CELTIC FROST: PARCHED WITH THIRST AM I AND DYING (1985-1991;
1992)
1) Idols Of Chagrin; 2) A
Descent To Babylon (Babylon Asleep); 3) Return To The Eve; 4) Juices Like Wine;
5) The Inevitable Factor; 6) The Heart Beneath; 7) Cherry Orchards; 8)
Tristesses De La Lune; 9) Wings Of Solitude; 10) The Usurper; 11) Journey Into
Fear; 12) Downtown Hanoi; 13) Circle Of The Tyrants; 14) In The Chapel In The
Moonlight; 15) I Won't Dance (The Elders Orient); 16) The Name Of My Bride; 17)
Mexican Radio; 18) Under Apollyon's Sun.
The importance of this compilation, originally
released in 1992, has now significantly decreased since many of its tracks were
dispersed as bonus additions to remastered CD editions of the band's overall
catalog. Even in 1992, however, it was a somewhat strange package,
interspersing rarities and oddities with an almost random selection of tracks
taken from albums all the way back to Mega
Therion (but, strangely, not Morbid
Tales). Whether the old fans even back then were happy to receive an
additional copy of three numbers from Cold
Lake and three more from Vanity/Nemesis
is a big question. Whether the presence of four previously unreleased songs was
enough of an incentive to make them tolerate these additional copies is an even
bigger one.
Anyway, here is a brief rundown on these «lost
treasures». ʽIdols Of Chagrinʼ is the reworking of a 1991 demo — a slow Vanity/Nemesis-style power metal
riff-rocker, with some chords sounding dangerously close to AC/DC's
ʽRock'n'Roll Ain't Noise Pollutionʼ and the general atmosphere reminiscent of
both AC/DC and Accept (but with far uglier vocals). ʽThe Inevitable Factorʼ is
an outtake from Cold Lake,
ironically featuring a more memorable riff than most of the regular songs on
there, but again spoiled by silly «dying metal Tristan» vocals. ʽJourney Into
Fearʼ is a very old outtake (from 1985), and thus, faster, more aggressive, and
more fun than all the later outtakes — but nothing in particular here with
which you were not already acquainted on To
Mega Therion. Finally, ʽUnder Apollyon's Sunʼ (I think they sort of
confused Apollyon, the Greek equivalent of Abaddon, with the god Apollo here,
but perhaps this was intentional) is another demo from 1991, but this time
with a more Sabbath-esque riff, and an almost industrial crunch in the middle —
melodically, perhaps, the most ambitious of these tunes.
Other than that, you have a few remixed
versions (ʽDowntown Hanoiʼ from Cold
Lake, for instance) with cleaner and sharper guitar sound, which probably
still does not redeem them as much as we'd want to, and a few scooped-up rare
jokes, such as the black metal take on the old popular standard ʽIn The Chapel
In The Moonlightʼ (from a 1987 promotional EP). It all works fine as a career
retrospective, especially if you rectify the dumb running order of the tracks,
but not a single moment here is truly eye-opening in any sense: at no stage in
their diverse career, apparently, did Celtic Frost produce something so unusual
that they would decide to keep it hidden from us until they ran out of new
material. Thus, for completists only.
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