Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 11/15/2005
Arguably, the Scandinavian countries have become to
death metal what New York City is to
jazz and Chicago is to the
blues -- not the place that invented it, but the area that is the most closely identified with it. A
death metal CD collection that is devoid of Swedish and Norwegian bands would be like a collection of
electric blues that excludes Chicago residents -- in other words, inadequate. Nonetheless, there have been countless
blues artists of merit who never lived in the Windy City -- and similarly, acknowledging Scandinavia's importance to
death metal doesn't mean downplaying the contributions of American bands ranging from
Slayer in Los Angeles to
Death,
Morbid Angel,
Deicide,
Obituary, and
Malevolent Creation in Florida. One band that helped keep the Florida
death metal scene alive in the late '90s and early to mid-2000s was
Divine Empire, who maintain their love of vicious sensory assault on their fourth full-length album,
Methods of Execution. The band's 2005 lineup goes for the jugular on this 58-minute disc, which unites former
Malevolent Creation members
Jason Blachowicz (lead vocals, bass) and
J.P. Soars (guitar) with drummer
Duane Timlin. Although
Methods of Execution is a Florida-style
death metal CD first and foremost, there are a few curve balls here and there.
"Impervious Deception" and
"Kill the King" (not to be confused with the
Rainbow/
Ronnie James Dio classic) both combine Florida-style
death metal with Norwegian-style
black metal, and
"Prelude to the Storm" is a two-minute instrumental that is surprisingly pretty (in a melancholy way) and has a strong East European
folk influence. But
"Prelude to the Storm" is hardly typical of
Methods of Execution on the whole -- and 95 percent of the time, this album thrives on harshness, brute force, and claustrophobic density. Although not essential,
Methods of Execution is a decent outing that will appeal to
Blachowicz and
Soars' die-hard fans.
~Alex Henderson, All Music Guide