What Should Not Be Unearthed

Nile
What Should Not Be Unearthed

18,47 EUR  15,39 EUR
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CD
Nuclear Blast
Release date: 28/Aug/2015
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Style: Heavy Metal
Product No.: 1987271167

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Details / Tracklist: MP3 Audio listen now for free 01. "Call To Destruction"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 02. "Negating the abdominable coils of Apep"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 03. "Liber Stellae Rubeae"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 04. "In The Name Of Amun"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 05. "What Should Not Be Unearthed"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 06. "Evil To Cast Out Evil"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 07. "Age Of Famine"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 08. "Ushabti reanimator"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 09. "Rape of the black earth"
MP3 Audio listen now for free 10. "To Walk Forth From Flames Unscathed"
Number of discs: 1
Extra-Infos: .. Unearthed
Description:What Should Not Be Unearthed is an album by Nile, released in 2016. The album is a heavy metal CD. - .. UNEARTHED
The reigning kings of technical, historically- themed brutality are back! Mixed by Neil Kernon (Judas Priest, Queen, Thin Lizzy etc) and produced by the band, 'What Should Not Be Unearthed' is Nile's 8th full-length release and another testament in the band's crushing catalog. Unlike 2012's 'At the Gate of Sethu', which was surgically precise and musically technical, the goal of Nile's upcoming full-length is utter heaviness and memorable songwriting while maintaining the kind of musicianship the long standing death metal visionaries have been known for. Artwork was handled this time by Michael 'Xaay' Loranc (Behemoth Necrophagist etc).
? First press edition. ? Released in jewel case with 24-page booklet and O-Card. ? There are 2 catalogue numbers: NB 3334-2 - on the CD, back cover, and back of the O-Card. 27361 33342 - on the spines and on the spines of the O-Card. ? Info from the back cover and back of the O-Card. All songs published c.p. 2015 by Sony ATV Music Publishing ? + © 2015 Nuclear Blast Records ? Info from the booklet: Mixed at OTB by Neil Kernon for [l480064] Drum recordings engineered by Bob Moore at Soundlab Studios ? Some copies came with an hype sticker on O-card.
No. of tracks: 10
Manufacturer No.: 2736133342
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william r. - 25/Mar/2023 4 of 5 Stars!
A classic Nile release that every fan should own. The production is much better than Gates of Sethu, but still not as crisp and clear as I would like. With that said, this is classic Nile. You can't go wrong!

Alexander S. - 22/Aug/2019 4 of 5 Stars!
I completely disagree with the definition of this album as technical death metal. “What Should Not Be Unearthed” is, of course, a death metal, and also a technical one, oh yes, but mastering the instruments here is not akin to the bodybuilder’s muscles, which he himself admires most when he looks in the mirror - this is again the skill necessary for music, but not an end in itself. The sophisticated Exercises on Unearthed were so diminished that Karl Sanders even used the word “anti-technicality” in an interview - he was disingenuous, of course, and yet a fact: this is Nile’s meatiest album in their entire career. Immediately after entering Unearthed, comparisons rained down on Annihilation of the Wicked, but I’ll say more: American Egyptologists have not been so straightforward since Amongst the Catacombs of Nephren-Ka! Finding themselves in an evolutionary impasse, Nile clearly relied on the availability of music: there is much less epicism, there is no academic super-skill “At The Gates of Sethu” - there is a frenzied death metal with fat guitars. Many riffs in the context of the group’s work almost deserve the definition of “primitive”, but coupled with slam slowdowns, the lobsters at the concert will take them with a bang. Of course, there is a proprietary “oriental” melody and furious cuts, and in some places even viscous motifs in the spirit of “Ithyphallic” appear, but this time Nile leaves no room for doubts that they play brutal death. The sound about which so many copies break every album is rhino-laden and aggressive, only losing a little cleanliness: the usual super-high-speed rumble of the Collias battery is buried under the guitar mass. Traditional atmospheric instrumental, short ambient inserts and even chanting are also present, but no more than as decorations and moments of relaxation. Did Sanders and his colleagues end up with something breakthrough or a masterpiece? In no way: the innovations are enough not to call the album self-plagiarism, but, in general, there is nothing here that Nile did not become famous for more than a decade ago. But this does not make the album bad, for example, I really liked Liber Stellae Rubeae, which perfectly combines traditionally fast and technical parts with kachem, In the Name of Amun and To Walk Forth From Flames Unscathed, where most of Egypt in guitar motifs. In general, it is quite worthy. So listen, just remember to turn up the sound louder and drop the nostalgic dreams of a masterpiece ...