CARCASS: SURGICAL STEEL (2013)
1) 1985; 2) Thrasher's
Abattoir; 3) Cadaver Pouch Conveyor System; 4) A Congealed Clot Of Blood; 5)
The Master Butcher's Apron; 6) Noncompliance To ASTM F 899-12 Standard; 7) The
Granulating Dark Satanic Mills; 8) Unfit For Human Consumption; 9) 316L Grade
Surgical Steel; 10) Captive Bolt Pistol; 11) Mount Of Execution; 12*) A Wraith
In The Apparatus; 13*) Intensive Battery Brooding.
Legendary bands never really die — they just
build up anticipation for a reunion tour. In the case of Carcass, this happened
as early as 2007, and they even got Amott to take a break from Arch Enemy and rejoin.
However, by the time they were ready to re-enter the studio, Amott left once
again, so the resulting album was made by the trio of Steer, Walker, and new
drummer Dan Wilding, whose style, it is said, reminded the band very much of original
drummer Ken Owen's (Ken was debilitated by a hemorrhage and could not play,
but, in a carcass-sweet gesture, they still invited him to provide some backing
voc... uh, grunts).
Asking the common question of «can they still
cut it?» is commonly senseless, because of course they can — had they not been
able to keep up with past standards of loudness, speed, heaviness, and
grossness, this album would have never been made. A better, and tougher,
question is «is there still any reason left for them to cut it?», because the
entire (relatively brief) career of Carcass had been about evolving, and
unless they convincingly show that they can pick up from where they left off
with Swansong and show new paths of
activity for the 21st century, Surgical
Steel is pretty much bound to find itself in the used instrument bin.
Adding up the style and quality of the riffs,
the production values, and the ambiguous nature of song titles and lyrics
(which has more than a few nods to the early goregrind values, but also
hearkens back to the sociopolitical angle of Swansong), Surgical Steel
finds itself closer to Heartwork, I'd
say, than any other Carcass record — which is hardly surprising, considering how
Heartwork has emerged as the most
fondly remembered album of 'em all. Elements of almost perverse melodicity
shine through beginning with the very first track (ʽThrasher's Abattoirʼ),
where Walker growl-sings strings of polysyllabic words to a sped-up
Sabbath-style riff, concluding that "Hipsters and posers I abhor / Welcome
to the thrasher's abattoir" — a nice amalgamation of the band's morgue
grossness and social stance all in
one. (So now you know who was
actually pictured on the front sleeve of Putreficiation
— hipsters and posers!).
That said, like on Heartwork, any perceived melodicity here serves one and only one purpose,
and by 2013, we should have all learned that purpose by heart. That all the
songs immediately merge into one big ball of thrashing riffs, histrionic solos,
and werewolf growls, is a self-understood limitation of the genre. Problem is,
there's hardly anything else to it: the band's sense of humor is not very
efficient, the social message is not working, and they have not really
developed any new musical ideas — all that «now we're playing fast... and now
we're playing very fast without
losing the melodic edge» schtick is already so familiar that only a total
novice could be properly amazed at the way they're doing it.
The last track, ʽMount Of Executionʼ, is their
first (I think) attempt at a massive epic, a sort of revision of Biblical
history where the events of Golgotha are perceived as the signal for a
"dark mobilization" (well, it's Carcass, what do you want? not
exactly the house band for love,
mercy, and forgiveness), and it's got an acoustic introduction, some old school
metal riffage, and on the whole sounds more like a mix of Sabbath and Amorphis
than a band that once vied with Napalm Death for supremacy on the grindcore
field. Repeated listens turn it into a clear favorite, but it's still just one
track, and, unsurprisingly, the least Carcass-ish of 'em all. The rest all
sound kinda cool while they're on, but fade into oblivion exactly fifteen
seconds after they're gone.
Incidentally, one of the bonus tracks on the
Japanese edition, called ʽIntensive Battery Broodingʼ, sounds almost exactly like Sabbath — in fact, they
could have done a generous deed and donated it to Iommi for his 13 project (on the other hand, it lifts
a crucial chord change from ʽInto The Voidʼ, so maybe they'd be too embarrassed
to hand Tony a variation on his own music). This just goes to show how much the
band has «regressed» back to heavy rock values of the 1970s, which is indeed in
line with their development in the 1990s — but also suggests that this is sort
of the natural way to go, as you just cannot keep chugging out the same radical
thrash / grindcore riffs forever, if you think of yourself as a musician rather
than a sonic entertainer. Unfortunately, it's way too hard to be just a heavy metal musician and retain
your own unmistakable identity, and lack of identity is what Surgical Steel suffers from the most,
even as it keeps kicking your putrefying, suppurating, crepitating, virulently
ruptured ass all the way through.
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