|
01.
Disharmonic Orchestra, Pungent Stench - Split LP,
1989 Vinyl LP Nuclear Blast - NB 019 , Compilation Contains 12 songs by: Disharmonic Orchestra, Pungent Stench 02. Disharmonic Orchestra - Successive Substitution, 1989 Vinyl 7" 33 ⅓ RPM EP Nuclear Blast - NB 021 03. Disharmonic Orchestra - Expositionsprophylaxe, 1990 CD Album Nuclear Blast, Nuclear Blast - NUCLEAR BLAST 037, NB 037 04. Disharmonic Orchestra - Expositionsprophylaxe, 1990 CD Album Reissue Nuclear Blast, Nuclear Blast - NB 469-2, 27361 64692 Reissue from 2000 - Includes Pungent Stench split LP tracks 05. Disharmonic Orchestra - Not To Be Undimensional Conscious, 1992 CD Album Nuclear Blast - NB 062 CD 06. Disharmonic Orchestra - Not To Be Undimensional Conscious, 1992 CD Album Limited Edition Reissue Remastered Metal Mind Productions - MASS CD 1186 DG Reissue from 2008 - Includes Successive Substitution EP tracks 07. Disharmonic Orchestra - Pleasuredome, 1994 CD Album Steamhammer - SPV 084-76772 08. Disharmonic Orchestra - Ahead, 2002 CD Album Nuclear Blast, Nuclear Blast - NB 1029-2, 27361 10292 09. Disharmonic Orchestra - Fear Of Angst, 2016 CD Album Limited Edition Not On Label - DM001 Advanced zeristic thrashosaurus! Austria is not only the birthplace of geniuses like Carl Menger and Ludwig Von Mises, it is the cradle of some unique metal as in Disharmonic Orchestra and Pungent Stench. The early days of of Disharmonic Orchestra display a love for raw meat and Repulsion: dirty, fast and bloody grinding deathlike aural pummeling is on the menu. That Pungent Stench split is a marvel of neanderthrash. On Expositionprophylaxe, more elaborated architecture started to grow under, or over, the thrashing death metal assault and we enjoyed an infusion of Coroner | Bulldozer | Prong | Celtic Frost in the mix. After the majestic Undimensional Conscious, the whole machine matured into a beast of another level and this is when they became a unique band. Starting on Pleasuredome, the death metal part vanished to give way to high grade progressions of diagonal riffs and jazzy syncopation in phase with what Coroner, Voïvod and even the Japanese Doom were doing in the early 90s, plus a remarkable liberation of punk beats. The following albums are even better - Fear Of Angst rips. The last three albums are exceptional pieces of rocking metallic explorations that even Trottel or NoMeansNo fan could enjoy. Pure joy of the twist in the heavy! Amazement of the triplazering from Austrian metalonomics! No I do not have the newest mini album Raw, but links are welcome. Remove brackets and unzip: [harmonizer] !ZER Disharmonic Orchestra, Pungent Stench ZER! |
Ideological Capture w/Pete Quinones
2 hours ago
I'm gonna miss that tumor. Such a plucky little guy, trapped under such horrid conditions inside that giant bag of shit.
ReplyDeleteI'm surprised it didn't starve to death ...
DeleteIt did. Could not allocate resources properly.
DeleteI always said I hope McStain dies of the bone cancer he deserves. He got off way too easy. He wasn't worth the time or calories necessary to convert himself to compost. Rot in hell you parasitic psychopath McStain.
ReplyDeleteWoodchuck Pirate
aka Raymond J Raupers Jr USA
Man, I almost forgot about the Disharmonic Orchestra, Pungent Stench - Split LP … I used to absolutely love that vinyl!
ReplyDeletethank you!
Regarding McCain, you guys forget that he was THE ONLY REPUBLICAN STANDING UP TO GENERAL TRUMP!!! So, he clearly deserves praise for that!
I seen Disharmonic Orchestra once, at the Day of Death festival/all day concert,at The Skyroom, in Buffalo, NY, Oct.20th, 1990. I heard OF the band before in fanzines, but still had no idea what they would sound or look like.
ReplyDeleteI think it was getting near the end of the show,(not as many audience members as in the early afternoon,and the place was fucking desolate when AUTOPSY played... maybe Autopsy were the final band?), anyways I remember being impressed, but was so bone tired, forgot about them or buying their records when I got back to Toronto.
It would be almost ten years before I seen a CD and bought it, thinking it would be pretty good. Turned out to be GREAT.