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SARCOFAGUS - Cycle Of Life LP

Nuclear War Now

SARCOFAGUS - Cycle Of Life LP

$51.95
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Often described as Finland’s first metal band, Sarcofagus’ place in the broader context of metal’s emergence in late 70s and early 80s is arguably more significant. For perspective, consider the fact that Sarcofagus self-released their first EP in ‘79—the same year as Maiden’s Soundhouse Tapes EP. 1980 saw the release of not one, but two full lengths, Cycle of Life and Envoy of Death. Both were musically and thematically far ahead of their time. Recorded onto 8-track over 3 days, Cycle of Life was an ambitious debut, stretching the bounds of the emergent genre.

The songs follow a single narrative, telling the story of a man who, believing himself to be an incarnation of Horus, the ancient Egyptian sky god, is deemed insane and confined in a mental hospital. Pursuing suicide as his only means of escape, he kills himself only to be reincarnated and condemned to suffer life once again. The theme of suicide proved controversial, resulting in at least one claim by a parent, albeit unsubstantiated, that a teenager killed himself after listening to the album. These tracks, written by guitarist Kimmo Kuusniemi, feature Sarcofagus’s more aggressive metal sound as well as the progressive and experimental elements that set them apart. Frantic drums and twisting, helical bass lines undergird the tracks, commanded by Kuusniemi’s heavy guitar riffs sheathed in brittle, low end distortion. Reckless, chaotic guitar solos and synthesizer accents by keyboardist Esa Kotilainen fill out the space, adding eccentricity to the material. The side culminates in a 3-minute psychedelic collision of experimental tape manipulation, effects, and electronics that concludes with the sound of a crying baby representing the protagonist’s rebirth. The second side bears a greater influence of the band’s other founding member, vocalist Hannu Leidén, who was more oriented toward hard rock and whose subsequent departure enabled Kuusniemi to shift the band into a high gear for the Envoy of Death album.


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