Blessed Are The Sick

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ALBUM INFORMATION
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Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 39:24

eMusic Review

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Jen Guyre

eMusic Contributor

03.29.02
An experimentally evil death metal landmark
2000 | Label: Earache

The reissue of the 1991 sophomore album from these American death metal legends showcases the solid songwriting and innovative musicianship that transformed them from early torchbearers to masters of their genre. With guitarist/ songwriting mastermind Trey Azagthoth just blossoming at the helm, tracks like the pace-setting opener "Fall From Grace" show off the band’s unmatched ability to move from slow-burning creepy-crawls to high-intensity, full-throttle speed with precision and grace. Brimming with the blast beats, gruff vocals, spoken-word warnings, odd time signatures, eclectic instrumentals and wailing, masterful guitar solos Morbid Angel crafted a landmark album, one justly heralded amongst their peers. To put it another way: Blessed is experimentally evil.

The mood-setting instrumental passages that both bookend the album and also provide ghostly interludes are a perfect counter to the pure aggression and face-melting intensity of tracks like "Day of Suffering" and "The Ancient Ones." With each evil intricacy in place, Morbid Angel set forth on a mind-blowing opus. Minor studio tampering is usually a given with reissues, but Morbid Angel’s innovative and influential sound holds up 18 years later — still remaining ahead-of-the-curve and offering untouchably great death metal for others to learn by.

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Gonna Have To Disagree Here...

TheAccuser

Musically this is much like the classic painting used for the cover--which shows cool-looking weird evil shit of SOME kind going on, but is unclear, blurry and muted. Likewise, the twisted and would-be menacing death metal compositions on offer here are severely let down by a shockingly-weak, quiet guitar sound, which is frankly surpassed in heaviness by the average asshole fratrock band these days. "Poser!" I hear you shouting--well, blow me, it's true, and it's a damn shame too because I LIKE Morbid Angel and I WANT to like this but I can't get past how un-powerful it sounds.

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Morbid Angel's Finest Hour

Tyr

I owned this on CD back when I was a teenager and always remember the impact it had on me with regards to the atmosphere and quality of songwriting. It has such a vast palette of sonic colours and textures with a killer production and mammoth guitar riffs. This album is like the Master of Puppets of Death Metal.

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One of the greatest death metal albums

Sgt-Ogre

I cannot express how incredible this album is. 10/10 for me. Not many albums are perfect like this one. I bought it on cassette in 1991, on cd during the nineties, and it's still in regular rotation now. I consider this to be one of the greats of the "Golden age of metal" alongside Megadeth's Rust in Peace, Carcass's Necroticism, and Sepultura's Arise. It's great to see Dave Vincent has rejoined the band. I'm hoping for something special like Blessed in the near future!

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New Disciple

Draco

Im new to Death Metal, I'm a long time fan of Heavy Metal going back to the early 80's. Before yesterday I never heard of Morbid Angle, My 15 year old daughter told me it would be good to put on my M.P.3 player for my workouts. "Feel the Burn"

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must have

tankworm

If you are into death metal. This is one of the best albums you will ever find! This album is a few years old, but its got all the elements you need for a great record. Hard hitting vocals, backed up with some of the best guitar riffs ive heard. I find myself coming back to it time and time again. Try it, I promise it will be one of your favorites if you are into death metal. Anything Morbid Angel has put out has been great, but this is the cream of the crop.

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They Say All Media Guide

Morbid Angel had impressed many with Altars of Madness, but they still hadn’t climbed into the upper class of death metal bands until this record. Overshadowed by great albums from Sepultura, Entombed, and Carcass the same year, Morbid Angel still managed to solidify their reputation as a heavy metal maelstrom with the 13 tracks found here. Songs like “Thy Kingdom Come,” “Brainstorm,” and the redundantly titled “Unholy Blasphemies” would go on to become cult favorites in the metal underworld, while “The Ancient Ones” became their first true anthem, as it covered the drug-fueled religious theories of guitarist Trey Azagthoth. Despite his unusual beliefs, his playing is on par with the best the genre has to offer, shredding through these songs with an unbelievable ease and dexterity that brings to mind his guitar hero, Eddie Van Halen. This unique approach to the genre is definitely what makes this band more memorable, although the simple fact that they bothered to write semi-catchy songs and had a fantastic vocalist in David Vincent did not hurt matters one bit. The album is short, to the point, and doesn’t waste time noodling on forgetable riffs and needless tempo changes the way so many of their contemporaries did. Still sounding vicious, Blessed Are the Sick is an unheralded classic in the short-lived but rewarding first wave of death metal. – Bradley Torreano

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