Into the Pandemonium
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| Into The Pandemonium | |||||
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| Studio album by Celtic Frost | |||||
| Released | 1987 | ||||
| Genre | Thrash metal Avant-garde metal |
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| Length | 47:59 | ||||
| Label | Noise | ||||
| Producer | Celtic Frost | ||||
| Professional reviews | |||||
| Celtic Frost chronology | |||||
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Into the Pandemonium is the 1987 (see 1987 in music) album by avant-garde thrash metal band Celtic Frost. The album is more varied than many of Celtic Frost's past LPs, with unlikely covers (Wall of Voodoo, "Mexican Radio"), emotionally charged love songs and the band's signature industrial-influenced rhythmic songs of demons and destruction.
The track "Rex Irae" is the opening part of Celtic Frost's requiem, the third, concluding part of which, "Winter (Requiem, Chapter Three: Finale)" can be heard on 2006's Monotheist. The second part of the requiem has yet to be released by the band.
Contents |
[edit] Original Track Listing
Side One
- "Mexican Radio" – 3:28
- "Mesmerized" – 3:24
- "Inner Sanctum" – 5:14
- "Sorrows Of The Moon" - 3:04
- "Babylon Fell" – 4:18
Side Two
- "Caress into Oblivion" – 5:10
- "One in Their Pride" [Porthole Mix] – 2:50
- "I Won't Dance! (The Elders' Orient)" (Warrior) – 4:31
- "Rex Irae [Requiem]" – 5:57
- "Oriental Masquerade" – 1:15
[edit] Remaster Track listing
- "Mexican Radio" – 3:28
- "Mesmerized" – 3:24
- "Inner Sanctum" – 5:14
- "Tristesses de la Lune" (Ain) – 2:58
- "Babylon Fell" – 4:18
- "Caress into Oblivion" – 5:10
- "One in Their Pride" [Porthole Mix] – 2:50
- "I Won't Dance! (The Elders' Orient)" (Warrior) – 4:31
- "Sorrows Of The Moon" - 3:04
- "Rex Irae [Requiem]" – 5:57
- "Oriental Masquerade" – 1:15
- "One in Their Pride" [Extended Mix] – 5:52
- "In The Chapel, In The Moonlight" - 2:04
- "The Inevitable Factor" - 4:38
- "The Inevitable Factor" [Alternate Vox] - 4:38
[edit] Credits
- Tom Gabriel Fischer - Guitars, Vocals
- Martin Eric Ain - Bass
- Reed St. Mark - Drums
[edit] Album art
The cover image is a detail from the right (Hell) panel of The Garden of Earthly Delights, a triptych painted in 1504 by Hieronymus Bosch, now part of the permanent collection at the Prado in Madrid.
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