yet pleased at the same time. While such differing sensations
once seemed incongruous, Obituary have proven the ability
to merge unlikely dichotomies, from their slow-as-hell-yet-fast-as-fuck
style to the non-evil, homegrown approach to what would
largely become the satanized, bastardized, make-up wearing
movement known as Death Metal.
The maturation of the musicians
into songwriters taking more visionary and complex forms
would soon be heard world wide as Obituary took metal
by storm in 1990. Despite their youth upon release of
their sophomore offering, “Cause of Death” embodied the
confident swagger of the most fearsome pack-leading hound.
From the insidious growls of John's vocals to the barrage
of Donald Tardy 's thunderously-metered explosions of
double bass, “Cause of Death” was the intention and method
as promised by the early threat of “Slowly We Rot”; for
Obituary, Death was just the beginning. Accordingly, the
title track alone (“Cause of Death”) would be heard, regurgitated,
manipulated, complimented and collapsed—but never duplicated—on
third and forth generation death metal albums for years
to come. Lovecraftian imagery and aural morbidity aside,
even a deaf man found fear when confronted by the formidable
visage of guitarist Peres; entering Frank Watkins , the
hulking henchman of a bassist from South Florida , finally
provided long-needed and powerful rhythm stability to
the line up. However, the grinding of the axes would not
be complete until the return of Xecutioner veteran Allen
West , who, along with Peres and Tardy, crafted the foundation
for most of Obituary's most primordial and historic moments.
Attack now whole, Obituary had given birth—sight, sound
and feel—to a true horror greater than metal had ever
known.
The paradox herein lies that Obituary
was anything but a summation to and end, but more an exploratory
journey into the infinite dehumanization of all that is
known, as confronted brazenly by their best selling release
yet, “The End Complete” and later followed by the cynical
and dark expedition of “World Demise”. Reunited with songwriter
West, the band was conjoined like quintuplets sharing
life and a name. Though finality was possibly inferred
by these titles, Obituary was anything but finished. Ironically,
the images conjured by songs such as “Don't Care”, “Platonic
Disease” and “World Demise” seemingly foretold of the
millennium as can now be seen daily, displayed plainly
across the screens of CNN and reality TV programs world
wide; not bad for a bunch of rednecks from Florida with
Budweiser dreams and bongwater nightmares.
2004 brings reason for Obituary
fans to rejoice, the sunken eyes and heaving cries have
all but abated. Obituary has only aspired to live up to
the standard they have set for themselves, one that numerous
bands have strived to duplicate, but never attained, falling
short both creatively and in lack of the unique talent
that each member contributes to the near indescribable
Obituary sound. Like a forgotten corpse in the basement,
Obituary are back to haunt, taunt and fully pollute your
senses. Fermenting like waste in the hot Florida sun,
Obituary return from hiatus with the voracity of a starven
wretch. The forfeiture of time brings blessings of brutality,
and assurance that the Dead shall indeed rise again. Such
aural abrasion can only be heard on an Obituary album
or the live circumcision of a thirty-year-old man, the
choice is yours
www.obituary.cc |