16 Jon a Qua - Take 6 (2:51) The Review Just as Motorhead is Lemmy, Chuck Schuldiner was Death. The man's personality, whims and wants are stamped all over every album the band put out and, of course, every album is different. That being said, it is very difficult to review ‘ Spiritual Healing’ objectively and independently of the other releases Chuck put his name to. Each album is a point in time and a snapshot of the erstwhile main man's musical vision at that point. Crucially, ‘ Spiritual Healing’ is something of a crossroads release.

A new direction had been taken- this is not a re-hash of ‘ Leprosy’, nor is it ‘ The Sound Of Perseverance’. There are few who would argue that ‘ Scream Bloody Gore’ or “ Leprosy’ were progressive albums, but they do represent the birth of a genre and the pushing of the musical envelope. So too does ‘ Spiritual Healing’ push the envelope, but in a markedly different way. Once this re-issue is played, it is obvious that time has gone into the re-mastering process. The sound is bright and clear. The vibe is very different to ‘ Leprosy’- this is NOT standard death/thrash fare.

“Living Monstrosity” gives us traits of the old Death and points us in the direction of what was to come. Chuck's shriek/growl is present and correct, as are numerous time changes. The lead break at the mid way point would be in no way out of place on ‘ Individual Thought Patterns’ or even ‘ Symbolic’.

Another crucial feature of the release is displayed here; time changes throughout the solos. ‘ And Justice for All’ must have been on Schuldiner's radar- the trait is shared by the two albums and it makes for a really quite progressive feel. Not Opeth, perhaps, but far, far removed from Venom or Possessed. “Altering the Future” starts slow and doomy and a 3:4 (or is it 6/8?!) time signature is introduced. This lends the track a rather jazzy feel. It swings rather than shreds and dexterity is favoured over power and aggression- another signpost of things to come and makes the title rather apt.

“Defensive Personalities” starts with straight thrash and death metal riffs but at 1.26 there is a riff that would not be out of place on any one of the era's black metal releases. Harmony lead breaks and dropped snare beats abound giving again a proggy feel and structure. “Within the Mind” gives the listener another slower riff and overall pace with those signature time changes through the solos cropping up again. The title track follows with 7.45 or so of progressive death metal. There is genuine bile in the delivery of the vocals and lovely tempo changes to keep the listener guessing, the extended solo section at the midpoint is also an aural treat here. The almost conventional mid-tempo start to “Low Life” settles you into a false sense of security briefly, before beats are again omitted or pushed and abrupt time changes kick in (closed hi-hat work is a feature of this release; not used much these days).

There are riffs which sound like leads and the solo sections often sound like a kinda sped up Iron Maiden. The ending is low and slow- again there is no predicting this album. “Genetic Reconstruction” offers socially/scientifically conscious lyrics, tempo changes, more solos and the feeling that “Zombie Ritual” is a long time in the past. “Killing Spree” closes this landmark release with more odd time feels and time changes and many ventures up the neck by bass player Terry Butler. The bonus material on offer with this particular edition takes the track list to a colossal 23 (more if you get the three disc set). This is really for completists. If you have a hankering to hear rehearsal tapes, instrumentals and jams, you will love it.

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It is interesting and a useful way to immerse oneself in the album- particularly looking for differences, song development etc. Perhaps most telling is the “Primus Jam ”- a fusion fuelled jam showing off jazzy chops. The signs for the future of Death were in place- Chuck just needed further line-up changes to fully realise his vision.

Listening to the album is a time capsule- James Murphy and Chuck really do shred like its 1990, the drums of Bill Andrews thud rather than crack and it is clear that the times were changing. As Chuck intones: “ Replacing what is real by using technology.” in “Genetic Reconstruction” you can't help feeling sad that this ended up being a prediction of the future of music. If you look at the quality of musicianship displayed on this album and every Death album that followed, it is very difficult to imagine similar quality and genre development being achieved organically today. No doubt about it, Death paved the way for modern giants of the metal genre by including elements that were at the time positively avant garde and introducing a musicality hitherto not found in the extreme metal genre.

For this album, and those that came before and after, we owe Chuck Schuldiner and all those that played with him a huge debt.

. writes about life, but not as we know it. They profile the dregs of society: the malformed, the defective, the insane. Spiritual Healing opens with “Living Monstrosity”, a song about a baby “born without eyes, hands, and a half a brain” — the product of a coke-addled pregnancy. The band follows with the aptly-named abortion-themed “Altering the Future”. Frontman and chief songwriter Chuck Schuldiner debates both sides of the argument (“Creating a life only to destroy” v. “Abortion when it is needed”) before concluding pro-choice (“The one who is with child, it’s their choice to make”).

This is thinking-man’s metal, and 1989’s Spiritual Healing, which is being reissued by Relapse Records, is Death’s most lyrically dominated album — a conceptual piece about the physically and mentally crippled. It’s as though Schuldiner based his words off medical journals, police reports, and Oliver Sacks novels: “Defensive Personalities” observes bi-polar schizophrenia; “Spiritual Healing” is about a pseudo-religious murderer; and “Low Life” rails against amoral bottom-dwellers who cheat to get. Feeding off anger and neuroses, Death plays minimalist heavy metal at high speeds and with brutal strength.

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The thin production (accentuated by the reissue’s improved mastering) is purposefully bleak; it’s a platform for skull-pounding power chords, growled vocals, and tales of the intrinsically hopeless. It’s hard to enjoy this music; it’s so abrasive that it can only be felt and experienced. But in this way, it’s affecting. You will react to it. The three-disc deluxe edition includes outtakes and an audience-recorded live show. Neither is practical, but they do serve academic purposes, depicting how these songs came to be and what they sounded like live.

Death Spiritual Healing Review

Although the band’s earlier albums are lauded as the origins of death metal, Spiritual Healing saw Schuldiner’s intellectualism blossom into unadulterated aggression. Relapse gives it the comprehensive reissue that it deserves. Essential Tracks: “Living Monstrosity”, “Spiritual Healing”.