Archive

Posts Tagged ‘Chuck’

Death – Suicide Machine ( 2011 )

October 12th, 2011 4 comments

Relapse Records.
June 21st, 2011.
Recorded and Mixed at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida.
Music by Chuck Schuldiner.
Recorded at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida.
Remixed by Jim Morris and remastered by Alan Douches.

Duration : 0:4:23

Read more…

Death – God Of Thunder ( 2011 )

October 4th, 2011 No comments

Relapse Records.
June 21st, 2011.
Recorded and Mixed at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida.
Music by Chuck Schuldiner.
Recorded at Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida.
Remixed by Jim Morris and remastered by Alan Douches.

Duration : 0:4:0

Read more…

Death – 05 Lack of Comprehension

July 13th, 2011 1 comment

Band: Death
Country: USA (Altamonte Springs, Florida)
Formed in: 1984
Album: Human
Year: 1991
Line-up :
Chuck Schuldiner: Guitars, Vocals
Steve DiGiorgio: Bass
Paul Masvidal: Guitars
Sean Reinert: Drums
Song: 05 Lack of Comprehension
Gener: Death Metal
Record label: Relativity Records/Roadrunner

Duration : 0:3:45

Read more…

Austrian Death Machine: Hello California/Get to the Choppa

June 1st, 2011 7 comments

AHNOLLDDDDDDDDDDD

Duration : 0:3:59

Read more…

DirtyBlack – Flesh and the Power it Holds (Death Cover)

January 24th, 2010 25 comments

http://www.myspace.com/buraklacinel
http://www.myspace.com/dirtyblackthrash
Origin Orlando, Florida, USA
Genre(s) Death metal
Progressive metal(later)[citation needed]
Technical death metal (later)
Years active 1983–1999
Label(s) Combat
Relativity
Roadrunner
Nuclear Blast
Website emptywords.org
Former members
Last known lineup:
Chuck Schuldiner
Shannon Hamm
Scott Clendenin
Richard Christy
Death was an influential American death metal band founded in 1983 by guitarist and vocalist Chuck Schuldiner, and dissolved in 1999. They are widely credited as the creators of the death metal genre, from the release of their first demo in 1984. The band’s label debut Scream Bloody Gore is considered a template of the genre, described as death metal’s first archetypal document.[1] Schuldiner was the only member to remain in the band from start to end. Music biographers have referred to Schuldiner as the father of death metal
In 1993, Reinert and Masvidal left the group to continue with Cynic, Schuldiner being unable to persuade them otherwise. Schuldiner replaced them with Gene Hoglan of the recently dissolved thrash metal band Dark Angel, and worked with guitarist Andy LaRocque from King Diamond for Individual Thought Patterns. LaRocque being obligated to his band, Schuldiner hired a then-unknown Ralph Santolla as touring guitarist. Death was arguably at the peak of their commercial and popular culture success, and the video for the track The Philosopher, a lyrical slam against former guitarist Masvidal,[3] even made it on to a Beavis & Butt-head episode in 1994 (Beavis also parodies Schuldiner’s vocals in a mock ‘drive-thru’ order of ‘tacos, to go!’ in death-metal style). Also in 1994, Death abandoned their eight year relationship with Relativity and signed with Roadrunner Records, their European distributor. For 1995’s Symbolic, Santolla and DiGiorgio were exchanged for underground Florida musicians Kelly Conlon and Bobby Koelble. For the Symbolic tour Brian Benson was brought in on bass (Conlon having left the band prior to the tour due to conflicts with Schuldiner).

After Symbolic, Schuldiner dissolved the band and all ties with Roadrunner and began writing songs for Control Denied. It was during this time that Schuldiner briefly worked with Florida studio guitarist James Hogan. Schuldiner was still contractually obligated to record an album under Nuclear Blast with Death, and so he used several songs that were intended to be used for Control Denied, as several song titles on The Sound of Perseverance were originally Control Denied song titles. He re-formed Death with Florida musicians Richard Christy, Shannon Hamm and Scott Clendenin to record 1998’s The Sound of Perseverance with his new label Nuclear Blast.

After the album and two supporting tours, Schuldiner dissolved Death to pursue Control Denied with Christy and Hamm. Clendenin was dropped in favor of Steve DiGiorgio, who was once again available, and an underground power metal singer named Tim Aymar. As Schuldiner finished Control Denied’s debut album, he was diagnosed with brain cancer, forcing the band to scrap plans for a US and Canadian tour. As he worked on the second release, Schuldiner’s condition improved, but the tumor left him in a weakened, vulnerable state. He contracted pneumonia and was placed in the hospital. He was released and returned home where, one hour later, Schuldiner died on December 13, 2001
The Sound of Perseverance is the seventh and final studio album released by Death in 1998.

This album, in particular, employs a style more akin to progressive metal than the earliest Death releases, although since Human and the albums following it, the band had been developing more toward this style. The average song time on this album is around 6 minutes long.

It is rumored that some of the song names and music on The Sound of Perseverance were originally going to appear on the first Control Denied album. Schuldiner himself denied this in an interview with Metal Maniacs in 1998 by saying that none of his compositions for Control Denied had been used to fill space for a Death album. When Death was signed on to Nuclear Blast, Chuck agreed to make one last Death album before moving forward with Control Denied.

“Spirit Crusher” was the single from this album. It featured a music video that was shot live.

Duration : 0:5:0

Read more…