{"id":82976,"date":"2018-08-03T09:00:09","date_gmt":"2018-08-03T14:00:09","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.toiletovhell.com\/?p=82976"},"modified":"2018-08-03T08:39:46","modified_gmt":"2018-08-03T13:39:46","slug":"review-maligner-attraction-to-annihilation","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/toiletovhell.com\/review-maligner-attraction-to-annihilation\/","title":{"rendered":"Review: Maligner<\/b> – Attraction to Annihilation<\/i>"},"content":{"rendered":"
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Thrash done right.<\/p>\n

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In spite of its wide-reaching popularity and immediately engaging nature, thrash metal is a surprisingly hard genre of metal to get right. Even in the genre\u2019s heyday it suffered moreso than any other style with an oversaturation of mediocre to outright snooze inducing bands who had the raw chug and charge needed to fill out the boxes but little of the creativity, finesse, truly unchained tenacity, or songwriting talents needed to give us more than the sum of their parts. To some extent, fusions and cross pollination with other genres can help but as the glut of forgettable black-thrash bands so, it has never been a guarantee. On the surface if you were flipping through a youtube playlist of thrash bands and came upon Maligner<\/strong> midway through you couldn\u2019t be blamed for skipping over them too as initially they don\u2019t seem to be that far out of the box. They aren\u2019t anyways but it\u2019s not a case of escaping the box in this case as much as turning that box into a fortress, one bristling with ever watchful mounted machine guns and flesh-rending barbed wire. This isn\u2019t merely a well-done nostalgia trip but a deadly reminder of why thrash was once feared and respected as feral spearhead that played the largest role in giving us extreme metal as we understand it today as well as serving as a bridge between it and the more accessible forms of metal it superseded.<\/p>\n