- December 17, 2020
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Examples: Exile and Payback There are some people out there, however, who do not like God Hates Us All. I find it very difficult that most bands (except for those losers called Manowar...) manage to keep playing the same shit years after years after years, without giving a turning point in their sound. Too bad the riffs sucks and it sounds just like Wicked or whatever. Playing to the band's honed-to-a-science strengths and hearkening back to the golden age of mullet heads, God Hates Us All is Slayer's most brutal record since 1986's immortal (or undead) Reign in Blood. The lyrics have gone from frightening (Hell Awaits era) to just plain stupid - it's clear to see that this band is desperately running out of ideas. Fortunately (or unfortunately depending on which side you're on), the naysayers, the pessimistic bitches who predicted Slayer's demise have had their asses kicked in a fashion so brutal words cannot describe it. After a dissapointing Diabolus In Musica, Slayer started the 2000's with the furious God Hates Us All. This album doesn't know if it wants to be an all out thrasher like Reign In Blood, or continue the path of the groovy br0000tal sound found on Diabolus In Musica. Sure, Slayer have never had truly amazing lyrics but they are capable of doing better than this! What is there to gain from this? Met deze nummers laat Slayer opnieuw zien dat ze nog Rated #1185 in the best albums of 2001. God Hates Us All Slayer. “All men are not created equal, only the strong will prosper; only the strong will conquer.” I remember reading similarities in the infamous “Mein Kampf” written by Adolf Hitler. The lyrics are about aggression, religion, murders, etc., quite generic and those kind of lyrics that aren't painfully bad but not nearly interesting enough to read them twice or even memorize them. "God Hates Us All" is very heavy, and it's cool that Slayer still has so much agression after so many years. Decent song, nothing too orgasmic thou, but still not as boring and uninspired as the previous five songs. stijl ontwikkeld die ze het, ondanks allerlei invloeden altijd weet te behouden. It's a different kind of Slayer, but that doesn't mean it's bad. So it's not surprising that the riffs bored the shit out of me. While God Hates Us All isn't the strongest piece of music that Slayer has done, I don't think it's bad at all. In a world that feeds on hate View all reviews for Slayer - God Hates Us All. Fast, precise and pure Hanneman-style! I am quite shocked at the degree of heaviness that this album demonstrates. But if Slayer would have recorded Reign In Blood over and over again, people would be complaining that they do not evolve their sound. Slayer - God Hates Us All. This is clearly Slayer at the bottom of the barrel as far as material goes, and it really shows in the album's overall sound. And on. 's Jason Arnopp described the album as "easily Slayer's most convincing collection since Seasons in the Abyss ," awarding the album five out of five. Not to say it was bad, but it certainly could not hold up to the classics. 8/10. Although I appreciate that Mr. Araya attempts the high-pitched scream, particularly on “God Send Death”, it just doesn’t feel right anyway. Score: 75 / 100, Je bent niet geil, alleen heel zielig.... GHUA ruleert, hoewel Reign In Blood natuurlijk veel beter is, Slayer - God Hates Us All Het is gewoon vet cool om Tom Araya zo woedend te horen. On. If the very idea doesn't make you nauseous, you might actually enjoy this album - in which case there's probably something wrong with you. Slayer is gewoon, net zo als MetallicA, (nog) niet zoals ze vroeger waren. Some cool solos are littered around the place, like in “Disciple” and “Exile.” They’re not mind-blowing, but I think they fit in where they go. It’s just a great fuckin’ title.” – Tom Araya. Ok, I've been listening to this album alot now, and I'm getting tired of it. Lots of expressionless chugging, some badly composed and uneffectful melodies, many notes for nothing. Thrash breaks are supposed to be good, and in the middle. We still don't have a SINGLE song in their classic D# standard tuning, their lyrics still smack of middle school edgelord garbage (thanks, Kerry King), and the guitar work is just as muddy as ever. Ehh?? The latter can occur through either a really poor delivery, by touching upon a really offensive topic and not handling it with any level of grace or intrigue, or by trying to guise incoherence as humor. Tom sounds really insane in some parts (not insane as in insanely good but just really twisted). Score: 100 / 100, Slayer - God Hates Us All Lyrics are laughable too, mostly just juvenile raving and ranting that you’d expect more readily from an online blog or the mind of a twenty seven year old living with his parents trying to be ‘dark.’ Pfft, I’m more intimidated by the fact that there are people actually defending this album! Pure comedic flop. It's been a long time that you're no more able to do your crazy screams like the one on Angel Of Death... After that intro, good vocals and better lyrics but an hardcore riff, slow and boring all along. Catchy end in that particular song. Again this is similar to mallcore. SLAYER - God Hates Us All. Out of all the songs ”Disciple” and ”Bloodline” became staples of the Slayer live show for years to come and the former remained on the setlist until the very end. Especially “Seven Faces”. I love early Slayer for their stripped down approach to dark thrash. Genres: Thrash Metal. A miscarriage of the highest degree, a real faux paus of metal, and an utter abomination, God Hates Us All will be forever remembered as Slayer's legendary false step, a permanent dent in their credibility. With God Hates Us All, Slayer has mostly stripped away the fast music that we heard in their first 3 albums, although there are some speedy songs here and there. Tom used to be able to sing and scream with the best of them, but on recent albums, there's been a lot more shouting and distorted vocals - not good. For me the lyrics are the only weak point of this record, and although some of the things being really relevant, others are pure crap... Then "Seven Faces", a simple intro with a lot of effect which give a dark and evil atmosphere, but ruined by Tom's scream: a very distorted growl with a lot of effects at the end. It is so well executed and pure in concept that it is essential. Released 11 September 2001 on American (catalog no. Far better. The year was 2004 and I was just stopping to listen to mallcore. Reactie van Een_Metalfan op 17-08-2004 om 21:42u, Slayer - God Hates Us All Whilst it's still clear that they're going for a more nu-metal sound, songs like … Repetitive and boring. This is one of the heaviest, scariest, most evil, church-burning, bible-bashing, Christian-raping albums of all time. Let's see what Slayer offers on it. Anger, Slayer have done an awesome job with making the vocals sound good with the measly guitar playing I see it as a breath of fresh air for the band, but that's just me. Persoonlijke klassiker ;), Slayer - God Hates Us All While this album is not as bad as St Anger, it's not far off it. Yes, there are a lot of different riffs, but most of them are simply not memorable at all. Making threats to your listeners via the lyrics will always sound silly and ridiculous. 'Darkness of Christ' is een vreemde intro dat tegelijkertijd een treffend beeld geeft over de rest van het album. Ultimately, though, God Hates Us All is a vocally-based album with less importance on the riffs themselves, and more upon the emotion evoked through the music as a whole (mostly anger, obviously). Yes, I said good, can it be possible? ...OK...That sort of puts me in the mind frame of when you get into an argument with a little kid and just to bombard you with insults, so in the end it really is just a slur and furry of cussing. Yes, I know god hates at least some of us, but could you please shut the fuck up now? They would be far more chilling in effect with such fifths in use. Reactie van Slaine op 13-11-2001 om 16:47u Undoubtedly, the album is full of great riffs and songs, but some of them sound very mono-tone, much like the vocals on a few of the tracks (for example, New Faith is a very annoying track). Don't waste your money or time with it. I mean this song has more riffs than the rest of the album combined, but fucken A, what sort of genius came up with screaming "yargh, new faith" a few times at the ... end? Whilst it's still clear that they're going for a more nu-metal sound, songs like Exile and Payback show that they are back with their roots. Spot on his ability to sing complex, breathtaking vocal lines, as in "Disciple" and "Payback", songs that require a good breathing technique to be sung correctly. Similar is the production: Compressed, loud, aggressive but somehow shallow. Puritanical fanatics...I will not even try…it does not worth it...do what you want to do, buy it or not… it's your choice... Slayer, without a doubt, are one of my favorite bands. An ironic twist of fate? This is some of the most awful material in the band's entire catalogue. A typical 'modern' sound that isn't offensively bad, but also has little character and distinction to it. Slayer fans are an opinionated bunch, but one thing they tend to agree on is that “Disciple” is an all-around awesome track and one of the band’s greatest. After that song all begins to fall, but falling very deep. Face down taste the dust, digging deeper in your grave Nope. New Faith and Cast Down after God Send Death aren’t better either. It just sounds too slipknot. een gitaar solo veranderd is in een trash tempo. It's all restrained, low-intensity material here. Uninspired riffs and compositions on the one hand, well executed drumming and a pissed off and "moshable" atmosphere on the other hand. The guitars are downtuned, depending on the song, from C# standard tuning to Drop B tuning, the riffs are groovier, quite nu-metal inspired (the track "Threshold" sounding completely like an actual nu metal song), there are quite a lot of breakdowns, the guitars sound compressed and quite polished. Zowel zanger/bassist Tom, gitaristen Kerry en Jeff als drummer Paul Bostaph zijn heel intens bezig met hun muziek. God Hates Us All is real, and nothing screams "SLIPKNOT RIP" quite like this. For starters, Slayer doesn't add any window dressing to its bile-filled Satanic metal. Originally submitted to (www.metal-observer.com) on May 2, 2009. After waiting three years since Slayer's previous release, Diabolus In Musica, God Hates Us All wasn't exactly a huge disappointment, but I expected better. God Hates Us All doesn't sound much "mallcore" like you claim, with the exception of a couple of songs - much less "mallcore" than Metallica's riffless St. Anger piece of shit. There’s many good points here, deserving much more praise than given, but there’s other parts where the same formula misses. Scientists report that the charisma of his voice was on vacation during the recordings. If you like heavy, brutal, uncompromising thrash metal, this is an absolute must-have. If they release this sort of feces, that is. Toegevoegd: 6 november 2001, Slayer - God Hates Us All God Hates Us All finds Slayer trying to make the most brutal music they possibly can ? verder zitten er lekker snelle ritmes in waar ik wel van houd. Bleed your death upon me It relinquishes the energy created by a bunch of songs created before it. LAME mallcore lyrics Review Slayer 5 Decade Of Aggression Live. Desperate need of riffs. They are the same people who drive Camaros to work and marry their sisters, hiding their mullets in ponytails under NASCAR caps. Songs like Payback and War Zone, although are damn solid for me, aren't very creative in the lyrics department and just seem to be angry for the sake of being angry. Well, "God Hates Us All" isn't one of Slayer's best efforts to date, but it's also not one of the worst, it's just a decent effort where the band tried to experiment a bit and change its sound, but it's unfair to cast stones at this album just because it took influences from a genre not popular on this site. Everybody still respects Slayer, to an extent, especially with what they have accomplished in the past. Unfortunately, the album lacks the probably most important aspect of a thrash recording: riffs. Araya is definitely a better vocalist than he shows on this album. [7] The songs range from boring, try-hard bursts of immature aggression like “Cast Down,” the awful “Threshold” and the annoying “War Zone” to faux-catchy nu-metal stinkbombs like “Seven Faces” and the atrocious distorted layering of “Deviance.” “Here Comes the Pain” has riffs that resemble the rumbling of a hungry stomach, and “Payback” has swearing like Tom just stubbed his toe and burned his hand on a hot stove…at the same time. Soundtrack for the movie Dracula 2001, which had a competent manuscript but sucked over the top anyway. I'm waiting for the day the whole world fucking dies" I really don't know many other bands which have had shittier production on studio albums than Slayer. Score: 100 / 100, Slayer - God Hates Us All New Faith is a song which is the song which is half good and half total shit. If all of your answers to those questions were "yes", then God Hates Us All might not be for you. What did you smoke Kerry? Maybe to try to wake us after the sleepy Deviance, they come into a fast song called War Zone. Featured peformers: Tom Araya (vocals, bass), Jeff Hanneman (guitar), Kerry King (guitar), Paul Bostaph (drums), Matt Hyde (producer, recording engineer), Dean Maher (recording engineer), Sean Beavan (aka_text mixing role_id 1327.aka_text), Paul Forgues … Tom Araya's vocals appear as though they have completely gone down the shitter (not true, he is still halfway decent live, but I think after listening to that distortion for a few minutes, even my hair turned orange and even my pants baggified themselves! Thankfully, since Christ Illusion, the band have focused on writing more material that's worth of praise, rather than material that's worthy of facepalms and a lot of cringes. You know it's true God hates this place god hates us all' As a thrash record, there’s probably not enough for fans to cling on to, which likely contributes to the poor reception God Hates Us All receives. One could write many more lines about the nerve-shattering and torn songs that it holds, but exceptionally I have better things to do. Well, a new Slayer album is always cause for rejoicing. The collector's edition is also worth checking out for the bonus tracks. Hell Awaits? Complete your Slayer collection. Then, without warning, it stops. After the transition, "Disciple" goes on for about another 45 seconds, but at a much slower pace, driven by a single riff that sounds absolutely nothing like the rest of the song. Just horrible. ), and the songwriting is a disaster. Er zijn meerdere thrash/speed/death grondleggers zoals TESTAMENT en ANTHRAX, OVERKILL,LAAZ ROCKET en METAL CHURCH. luisteren. It reminds me of Pantera's Vulgar Display Of Power in how both genres are thrown in, and also just how raw everything sounds. Similarly, “Payback” might be the least ambiguous song of the lot, but it’s a really fun song to listen to, especially when I’m pissed off. Apparently yes, since this solo fucking owns. The only low point (but almost insignificant one...) is that singing by Tom Araya, or should I say screaming, that although not being bad, it could be better on those songs with one of the "Seasons" or "South" vocal work. That's right one and a half. After "Bloodline" we come into "Deviance" which sounds a lot like "Seven Faces", with recycled riffs taken of South Of Heaven, mixed with slow hardcore riffs. I'd heard this album was bad, but I bought it anyway, because after all - it's Slayer, how bad can it be? The last song, payback, tries to be old school slayer, but it is just a bad copy from Angel of Death. Reviewer: Jeffry Mulyadi Then the sound changes again: seven faces sounds very good, with an agressive doom-riff (remembers me of gates of slumber). Already the first track after the nonsensical intro points out that Slayer have taken a dangerous route. This is simply not the Slayer that everybody loved. Distorted guitar picks a bit on the strings, making an intro, rest of the instruments kick in at 0:20. I think because Kerry was very influenced by shitty lyrics of the mallcore band Slipknot. “New Faith” is fine, although straightforward track, which contains the cheesy line, ‘I keep the Bible in a pool of blood so that none of its lies can affect me’. And that goes double for this album as a whole. Deze intro duurt 1.30 en bevat allerlei fragmenten door elkaar. It is kinda eerie that an album titled 'God Hates Us All' was released on 9/11. No, the album did not come as a bad surprise. Geweldige intro 'disciple' en 'bloodline' absoluut 100% slayer....en dan 'treshold' dat zou zo nummer 2 van st. Anger kunnen zijn. Needless to say, it is easily the best song on the album. By even the most primitive of speed/thrash standards, these songs are extremely redundant, not to mention loaded with uninteresting and unmemorable ideas. The halfway distorted vocals sound mallcore as hell, as well. Don’t bother buying this album. It's the most joyous holiday of the year, a great feast of colorful lights and hymnal singing and everything else that is completely the opposite of what Heavy Metal is about. Then the song "Threshold": the first time I heard it I couldn't believe it was Slayer, it was a brutal version of bands like Disturbed etc... Good drums by Bostaph and then Tom who seems to try (and fortunately fails) to sing like a hip hop singer (or maybe he tries to imitate the Disturbed singer, I don't know), it's maybe catchy but the lyrics are very silly and again there are no solos. The lyrical work is all practically the same thing in the whole record: I HATE GOD, GOD HATES ME, I HATE YOU ALL, GOD HATES US ALL, I HATE, GOD HATES, I HATE, GOD HATES, I HATE MY NEIGHBOUR, GOD HATES MY DOG...basically all of what dwelled in Kerry King( and this guy has to be a hell of a catholic person to speak like this...)'s mind. The legendary Slayer shares Slipknot's dogged fury and persistence of vision, but God Hates Us All clearly illustrates why it stands a good chance of outlasting its Iowa brethren. He dug the fuck out of it. Slayer God Hates Us All review Thrash Metal. Haven't found a reason Dennoch – vor fünf Jahren wäre ich angesichts eines solchen SLAYER Album auf Knien gerutscht, doch heute will sich die Begeisterung einfach nicht so recht einstellen. I don't know what Slayer were going for when it came time to the mixing, but my god....It's hard to describe but I'll do my best. Their schtick here is anger, groove, and mid-paced thrash. View all reviews for Slayer - God Hates Us All. A statement from Kerry King underlined that they were still searching for a new style, but also trying to get back to the roots. "Disciple" annihilates everything in its path until the 2:50 mark. The drumming is one of the high points of the album. To an album more in the vein of Reign in blood, but with new touch. "Pessimist, Terrorist targeting the next mark SLAYER - God Hates Us All. Slayer ruin their own compositions with instinctive certainty. Genres: Thrash Metal. That’s probably the worst idea I’ve heard in a while. Score: 8 / 100, Alle artikelen en foto's (afgezien van albumhoezen, door bands/labels/promoters aangeleverde fotos of anders aangegeven), zijn, Emma Ruth Rundle & Thou - May Our Chambers Be Full, Dynamo Metalfest - Online Streaming Event, Anathema - We're Here Because We're Here, Weird Tales - Y'all Motherfuckers Forgot 'Bout Good Ol' Son OfA Bitchin' Blues. Instead of straight forward thrash, we have more of a groovy thrash record. Slayer - God Hates Us All They just fly by leaving me unimpressed. People were pissed off with South of Heaven (now considered as a masterpiece), now people are pissed off with god hates us all. Everyone knows his proclivity for the F-word, so I find this album in particular a good release of curse words when I’m in that mood and I feel like swearing at my laptop screen. This is without a shadow of a doubt the greatest Slayer release for many years. After a little intro that was not essential we come into the first song: "Disciple". Slayer God Hates Us All review Thrash Metal. Slayer God Hates Us All review Thrash Metal. Over alles is nagedacht en keer op keer slagen ze erin het spontaan en ongeforceerd te brengen. ...makes us stronger, but honestly, I have never felt a new strength after listening to this output. Another example: "Exile". Slayer - God Hates Us All music album discussion and ratings. While God Hates Us All possesses some of the same ingredients that made Diabolus… a marginally refreshing surprise, SLAYER's latest represents yet another failure on the band's part to take the initiative and reinvent themselves—a regurgitation of the group's past songwriting efforts in the hopes of pleasing no one but their most ardent and loyal fans. There's a reason the band only really plays Disciple at their live shows, because looking back, it's easy to see that effort was put into these songs, it's just that they don't feel complete, or the instrumentation feels out of place with what the boys were trying to convey through the song's lyrical meaning. Riffs and songwriting have not been this good since Reign In Blood. Threshold? Speaking of the songs, there are some that aren't so special, but also some that have become real classics on this CD: album opener "Disciple" is a must-play at every Slayer show, thanks to the cool main riff, the catchy vocal part and chorus, the various climaxes in the song's structure, the breakdown, and memorable lines like "God hates us all!" The frustrating thing is that it works sometimes, and other times it doesn’t. After the solo a riff enters, a riff with such intensity, it will blow you away. Oh yeah, and this has just about the WORST thrash break ever in the history of the world. Fake, fake, fake, fake. "Despair, emptiness Before I can review this album, I believe it is necessary to give you some background on how I came to listen to this album. God Hates Us All follows the story of a lonely young man, desperate to find meaning to his lost and destructive life. Then "Exile", a fast song, but again ruined by silly lyrics, with all these "fucks" . Well, if you are open minded, I think you'll like this and it's a good item, especially with the original "butchered bible" cd package, to get. To bad the riffs are boring and the screaming is horrid. My one major problem with Slayer since Seasons... is the amount of distortion used on Tom's vocals, and much of the guitar work. It's just sound. My only hope was that this album remained an isolated case, an experiment gone wrong. strive for peace with acts of war Well, really bad, actually. I would usually come up with something a little cleverer, but this isn’t that kind of album. It's strange but it's catchy in spite of the lyrics. i have no faith, distracting me, Payback has a nice thrash riff at the start, though it slows down to about mid-pace in parts on the song. The result is an oversized collection of confused songs that somehow manage to be both boring and completely unpredictable at the same time. If you can make it all the way through the album, all you're left with is the realization that you could have spent the last 40 minutes beating your head against a wall and enjoyed it a lot more. His ear-raping introductory scream sounds like he just lost the winner lotto ticket. Hell even Divine Intervention sounds better than this album, and that's saying something. A bit of undistorted vocals are here to be found. Overall, while a big step up from Diabolus In Musica, Slayer still needed to get their heads out of their asses if they wanted to restore what little credibility they had left at this point. Let's pretend this never happened, shall we? Distorted guitar for an intro. Reactie van klokkie op 03-05-2013 om 02:45u “Discipline” is a decent thrash attack track that gets the album off well enough to get others to listen the next track, “God Send Death”, which is also good in a way. I can understand that this is not for everyone, and I can also see where Slayer fans of old might point an accusing finger at this, since it is in some ways a departure from the pure thrash roots they pioneered many years prior. Released 11 September 2001 on American (catalog no. The Slayer formula with these songs absolutely works, and for these reasons does not deserve its unrelenting scorn. We can't expect that most bands that have so much influential musicians, always learning new stuff every day and progressing towards a new direction, keep playing the same shit twenty years in a row just to please their fans...Open your ears, stop being puritanical, and accept the reality that music, like everything in life needs a breath of fresh air, live and deal with it, or even try to enjoy the new styles... God and Satan have finally found something that they can agree on, they hate this album, as should any self-respecting fan of this band who loved the pioneering thrash staples that were “Show No Mercy” and “Hell Awaits”. No one expects Slayer to do another ultra-mega-trash-masterpiece but as earlier stated we DO expect them to go out with grace. After this one they want to make you sleep again before the end with Here Comes The Pain, after a boring intro with Jeff and Kerry taking fun on their wah pedals we come into a song which really looks like a slow Hatebreed's song with Tom yelling at the chorus. A continuation of their previous album’s Thrash-Groove/Nu Metal mesh, Slayer’s God Hates Us All (coincidentally released during the same day of the Twin Towers’ destruction) takes less dips into anxiety in favor more flexible tempos, though the songs’ monochromatic attack is undoubtedly a … Though, the few good riffs are capable of creating a nice "fuck yeah"-atmosphere you can perfectly bang your head to. After this however, you might as well stop listening to the CD because you've heard the best this has to offer. That honour would go to such boring songs as Cast Down and Deviance. Reactie van 'bones' op 25-11-2004 om 16:42u. 'God Hates Us All' proved that Slayer has plenty of fight left in them, and it is unknown if they will continue this evolution of sorts onto their next, as yet untitled album. Overall, while there are a few good moments on the album, like some cool aggressive riffing or occasional breakdown, the album is incredibly hard to suffer through and feels too much like a more modernized reboot of their last project for me to enjoy it. Imagine Death Magnetic, without the compression and clipping, but THREE TIMES AS LOUD! Seriously, this is probobaly the most agressive… Kerry's solos are mostly noisy and not very appealing to me, while Jeff's solos maintain some melody and point to them. I'd heard this album was bad, but I bought it anyway, because after all - it's Slayer… http://www.hellsrockandroll.cjb.net. I thought Diabolus In Musica was pretty mediocre but this one manages to be even worse! Schitterend album, idd onder Reign in blood en mijn persoonlijke favoriet Seasons in the abyss, maar toch een waardige plaat voor slayer. 314 586 332-2; CD). Seven Faces is proof of that. Let your bloodline feed my youth. There are two kinds of jokes in this world, ones that inspire laughter and ones the cause either a sigh or a very awkward silence. “God Send Death” is much too slow. Threshold is marked as shit because it is the closest you can be to mallcore without actually being mallcore. - 15% MurderNArson, May 4th, 2007 I can't believe this is the same band that recorded "Raining Blood," one of the greatest metal songs of all time. So you could say he is doing the most he could do while staying in the restrictions of regular thrash metal. This has probably been done better by other bands. However, Slayer have certainly not "sold-out" or watered-down their music, you can still identify the music as Slayer's, and the solos are still there. Only the more or less flawless production does not show signs of weakness and, almost unbelievable, the last track of the album shows the real Slayer. Diabolus In Musica isn’t much better but at least it has decent lyrics and a few more good songs. Erst auf dem finalen Album von Slayer, Repentless, ist wiederum Bostaph zu hören. Is it even a riff? It's well play and the first thing that comes to mind is that Tom yells like a madman, the voice is too distorted. Weitere Artikel zu Slayer. By the time you get to the fifth track, you just want to put them out of their misery. So I try to see "God Hates Us All" independent from the old Slayer records. After the quite embarrassing effort they put in Diabolus in Musica, the pressure was turned up for Slayer to produce something worth spending time and money on. Probably the most exotic composition is Seven Faces. I'm willing to forgive Slayer, only if they completely abandon this direction. So, there you have it. But is God Hates Us All all that bad? Auf "God Hates Us All" stehen meiner Meinung nach zu viele Mid-Tempo-Songs und dem entsprechend zu wenig echtes Highspeed-Geböller. As a metal fan, though, it is my duty to spread my own perverse version of the Christmas cheer by exorcising my demons. KUT! Auf Discogs können Sie sich ansehen, wer an 2001 Red Transparent Vinyl von God Hates Us All mitgewirkt hat, Rezensionen und Titellisten lesen und auf dem Marktplatz nach der … Paul Bostaph isn't quite as creative and powerful as Dave, but he throws in more than most others do in thrash metal. There are some devestating songs and riffs on here, and the production is great. hij zou gewoon goed moeten grunten. Genres: Thrash Metal. I will admit however that this is due to more of their earlier efforts, as I was quite disappointed with the last few.
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