![]() You were sure to run into their logo, brandished across posters and flyers, at any gigs you attended, and probably their looming, be-skulleted frontman Riley Strong as well, at shows in Melbourne and all across the country. The Big One Desecrator – Summoningįor the past decade, Descrator have been an Australian metal institution. It’s a record that comes with quite a story, however, and I was glad to be able to catch up with the band to help clarify some of the details as the situation evolved. No where has this been better illustrated perhaps than in terms of the thrash genre, with the past few months only really giving rise to a handful of impressive if-flawed underground efforts and couple of disposable covers compilations, with big name releases from Trivium, Exodus and Bullet for My Valentine, among many other higher-profile releases, suddenly slated for the year’s back end.Īs such, I don’t have a “Big Four” for you this round, there being only one record I deemed truly worthy of the honour. Across the board, it seems like the spike in interesting underground releases that flourished during the (ongoing) COVID-19 pandemic is slowly giving way as more of the bigger bands who have been silently sitting on their stockpiles begin to poke their heads out and test the waters as the industry returns to semi-functionality. ![]() It’s been a bit quiet in the thrash metal world lately.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |