Celtic Frost - Into the Pandemonium

Celtic Frost - Into the Pandemonium
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Album Details

Title: Into the Pandemonium
Artist: Celtic Frost
Release Date: 1987
Re-Released On: 3/3/2006
Label: Noise, Modern, Sanctuary
Duration: 47:59
UPCs: 823107400524, 036124484242, 088561817541, 090861105044, 4006030006728, 4006030032727, 701301006721
Genre: Rock
Styles: Heavy Metal, Symphonic Black Metal
Moods: Bleak, Gloomy, Hostile, Malevolent, Menacing, Suffocating, Aggressive, Theatrical
Total Copies: 0
Members Wishing: 4
Number of Discs/SwapaCD Credits: 1

Track Listings

  1. Mexican Radio
  2. Mesmerized
  3. Inner Sanctum
  4. Tristesses de la Lune
  5. Babylon Fell
  6. Caress into Oblivion
  7. One in Their Pride [Porthhole Mix]
  8. I Won't Dance (The Elders Orient)
  9. Sorrows of the Moon
  10. Rex Irae [Requiem]
  11. Oriental Masquerade
  12. One in Their Pride [Extended Mix]

Additional Releases

YearTypeLabelCatalog #
2006CDSanctuary10067
2000CDModern03272
1999CDNoise0067
1998CDNoise74005
------CDNoise03612-44842-2

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Album Review

Having created what would remain an archetypal metal record in To Mega Therion, it seemed like Thomas Gabriel Warrior and his compatriots were after an exact repeat on first blush with Pandemonium. Armed with harrowing Bosch cover art and song titles like "Babylon Fell" and "Sorrows of the Moon," what else could be the result? With the first track, though, all bets were off, showing Warrior to be one of the least predictable folks around. The song? A nuclear-strength rip through Wall of Voodoo's West Coast new wave classic "Mexican Radio," with everything intact down to the nerdishly sung line about eating barbecued iguana. Hearing Warrior gasp and snarl his way through Stan Ridgway's shaggy dog tale is one of those not-to-be-believed-until-heard experiences. The next big change surfaces on "Mesmerized" -- rather than again invoking Beelzebub in a harsh rasp, Warrior actually sings a weepy love lyric in a sad moan. Admittedly the beloved appears to be some ancient Roman priestess, but still, this is surprising (and effective) stuff, a singing approach he reuses throughout the album. "Rex Irae (Requiem)" is especially fine, a blending of operatic backing vocals, orchestrations, and just enough crunch when needed. Then there's "One in Their Pride," which exists on the album in two different forms -- both of them drum machine-laden dub/industrial mixes. Running rampant throughout Pandemonium is the massive metal crunch and lyrics about death and destruction with which Celtic Frost made its name, so fans of earlier stuff won't feel too taken by surprise. "Inner Sanctum," detailing a wish to "forget in the sleep of death," is especially fine. But whether it's the strings and orgasmic female French lead singer -- and nothing else -- on "Tristesses de la Luna" or the brassy r&b backing vocals on "I Won't Dance," Pandemonium is a record taking happy delight in trashing expectations to follow a stranger muse. ~ Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

Credits

NameCredits
Celtic FrostProducer
Jan NemecEngineer
Martin Eric Ain?
Reed St. Mark?
Thomas Gabriel Warrior?