Christ Illusion (Limited Re-issue) Album

Christ Illusion (Limited Alternate Version Re-issue)
  • Release date: July 24th, 2007
  • Label: Warner Bros. Records
  • Recorded at: NRG, North Hollywood, Westlake Studios, Los Angeles, CA
  • Mixed at: Pulse Recordings, Silverlake, CA
  • Running time: Around 58:00 including Video Content
  • US highest chart position: n/a
Track listing - disc 1Song creditsTimeLyrics
01. Flesh Storm(King)4:14read
02. Catalyst(King)3:07read
03. Skeleton Christ(King)4:22read
04. Eyes of the Insane(Araya/Hanneman)3:23read
05. Jihad(Araya/Hanneman)3:31read
06. Consfearacy(King)3:07read
07. Catatonic(King)4:54read
08. Black Serenade (alternave ver.)(Araya/Hanneman)3:16read
09. Cult(King)4:40read
10. Supremist(King)3:51read
11. Final Six(Hanneman)4:11read
Track listing - disc 2Song creditsTimeLyrics
01. Slayer on Tour '07n/an/an/a
02. Eyes Of The Insane (promo video)(Araya/Hanneman)3:23read
03. South Of Heaven (Taken from the forthcoming Unholy Alliance DVD)(Araya/Hanneman)n/aread

Album credits (original issue)

Tom Araya - Bass, Vocals | Jeff Hanneman - Guitars | Kerry King - Guitars | Dave Lombardo - Drums | Josh Abraham - Producer | Rick Rubin - Executive Producer | John Ewing, Jr. - Engineer | Ryan Williams - Mix Engineer

Album reviews (original issue)

The reunion of the original Slayer lineup appears for the first time in the studio since 1990s Seasons in the Abyss (a record that topped off one of the great four-album stands in metal history: Hell Awaits, Reign in Blood, and South of Heaven preceded it). Drummer Dave Lombardo's retaking of the drum chair places the band back on the edge, pushing themselves and the genre to look back at t where they've been and where they go from here. For a band that has been together as long as Slayer has, they have never made concessions, and have stubbornly refused to sound like anyone but themselves. Christ Illusion is a raging, forward-thinking heavy metal melding with hardcore thrash; this is what made them such a breath of fresh air in the first place. And while they no longer sound terrifying, that was never their point anyway. Hearing Slayer rip through these ten songs, complete with lightning changes, off-kilter rhythms, and riff invention, together with plodding crescendos, sick as hell guitar breaks, and dark, unrelentingly twisted as f*ck lyrics reflect a singular intensity. The big themes on Christ Illusion center on the perverse myth of religion and its responsibility for, and cause of, war. One can talk about the power big money has at stake in the Middle Eastern havoc, but the root, according to some of these songs, is the culture war between two competing myths, Christianity and Islam; that this time out could result in the apocalypse. On the opener "Flesh Storm," Tom Araya roars the refrain above the guitars and frantic drumming: "It's all just psychotic devotion/Manipulated with no discretion/Relentless/Warfare knows no compassion/Thrives with no evolution/Unstable minds exacerbate/Unrest in peace...only the fallen have won/Because the fallen can't run/My vision's not obscure/For war there is no cure/So here the only law/Is men killing men/For Someone else's cause..."

Elsewhere, such as "Eyes of the Insane," the story comes in the first person from the point of view of a soldier who is suffering the effects of PTSD, yet he may or may not still be on the battlefield. Lombardo's drums open it slow, then the Jeff Hanneman and Kerry King guitar gods create an intensely harrowing and angular riff that changes from verse to verse, through the refrain and bridge, and comes back again. Yeah, Slayer actually craft and write songs. Check the little skittering vamp that leads into "Jihad," where Lombardo just shimmers his hi hat before the band begins to enter and twist and turn looking for a place to create a new rhythmic thrash that's the most insane deconstruction of four/four time on tape. The indictment of "holy war" is possible only through the telling of the narrative from a Jihadist's point of view. The blazing, low-tuned heaviness of "Consfearacy" turns the entire principle of patriotism's blind ideals into an evil joke. Araya's voice is mixed way up this time, every utterance is understandable, thanks to producer and mixer Josh Abraham and label boss Rick Rubin. This scathing rejection of religion as the cause for world conflict is best characterized in "Cult." The low-tuned, two-string vamp that slithers into the foreground creates a tension as Lombardo's cymbals call the band into the riff that opens the tune. It's slow, meaty, unrelenting in its tautness. When Araya's voice comes in, the whole track is off the rails and stays there: "Oppression is the holy war/In God I Distrust...Is war and greed the Master's plan? The bible's where it all began/Its propaganda sells despair/And spreads the virus everywhere/Religion Is hate/Religion Is fear/Religion is war..." Whether you agree with Slayer's anti-religion militancy is one thing, but their view that it underscores this war and so many preceding it has to be taken with some seriousness. And musically, they are in a league of their own. Christ Illusion creates an interesting dilemma for people of faith who like heavy metal: the stance against war here is unreproachable, but can one hang with the conflicting point of view that faith in a god is responsible for it? Given the defined presence of the vocals, one cannot simply listen to the voice as another instrument, as in much of heavy metal. One has to deal with the music and the words this time out, and yes, they're printed in the lyric booklet. Christ Illusion is an anti-war record that asks people to think for themselves. At one point Araya makes his choice: "six six six," but even that's in reaction; an irony. Christ Illusion is brilliant, stomping, scorched-earth thrash metal at its best. Lyrically, it may offend people, but getting the listener to think and make choices is what this music is all about. An anti-Christian/anti-Islam/anti-Theocratic, anti-war album, Christ Illusion is essential for anyone interested in the genre. - Thom Jurek   |   All Music Guide   |  


08/08/06 might not have the same sinister ring to it as 06/06/06, but Slayer's latest Soundtrack to the Apocalypse will arrive two months later than initially planned, on what would seem to be a benign August Tuesday. But 09/11/01 also began as a benign Tuesday until all terrorist hell broke loose while the band's last opus, God Hates Us All, was hitting the shelves in what surely is the most freakish coincidence in metal history. So we can only hope the release of Christ Illusion, the band's first album as the original fearsome foursome in some 15 years with the return of drum god Dave Lombardo, is greeted merely with the usual outrage from those who've typically taken offense at all things Slayer for the last 25 years - although the way things are boiling over in the Middle East right now, we could be staring Armageddon in the face by then.

Christ Illusion comes designed with outrage in mind. From its defiantly sacrilegious cover art to its ceaselessly misanthropic, blasphemous plot lines, it demands OUTRAGE - more calculatingly so than any other album the band has done.

And that, in a nutshell, is Christ Illusion's glaring weakness. The band, and in particular guitarist Kerry King who wrote 70 percent of the material, seem more interested in provocation than anything else. While provocation has always figured in Slayer's formidable arsenal - as evidenced by "Necrophiliac," "Silent Scream," "Angel of Death," etc. - it was never the main motivator. Here it is, or so it seems, and it hamstrings and cheapens the overall effort.

Indeed, to be blunt, when bassist/frontman Tom Araya spits such King-scripted diatribes as "Supremist's" "Pissing on your faith/incinerate God's whore/Perpetual is my reign/I will eat your soul" or "Skeleton Christ's" "I laugh at the abortion known as Christianity/I've seen the ways of God/I'll take the devil any day/Hail Satan," Slayer sink to the level of God-repelling dunderheads Deicide.

"Cult," which anyone who's seen the Unholy Alliance Tour - that couldn't start on 06/06/06, as planned, either because of Araya's appendicitis. Spooky! - will have heard, offers more of the same rote "There is no fucking Jesus Christ" railing. It's deja vu all over again from God Hates Us All - and once you've titled something God Hates Us All, haven't you made your point enough already?

Guitarist Jeff Hanneman and Araya offer a different take on religion with "Jihad," which sees holy war through the eyes of the terrorist, and no doubt will be Christ Illusion's most controversial track - especially if some flag-waving Fox News dipshit like Bill O'Reilly or Sean Hannity gets clued in. "Fuck your god, erase his name/A lady weeps insane with sorrow/I'll take his towers from the world/You're fucking raped upon your deathbed." Nice.

Even more cold-blooded is the text "Jihad" borrows for its climax from the motivational letter left behind by 09/11/01 ringleader Mohammed Atta - "You must not comfort the animal before you kill it/Strike as champions at the heart of the nonbelievers," etc. It's the same sort of detached, matter-of-fact tactic Hanneman and Araya have employed for "difficult" subjects in the past - Josef Mengele's Nazi atrocities in "Angel of Death" or Jeffrey Dahmer/Ed Gein's ghoulish proclivities in "213" and "Dead Skin Mask" - with great effect. But here it feels atypically crass and exploitative, as if it was done purely to get a rise out of people - kind of like what right-wing slag-bag Anne Coulter did by slamming the 9/11 widows in her latest load of excreta, "Godless." And Slayer's usually a lot more clever than that.

When not fixating on religion, the band revisit their other favorite subject - war - in surprisingly familiar terms. "Flesh Storm" is essentially King's rewrite of Hanneman's classic "War Ensemble" - with the accompanying music borrowing both from that and "Angel of Death." And "Eyes of the Insane" offers a post-traumatic sequel to "Mandatory Suicide," again with a soundtrack that recalls the original, but boasting a couple truly mammoth hooks that do shake things up. And truth be told, Slayer could have shaken things up a bit more musically here. In the lead up to its release, the band members were emphatic that Christ Illusion, to quote King from our April interview, "sounds like a damn Slayer record." And it certainly does. But some more of the aforementioned pounding hooks that punctuate "Insane" or the spasmodic tempos and surging riffs that power "Jihad" and the menacing "Black Serenade" would have been welcome. The droning "Catatonic" pretty much lives up to its name as the Illusion's one "experimental," and weakest, track.

The grandiosity and imposing presence that made South of Heaven or Seasons In The Abyss so magnificent - but have largely been missing since - are again noticeable in their relative absence. Too often here, the band simply either dips back into their old bag of tricks, as on "Flesh Storm" or the drill sergeant cadence of "Cult," or settles for full-frontal attack mode - "Catalyst," "Consfearacy," "Supremist" - perhaps figuring that, if nothing else, sheer brutality will do the trick. And while the ruthless, Bush-bashing "Consfearacy" benefits from Lombardo's tornadic drum salvos - his performance is top notch throughout and does give the album a looser feel than Paul Bostaph's technical precision offered -at the end of the day the effect is more numbing than satisfying.

Basically, the bottom line here is this: If the mere fact that Christ Illusion is a "new Slayer album" will be enough to scratch your Slayer itch, then you should be more than satisfied - and I've got to admit, at times, it works for me, too. But for anyone expecting - or at least hoping - for anything more monumental than just another "damn Slayer record," hate to bust your bubble. Christ Illusion is full of sound and fury that ultimately doesn't signify a whole hell of a lot. - Peter Atkinson   |   Knac.com   |  

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