Maximum Metal Rating Legend
5 Excellent - Masterpiece. A classic.
4.5-4 Great - Almost perfect records but there's probably a lacking.
3.5 Good - Most of the record is good, but there may be some filler.
3 Average - Some good songs, some bad ones at about a half/half ratio.
2.5-2 Fair - Worth a listen, but best obtained by collectors.
1.5-1 Bad - Major problems with music, lyrics, production, etc.
0 Terrible - Waste of your life and time.

Note: Reviews are graded from 0-5, anything higher or not showing is from our old style. Scores, however, do not reveal the important features. The written review that accompanies the ratings is the best source of information regarding the music on our site. Reviewing is opinionated, not a qualitative science, so scores are personal to the reviewer and could reflect anything from being technically brilliant to gloriously cheesy fun.

Demos and independent releases get some slack since the bands are often spent broke supporting themselves and trying to improve. Major releases usually have big financial backing, so they may be judged by a heavier hand. All scores can be eventually adjusted up or down by comparison of subsequent releases by the same band. We attempt to keep biases out of reviews and be advocates of the consumer without the undo influence of any band, label, management, promoter, etc.

The best way to determine how much you may like certain music is to listen to it yourself.
Band
Hypocrisy
Title
Virus
Type
LP/EP
Company
Nuclear Blast
YOR
2005
Style
Death
8/30/2005 - Review by: Eric Compton
Hypocrisy - Virus - 2005 - Nuclear Blast

Track Listing
1. Intro
2. Warpath
3. Scrutinized
4. Fearless
5. Craving for Another Killing
6. Let the Knife Do the Talking
7. A Thousand Lies
8. Incised Before I’ve Ceased
9. Blooddrenched
10. Compulsive Psychosis
11. Living to Die
Just in time for the release of our first issue of Past, Present, Future spotlighting the best damn death metal band in Sweden, Hypocrisy, comes my review for the new album "Virus". Those of you still a bit burdened by the band's last few outings will find resolution here, a saving grace in the form of eleven do-or-die tracks that catapult the band and their formula back to the forefront of the genre's star-studded leaders. This time around Tagtgren and company make up a bit of lost ground, really focused and inventive in their recapture of the abandoned throne. After disappointing releases in "Into The Abyss", "Catch 22" (Peter's personal favorite), and the overly familiar "The Arrival", Hypocrisy are back in the saddle with a fresh outlook and a few new weapons pulled from the armory reserve.

This 2005 version of Hypocrisy is entirely a different creature from the outside looking in. The band's long-time drummer Lars Szoke left after the band's last record, replaced by Tagtgren's long-time idol, former Grimfist/Immortal skinsman Reidar Horghagen. Along with the change behind the kit comes an additional guitarist in Andreas Holma, making this version of the group a four-piece for the first time in over ten years. I am very fond of the band's prior works as a dynamic four-piece and with "Virus" those elements come together again, turning something glorious and fabulous into a work of astonishment and delight. "Virus" may be this band's most well rounded effort to date, turning to gold the ventures of an innovative pioneer looking dead red at a career crossroads.

This record moves with as much velocity as "Into The Abyss", but still manages to absorb the same atmosphere and vibe from the band's most successful albums, "The Final Chapter" and "Abducted". "Virus" is filled with the most intense, hate filled fury found on a record today, but while clocking by at a million miles an hour it manages to adapt and morph into a more calculated, thought provoking affair. With the added dimension of a second guitarist, the group now gets to explore their melody and mood, something that Tagtgren has always managed to do in the past with his playing and technique, but with an added hand it allows for a much more dramatic effect. The backing rhythms through most of the material is completely soaked with atmosphere and melodic structures, building to the most violent displays of power while slowly stewing in the blackest cauldron.

With supersonic cuts like "Blooddrenched" and "Let The Knife Do The Talking", past material like "Killing Art" and "Buried" come to mind, the effective speed and then more speed formula is the perfect antidote for the modern grooves our metal society has plagued us with. Slower, deeper passages exist with "Fearless" and "A Thousand Lies", cuts that seem to absorb the same sort of texture and simplicity found on the group's self-titled record, with "Fearless" a bit like "The Arrival" highlight "Slave To The Parasites". Strong opener "Warpath" is probably my favorite selection, a mind warp that builds on some black metal elements before totally reproducing into a thrashing holocaust. New drummer Horgh is a very different musician when compared to former drummer Lars Szoke, with Horgh's fills and patterns of a more extreme nature. Really this album is filled with off the wall things, from spoken passages on "Living To Die" to the small neo-classical section in "Incised Before I've Ceased". The album's fastest track is "Craving For Another Killing", a blistering, scorching rampage that borrows from the same intensity as the group's first two records.

I hate to continue referencing past songs and selections but that is really what this band has always been built on, a constant evolution on past works. It doesn't work for some bands but for Hypocrisy it is a winning formula. Their reflections of the past are crucial in their future developments, much like the building of a skyscraper rests on the brick and mortar rows below it. This Swedish act has broken down every barrier on their quest for death metal domination, and at this point in time with this much competition, all of the barriers lie in the rearview.


---EC 08.22.05

  • 1 :REVIEW COUNT
    N/A :AVE RATING

ALL REVIEWS FOR: HYPOCRISY
TITLE
DOR
COMPANY
REVIEWER DATE MADE RATING
A Taste of Extreme Divinity
2009
Nuclear Blast
Greg Watson4/16/2010
4.5
End Of Disclosure
2013
Nuclear Blast
Eric Compton4/11/2013
3.5
The Arrival
2004
Nuclear Blast
Greg Watson4/30/2004
-
The Arrival
2004
Nuclear Blast
Eric Compton2/10/2004
-
Virus
2005
Nuclear Blast
Eric Compton8/30/2005
-

ALL INTERVIEWS FOR: HYPOCRISY
INTERVIEW INTERVIEWER DATE TAGLINE


<< back >>