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Seasons in the Abyss

 
Album Review: Seasons in the Abyss

  • Artist: Slayer
  • Rating: StarStarStarStarHalf Star
  • Release Date: 1990
  • Total Time: 42:27
  • Type: Contains explicit content, Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

After staking out new territory with the underrated South of Heaven, Slayer brought back some of the pounding speed of Reign in Blood for their third major-label album, Seasons in the Abyss. Essentially, Seasons fuses its two predecessors, periodically kicking up the mid-tempo grooves of South of Heaven with manic bursts of aggression. "War Ensemble" and the title track each represented opposite sides of the coin, and they both earned Slayer their heaviest MTV airplay to date. In fact, Seasons in the Abyss is probably their most accessible album, displaying the full range of their abilities all in one place, with sharp, clean production. Since the band is refining rather than progressing or experimenting, Seasons doesn't have quite the freshness of its predecessors, but aside from that drawback, it's strong almost all the way from top to bottom (with perhaps one or two exceptions). Lyrically, the band rarely turns to demonic visions of the afterlife anymore, preferring instead to find tangible horror in real life -- war, murder, human weakness. There's even full-fledged social criticism, which should convince any doubters that Slayer aren't trying to promote the subjects they sing about. Like Metallica's Master of Puppets or Megadeth's Peace Sells...but Who's Buying, Seasons in the Abyss paints Reagan-era America as a cesspool of corruption and cruelty, and the music is as devilishly effective as ever. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
War Ensemble (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman Slayer (4:51)
Blood Red (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman Slayer (2:47)
Spirit in Black (Lyrics) Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King Slayer (4:07)
Expendable Youth (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Kerry King Slayer (4:09)
Dead Skin Mask (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman Slayer (5:20)
Hallowed Point (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King Slayer (3:23)
Skeletons of Society (Lyrics) Kerry King Slayer (4:40)
Temptation (Lyrics) Kerry King Slayer (3:25)
Born of the Fire Jeff Hanneman, Kerry King Slayer (3:07)
Seasons in the Abyss (Lyrics) Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman Slayer (6:37)

Credits

Slayer (Producer), Slayer (Main Performer), Allen Abrahamson (Assistant Engineer), Tom Araya (Bass), Tom Araya (Vocals), Jeff Hanneman (Guitar), Kerry King (Guitar), Dave Lombardo (Drums), Rick Rubin (Producer), David Tobocman (Assistant Engineer), Andy Wallace (Producer), Andy Wallace (Engineer), Andy Wallace (Mixing), Howie Weinberg (Mastering), Robert Fisher (Design), Chris Rich (Assistant Engineer), Sunny Bak (Photography), Marty Temme (Photography), Rick Sales (Management), Larry Carroll (Artwork), Larry Carroll (Illustrations)
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Wikipedia: Seasons in the Abyss
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Seasons in the Abyss
Studio album by Slayer
Released October 9, 1990
Recorded January-June 1990 at
Hit City West
Hollywood Sound
Record Plant
Los Angeles, California, USA
Genre Thrash metal
Length 42:23
Label Def American Records
Producer Rick Rubin, Andy Wallace, Slayer
Professional reviews
Slayer chronology
South of Heaven
(1988)
Seasons in the Abyss
(1990)
Decade of Aggression
(1991)

Seasons in the Abyss is the fifth studio album by the thrash metal band Slayer. It was released in 1990 through Def American Records, and later through American Recordings after the company changed its name. It was Dave Lombardo's last studio album with Slayer, until his return in 2006 with the release of Christ Illusion. Seasons in the Abyss is Slayer's third major record label release. Seasons in the Abyss is one of few albums to be issued with a Parental Advisory label despite the virtual absence of profanity unlike other Slayer albums, though the lyrics depict violent acts.

Contents

Recording

"Born of Fire" was for a long time just an instrumental leftover song from South of Heaven with a working title "Stress" due to the fact that Kerry King could not write any good lyrics for it during the South of Heaven sessions. Eventually it was the last song completed for Seasons in the Abyss.

The somewhat strange vocal arrangement on the track "Temptation" was unintentionally done that way. Tom Araya sang the song twice: once the way he thought it fit and for the second time on the insistence of Kerry King the way he thought it should be sung. The haunting end result came to be because the first vocal track was not erased between the takes. When the producer played the track and heard both vocal renditions simultaneously on the instrumental background, he liked it so much that both vocals were used on the album. Nobody is sure which vocals are the original.[2] Also, for the title track, during Kerry King's guitar solo, there is a variation between the album version solo and the one on the music video for "Seasons in the Abyss", plus sound effects in the beginning of the song during which the clean guitar is playing.

Lyrical themes

War, murder, blood, and human weakness are the major lyrical themes. In "Born of Fire," "Spirit in Black," and "Temptation," the album returns to the Satanic themes previously featured in Hell Awaits.

The song "Dead Skin Mask" was inspired by murderer Ed Gein. "Blood Red" deals with oppressive communist regimes. "War Ensemble" is an exploration of the horrors of war.[3]

"Skeletons of Society" and "Seasons in the Abyss" on the other hand deal with apocalyptic themes. "Expendable Youth" is about gang wars and gang violence. "Hallowed Point" is about a killing spree.

Critical reception

Seasons in the Abyss was released on October 9, 1990 and peaked at number 40 on the Billboard 200 album chart, the highest position the band attained at the time.[4] In 1992 the album was certified gold, for shipments in excess of 500,000 in the United States.[5] David Browne of Entertainment Weekly commented "Pushing the envelope of its previous album straight out the door, Slayer piles on the grim vocals, the frenetic guitar work, and the gore on Seasons in the Abyss," praising the guitar work of King and Hanneman. [3]

Steve Huey of Allmusic described the album as bringing back the "pounding aggression of Reign In Blood, while periodically kicking up the mid-tempo grooves of South of Heaven." Huey praised the music as "displaying the full range of their abilities all in one place, with sharp, clean production," stating the band is refining rather than progressing or experimenting. The album received a rating of four and a half out of five stars, while the title track and "War Ensemble" earned Slayer its heaviest airplay on MTV to date.[6] In an October 2007 interview, Evile frontman Matt Drake described Seasons in the Abyss as "the perfect mix" between the two styles ("speed" and "slow material") showcased on Reign in Blood and South of Heaven respectively.[7] Children of Bodom bassist Henkka T. Blacksmith hailed Seasons in the Abyss as "the best metal album ever".[8]

Track listing

# Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "War Ensemble"   Tom Araya, Jeff Hanneman Hanneman 4:54
2. "Blood Red"   Araya Hanneman 2:50
3. "Spirit in Black"   Kerry King Hanneman 4:07
4. "Expendable Youth"   Araya King 4:10
5. "Dead Skin Mask"   Araya Hanneman 5:20
6. "Hallowed Point"   Araya, Hanneman Hanneman, King 3:24
7. "Skeletons of Society"   King King 4:41
8. "Temptation"   King King 3:26
9. "Born of Fire"   King Hanneman, King 3:07
10. "Seasons in the Abyss"   Araya Hanneman 6:42

Personnel

  • Tom Araya: Bass, Vocals
  • Kerry King: Guitar
  • Jeff Hanneman: Guitar
  • Dave Lombardo: Drums

Production

  • Produced By Slayer, Rick Rubin & Andy Wallace
  • Engineered & Mixed By Andy Wallace
  • Assistant Engineers: Allen Abrahamson, Chris Rich, David Tobocman
  • Mastering: Howie Weinberg

References


 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
Wikipedia. This article is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share-Alike License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article "Seasons in the Abyss" Read more