Cause Of Death es el segundo album de la banda americana Obituary, es considerado cómo uno de los clásicos de la historia del Death Metal.
La portada fué realizada por Michael Whelan, fué usada en la colección "Bloodcurdling Tales of Horror and the Macabre" de H.P. Lovecraft.
En principio iba a ser usada por la banda Sepultura para su album Beneath the Remains, pero Roadrunner Records permitió a Obituary usarla a pesar de que el disco de sepultura fué realizado algún tiempo antes.
Origen: USA (Brandon, Florida)
Año: 1990
Formato: FLAC [tracks] 1765 Kbps [Vinyl Rip 24 Bit 48 kHz]
Uploader: nebula
Duración 00:49:21
Tamaño: 399 Mb + 224 Mb
Тracklist:
01. Infected 03:34
02. Body Bag 05:36
03. Chopped In Half 05:50
04. Circle Of The Tyrants 03:46
05. Dying 04:27
06. Find The Arise 04:32
07. Cause Of Death 02:52
08. Memories Remain 05:40
09. Turned Inside Out 03:45
10. Infected 05:00
11. Memories Remain 04:17
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Review by Jason Birchmeier
Lead guitarist Allen West didn't join Obituary for their second album, Cause of Death, which makes a bigger difference than you might expect. His replacement is a close associate of the band, James Murphy of the band Death -- the man many consider to be the godfather of death metal -- and he brings his own style to Cause of Death, resulting in an album that sounds like a hybrid of Obituary and Death. This isn't necessarily bad; in fact, it's somewhat fascinating, especially for metalheads well immersed in the Florida school of death metal. You can hear Murphy's influence throughout the album, as he often leads the band into eerie dirge-like moments that sound like the eye of the storm at hand. Murphy's contribution to Cause of Death aside, not much else has changed in the year since Obituary's 1989 debut, Slowly We Rot. The vocals of John Tardy still dominate the proceedings, the drastic tempo changes still set Obituary apart from the majority of their peers of the time, and producer Scott Burns still struggles with seemingly low-budget values that actually sound worse than they did on Slowly We Rot (not in a good, lo-fi way, either). The band's songwriting -- handled almost …read more