Bathory - Blood Fire Death

Bathory - Blood Fire Death
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Album Details

Title: Blood Fire Death
Artist: Bathory
Release Date: 1988
Re-Released On: 3/17/2003
Label: Maze/Kraze Records, Black Mark
Duration: 44:53
Album Type(s): lyrics/libretto
UPCs: 032751106328, 4012743000427, 602276000427, 032751106342, 4012743000410, 4012743000441, 602276000441, 693723000077
Genre: Rock
Styles: Death Metal, Heavy Metal, Scandinavian Metal, Black Metal
Moods: Aggressive, Hostile, Menacing, Theatrical
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 6
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Odens Ride Over Nordland
  2. A Fine Day to Die
  3. The Golden Walls of Heaven
  4. Pace 'Till Death
  5. Holocaust
  6. For All Those Who Died
  7. Dies Irae
  8. Blood Fire Death
  9. [Untitled Hidden Track]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2003CDBlack MarkBMK6664.2
1994CDMaze/Kraze Records1063
------CDBlack Mark0000000007

Other Editions

  • No other editions were found for this album.

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Album Review

Possibly the first true example of what is commonly called Viking metal, 1988's Blood Fire Death inaugurated an incredibly prolific period in Bathory's history -- so prolific and creative, in fact, that an entire album's worth of material recorded at this time would be shelved for years before eventually finding room for release as 1996's Blood on Ice. Featuring dramatic orchestral arrangements backing horrific banshee cries and galloping battalions of doom and destruction, "Oden's Ride Over Nordland" was as powerful an instrumental mood setter as has ever introduced a heavy metal album. It also boasted something never before heard on a Bathory LP: high audio fidelity, for Blood Fire Death was indeed the group's first to qualify as a professional-sounding recording. The second shock arrived when Quorthon employed a clean singing style (as opposed to his previously preeminent death croak) on the remarkable epic "A Fine Day to Die," whose complex arrangements and wide-ranging use of melody are also far more daring and adventurous than all his previous works. And what may have seemed accidental with the previous year's exceptional Under the Sign of the Black Mark was unquestionably confirmed here: This was the sound of modern black metal taking shape before fans' very eyes. Unfortunately, the album's jaw-dropping initial offensive isn't always maintained throughout, with simplistic thrashers like "For All Those Who Died" and "Holocaust" harking back to the band's crude early days, but failing to deliver with quite as much power and conviction. On the other hand, outstanding songs like the aforementioned "Fine Day to Die," the deliriously heavy "The Golden Walls of Heaven," the multi-paced "Dies Irae," and, most notably, the lengthy title track (containing acoustic guitars and the whole kitchen sink) certainly qualify among the best things Bathory had ever recorded thus far. Simply put, Blood Fire Death's lasting legacy of influence cannot be underestimated, and its courageous experiments set the stage for what many consider Bathory's finest hour, the magnificent Hammerheart. ~ Eduardo Rivadavia, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Andy DacostaMastering
Borje ForsbergExecutive Producer
BossProducer
KothaarBass
Peter Nicolai ArboCover Painting, Paintings
QuorthonProducer, Guitar, Cover Design, Vocals, Group Member
VvornthDrums, Group Member