Disfear: Everyday Slaughter 12"
Last in the Disfear re issue series. Ā Crushing Swedish hardcore originally released in 1997 and of print on vinyl ever since. Disfear combines the intensity and bleak anti war imagery of Discharge and early UK bands with the heaviness of Swedish Death Metal and Crust. The result is like a sledgehammer to the walls of ignorance and oppression built up around us by the system. A blast of raw anger and pure hardcore power. Ā Full color gatefold. Europe, order from La Familia/Kink Records.
Our take: Holy hot damn, Havoc Records brings a landmark Swedish d-beat record back into print. When I wrote about Havocās reissue of Disfearās 1995 LP Soul Scars, I mentioned I became aware of Disfear through their more polished 2000s releases, not learning until years later about their furious early material. Itās tempting to see 1997ās Everyday Slaughter as the culmination of that early era, as the record after this one marked a change in drummer, vocalist, and style. Everyday Slaughter, though, is a total shredder. Disfear recorded the album with Thomas Skogsberg at Sunlight Studios, who also produced sonically renowned Swedish death metal classics like Entombedās Left Hand Path and Clandestine, Dismemberās Like an Ever Flowing Stream, Carnageās Dark Recollections, and many others. However, the bigger production on Everyday Slaughter is balanced out by a feral performance from the band, who lays into these songs like a hungry pack of wolves on a fresh kill. Disfear builds most of these songs around short, relatively simple riffs, and even though the clarity and beefiness of the tones might sound metal, the music here is pure hardcore punk. Check out the last track on the a-side, āSubsistence,ā whose verse riff is literally just one chord played as hard and as fast as possible for four bars⦠itās so fucking PUNK. Iād call it a highlight, but every moment of Everyday Slaughter crackles with energy and power. Itās just a great fucking record, a high-definition portrait of a band at the top of their game.
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Disfear: Everyday Slaughter 12"
Disfear: Everyday Slaughter 12"
Last in the Disfear re issue series. Ā Crushing Swedish hardcore originally released in 1997 and of print on vinyl ever since. Disfear combines the intensity and bleak anti war imagery of Discharge and early UK bands with the heaviness of Swedish Death Metal and Crust. The result is like a sledgehammer to the walls of ignorance and oppression built up around us by the system. A blast of raw anger and pure hardcore power. Ā Full color gatefold. Europe, order from La Familia/Kink Records.
Our take: Holy hot damn, Havoc Records brings a landmark Swedish d-beat record back into print. When I wrote about Havocās reissue of Disfearās 1995 LP Soul Scars, I mentioned I became aware of Disfear through their more polished 2000s releases, not learning until years later about their furious early material. Itās tempting to see 1997ās Everyday Slaughter as the culmination of that early era, as the record after this one marked a change in drummer, vocalist, and style. Everyday Slaughter, though, is a total shredder. Disfear recorded the album with Thomas Skogsberg at Sunlight Studios, who also produced sonically renowned Swedish death metal classics like Entombedās Left Hand Path and Clandestine, Dismemberās Like an Ever Flowing Stream, Carnageās Dark Recollections, and many others. However, the bigger production on Everyday Slaughter is balanced out by a feral performance from the band, who lays into these songs like a hungry pack of wolves on a fresh kill. Disfear builds most of these songs around short, relatively simple riffs, and even though the clarity and beefiness of the tones might sound metal, the music here is pure hardcore punk. Check out the last track on the a-side, āSubsistence,ā whose verse riff is literally just one chord played as hard and as fast as possible for four bars⦠itās so fucking PUNK. Iād call it a highlight, but every moment of Everyday Slaughter crackles with energy and power. Itās just a great fucking record, a high-definition portrait of a band at the top of their game.
Original: $18.00
-70%$18.00
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Description
Last in the Disfear re issue series. Ā Crushing Swedish hardcore originally released in 1997 and of print on vinyl ever since. Disfear combines the intensity and bleak anti war imagery of Discharge and early UK bands with the heaviness of Swedish Death Metal and Crust. The result is like a sledgehammer to the walls of ignorance and oppression built up around us by the system. A blast of raw anger and pure hardcore power. Ā Full color gatefold. Europe, order from La Familia/Kink Records.
Our take: Holy hot damn, Havoc Records brings a landmark Swedish d-beat record back into print. When I wrote about Havocās reissue of Disfearās 1995 LP Soul Scars, I mentioned I became aware of Disfear through their more polished 2000s releases, not learning until years later about their furious early material. Itās tempting to see 1997ās Everyday Slaughter as the culmination of that early era, as the record after this one marked a change in drummer, vocalist, and style. Everyday Slaughter, though, is a total shredder. Disfear recorded the album with Thomas Skogsberg at Sunlight Studios, who also produced sonically renowned Swedish death metal classics like Entombedās Left Hand Path and Clandestine, Dismemberās Like an Ever Flowing Stream, Carnageās Dark Recollections, and many others. However, the bigger production on Everyday Slaughter is balanced out by a feral performance from the band, who lays into these songs like a hungry pack of wolves on a fresh kill. Disfear builds most of these songs around short, relatively simple riffs, and even though the clarity and beefiness of the tones might sound metal, the music here is pure hardcore punk. Check out the last track on the a-side, āSubsistence,ā whose verse riff is literally just one chord played as hard and as fast as possible for four bars⦠itās so fucking PUNK. Iād call it a highlight, but every moment of Everyday Slaughter crackles with energy and power. Itās just a great fucking record, a high-definition portrait of a band at the top of their game.











