Morgue Terror – Violent and Murderous Thoughts

Posted: 21 August 2024 in Reviews, Singles and EPs
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Self-released – 23rd August 2024

Christopher Nosnibor

Violent and Murderous Thoughts is the second EP from ‘Horror-themed death metal act Morgue Terror’, and this one is all about ‘chronicling the atrocities of four sadistic serial killers and a debauched, abusive sect’ across its five tracks. In this sense, it broadly represents a thematic continuation of its predecessor, their eponymous debut, which was ‘all about the murders and characters in the Terrifier movies’. Nerds. However, it also marks something of a departure, being their first release ‘to have an actual drummer, with Dustin Klimek (ex-Full of Hell) behind the kit’.

His presence has certainly brought a new dynamic to the sound, with (full of) hell-for-leather pedalwork bringing relentlessly powerful beats to propel the furious fret frenzy and guttural grunting vocals. I mean, it’s impossible to determine by ear who any of the sadistic serial killers might be, and serial killers really have been done to death – if you’ll pardon the pun – and have, thanks to Channel 5 and Netflix, become completely mainstream. Still, in terms of revelling in gore and death metal tropes, Morgue Terror deliver everything they promise, and this EP sounds exactly the way you’d expect it to based on the bloody, gruesome cover art. Sure, it’s puerile and way over the top – the cover and the music – but it works.

‘Chessmaster’ (inspired by Claude Bloodgood, perhaps?) showcases some well-conceived dynamics, with tempo changes and breakdowns aplenty and some interesting chord progressions, packing a lot of action into only a little more than three minutes. ‘Bludgeoned_Brutalized’, the longest of the songs and running past four minutes conveys the sentiment of the title as an aural manifestation, relentlessly battering the listener with punishing force. The vocals sound as if they’re being coughed through a cascade of blood while the guy’s entrails are being torn out through his abdomen. Make no mistake, this is nasty, and single cut ‘Neanderthal’, which features guest vocalist Cheney Crabb is punishing from beginning to end, three devastating minutes of raw intensity.

There is simply no let-up across the duration of Violent and Murderous Thoughts, and while the whole EP may only have a duration of around eighteen minutes, it’s a blunt forced trauma in musical form: hard-hitting and harrowing, it leaves you feeling battered, bruised and borderline concussed.

AA

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