eMusic Review
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.