The Stench of Redemption

The Stench of Redemption is the eighth studio album by American death metal band Deicide. It is the first album by the band to feature Jack Owen (formerly of Cannibal Corpse) and Ralph Santolla (formerly of Iced Earth) on guitars. Some editions of the album include a cover of "Black Night" by Deep Purple, with rewritten lyrics by Glen Benton.

The Stench of Redemption
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 22, 2006 (2006-08-22)
Recorded2006
GenreDeath metal
Length41:12
LabelEarache
ProducerSteve Asheim
Deicide chronology
When London Burns
(2006)
The Stench of Redemption
(2006)
Doomsday L.A.
(2007)

The Stench of Redemption was Deicide's most successful release to date, peaking at No. 11 on the Top Heatseekers chart. Many critics praised The Stench of Redemption as a return to form for Deicide, despite the band losing both Eric and Brian Hoffman.

Background

Two tracks, "Homage for Satan" and "Crucified for Innocence", were released exclusively via iTunes on June 6, 2006. Deicide released these songs online because of financial problems that the band and Earache Records had. The band also cancelled some of their concerts because of these financial problems.

The album features themes of destruction and anti-Christianity. This is the first Deicide album to have writing credits attributed to individual band members.

There is a noticeable change in the guitar work, as guitar leads are much more prevalent. The style of the solos on the album is also drastically different from previous Deicide records. Ralph Santolla and Jack Owen utilize a neo-classical style of guitar soloing along with the traditional riffing of Deicide.

Drummer Steve Asheim said of the album, "I'd have to say 'Stench' is definitely my favorite and the one I'm most proud of, Benton too I think. It really all came together on this one, the material, the players, the sound, the vibe... It was a real pleasure doing this record with this line-up, almost effortless."[1]

Reviews

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
About.com[2]
Allmusic[3]
Blabbermouth8/10[4]
Chronicles of Chaos9/10[5]
Metal Storm9.6/10[6]
Sea of Tranquility[7]
StylusB+[8]

The Stench of Redemption met with positive reviews, with most reviewers praising the added melodic dimension, which they attribute to the new guitarists. Chad Bowar, writing for About.com, praised the guitar team for "breath[ing] new life into Deicide's approach. You might not even notice because of all the blast beats and breakneck riffing, but there are some actual melodies here. They have added a subtle layer of complexity to the band's brutal arsenal, which makes the songs that much more powerful".[2] Similarly, Scott Alisoglu wrote for Blabbermouth that the new guitarists "add to Deicide's legendary death metal sound by upping the six-string dynamics and giving these compositions a much-needed injection of compositional depth. That does not mean that you won't recognize The Stench of Redemption as anything but a Hell-fried Deicide album, only that the added ingredients push the album to heights previously unattained".[4] Jackie Smit, writing for Chronicles of Chaos, claimed that the addition of Jack Owen and Ralph Santolla not only "lit under the remaining original members' collective behinds", but also added a melodic dimension "unlike anything the Hoffman brothers were ever able to muster".[5] Referring to the album as "unapologetically melodic", Cosmo Lee wrote in Stylus Magazine that The Stench of Redemption is "no less brutal" as a result of the melodic inclinations, and praised Steve Asheim's "massive, memorable" riffs and Benton's "diabolical" vocals.[8]

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Glen Benton; all music is composed by Steve Asheim.

No.TitleLength
1."The Stench of Redemption"4:09
2."Death to Jesus"3:53
3."Desecration"4:31
4."Crucified for the Innocence"4:35
5."Walk with the Devil in Dreams You Behold"4:58
6."Homage for Satan"3:59
7."Not of This Earth"3:19
8."Never to Be Seen Again"3:24
9."The Lord's Sedition"5:41
10."Black Night (Deep Purple cover)"2:43
Total length:41:12

Personnel

Accolades

The Turkish Metal Music Awards of 2006, conducted by Turkish webzine Bira Darkzine, has recognized The Stench of Redemption as the best metal album of 2006, as voted by the Turkish public.

gollark: Is there a way to download all my pastes from pastebin, given that it's now broken as TomatOS?
gollark: And Facebook is evil, so probably not a great idea.
gollark: In the UK, a million plus a half would just be 1,000,000.5.
gollark: Commas and decimal points being swapped is an EU thing.
gollark: We still use . as a decimal point in Britain. What do you *think* we did?

References

  1. Deicide interview (06/2006) - Metal Storm
  2. Pretorius, Neil. "Deicide - The Stench Of Redemption Review". About.com. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  3. Prato, Greg. "Deicide The Stench of Redemption". Allmusic. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  4. Alisoglu, Scott. "Deicide: The Stench of Redemption (Earache)". Blabbermouth.net. Retrieved February 27, 2010.
  5. Smit, Jackie (December 8, 2006). "Deicide - The Stench of Redemption". Chronicles of Chaos. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  6. "Deicide - The Stench Of Redemption". Metal Storm. August 22, 2006. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  7. Pardo, Pete (October 23, 2006). "Deicide: The Stench of Redemption". Sea of Tranquility. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  8. Lee, Cosmo (August 28, 2006). "Deicide The Stench of Redemption". Stylus Magazine. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
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