Come My Fanatics

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (64 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 97:34

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Extremely heavy

Markg

This is an earlier album and very heavy, yet still melodic. All of their stuff is very good.

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I don't get it

terp

I don't get what all the fuss is about. this was just boring. lousy vocals, lousy musicianship, you name it.

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Not just Come My Fanatics

WhiteWhaleHolyGrail

Disc 2 is actually the Electric Wizard self-titled debut from 1994. Come My Fanatics was released in 1996 and packaged later with the debut as seen here.

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Word

Untertan

I can only agree with Captain Hook, I live in Sweden and something like every third album I click on is unavailable for me. I pay the same money as everybody else and expect the same deal. Lately, logging on to emusic just pisses me off.

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Get Your Act Together!

CaptainHook

Yet another album you can't download in England! You can't even get this one in the shops over here. What are we supposed to do? This album is one of the main reasons for me signing up for eMusic, because when I was browsing, it said it was availible. We pay good money to download music from here, so we should be able to download anything we want, regardless of country. Rant over.

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They Say All Media Guide

Upon its release, Electric Wizard’s excellent debut carved a Titanic-sized swathe through the heavy metal landscape, burying much that had come before under an avalanche of amp distortion, detuned riffs, and billows of marijuana smoke. And yet, impossible as it may seem, the band’s absolutely colossal second effort, Come My Fanatics…, while somewhat less immediate than its predecessor, somehow upped the sonic ante through a wall of sludge so thick that even the most experienced of metal heads couldn’t help but be overwhelmed by its power. Opening number “Return Trip” is quite simply a heavy metal landmark, from its sudden, feedback-induced (and bowel-releasing) opening chord to the anguished screams of main man Jus Oborn through to its final coughing denouement ten minutes later. The barely discernible lyrics to second track “Wizard in Black” (another monster at eight minutes) gradually emerge from the trio’s cyclopean grind, intoning “I am a God…I am the One” — and by gum if by now you’re not ready to believe just that! Ensuing acid-metal behemoths like “Doom-Mantia” and “Son of Nothing” (the album’s shortest track at almost seven minutes) will test the patience of uninitiated listeners before drifting into focus through billowing clouds of smoke, but the ultimate religious experience is well worth the lengthy conversion process. And though less memorable, instrumentals like “Ivixor B/Phase Inducer,” (a full-fledged space rock feedback freakout) and closer “Solarian 13″ slot right into the album’s imposing mass. Essential doom. – Eduardo Rivadavia

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