Home
Illud Divinum Insanus

Illud Divinum Insanus in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $5.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
Morbid Angel
's first album since 2003's
Heretic
is bound to divide listeners. Those who love the band's earliest records --
Altars of Madness
,
Blessed Are the Sick
, and
Covenant
-- are bound to see
Illud Divinum Insanus
' experiments with industrial (the
Laibach-esque
intro "Omni Potens," the
Marilyn Manson
-meets-
Tim Burton
"Destructos vs. the Earth/Attack" and "Radikult") as betrayals of everything the group once stood for. But
hired
Laibach
to remix some of their tracks way back in 1994; this isn't new territory for them. And many of the songs on
Illud
("Existo Vulgore," "Blades for Baal," "Nevermore," "Beauty Meets Beast") are as raw and savage as anything the band's ever recorded. And
Trey Azagthoth
's guitar solos, always one of the group's primary attractions, are wild displays of virtuosic technique, just as they've always been. The other big change, of course, is that the band's drummer,
Pete Sandoval
, is absent for medical reasons, with his seat being filled by
Tim Yeung
(
Vital Remains
Divine Heresy
).
Yeung
does just fine, unleashing double bass barrages every bit as brutal and precise as
Sandoval
did on the group's earlier albums.
isn't a stumble for
; it's a left turn by a band that's already made many of them throughout its over 20-year career. ~ Phil Freeman
's first album since 2003's
Heretic
is bound to divide listeners. Those who love the band's earliest records --
Altars of Madness
,
Blessed Are the Sick
, and
Covenant
-- are bound to see
Illud Divinum Insanus
' experiments with industrial (the
Laibach-esque
intro "Omni Potens," the
Marilyn Manson
-meets-
Tim Burton
"Destructos vs. the Earth/Attack" and "Radikult") as betrayals of everything the group once stood for. But
hired
Laibach
to remix some of their tracks way back in 1994; this isn't new territory for them. And many of the songs on
Illud
("Existo Vulgore," "Blades for Baal," "Nevermore," "Beauty Meets Beast") are as raw and savage as anything the band's ever recorded. And
Trey Azagthoth
's guitar solos, always one of the group's primary attractions, are wild displays of virtuosic technique, just as they've always been. The other big change, of course, is that the band's drummer,
Pete Sandoval
, is absent for medical reasons, with his seat being filled by
Tim Yeung
(
Vital Remains
Divine Heresy
).
Yeung
does just fine, unleashing double bass barrages every bit as brutal and precise as
Sandoval
did on the group's earlier albums.
isn't a stumble for
; it's a left turn by a band that's already made many of them throughout its over 20-year career. ~ Phil Freeman