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Information
The Will to Kill





The Will to Kill
by: Malevolent Creation

Price: $12.95
current as of:
03/14/2010 23:37 EDT




Binding: Audio CD
EAN: 0805019220926
Item Dimensions: 22
Label: Arctic
Manufacturer: Arctic
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Arctic
Release Date: November 05, 2002
Studio: Arctic

Editorial Review:

Description:
Vetern death metal band Malevolent Creation return with their eighth full length album The Will to Kill. Eleven tracks of pure terror that brings new life to the patented Florida death metal sound. Crushing vocals by new singer Kyle Symons, mixed by Jea

Disc 1:
  1. Will to Kill
  2. Pillage and Burn
  3. All That Remains
  4. With Murderous Precision
  5. Lifeblood
  6. Assassin Squad
  7. Rebirth of Terror
  8. Superior Firepower
  9. Divide and Conquer
  10. Cardinal's Law
  11. Burnt Beyond Recognition
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Customer Reviews

Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - Can this band keep the same lineup for more than a month?
Even though the "Will to Kill" starts off with the thunderous title track, this album mirrors the previous period in the mid-90s where the albums were without Brett Hoffmann. Kyle Symons from Hate Plow replaces Hoffmann on vocals. No Dave Culross which is maybe an even bigger loss for the band since he's a great drummer. The only lineup from the early 90s MC is Rob Barrett and the only constant on any MC release, Phil Fasciana.

Despite using the gory cover to real people into listening ...



Rating: 2 out of 5 stars - 2 1/2, Perhaps the weakest in the Malevolent Catalog
Even though there aren't many reviews to go by with Malevolent Creation's 2002 effort "The Will to Kill" I was a bit surprised by the album getting the high praise that it did, as I think this might be the weakest album in Malevolent's catalog, including the new release (2007) Doomsday X. If you enjoyed Malevolent's first three albums and hated "In cold Blood" and "Envenomed" then you will I think you will dispise "The WIll to Kill" as it sounds more like those albums, but its just a bit to repetive with ...



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - The second masterpiece in a row!
If you read my review on Malevolent's previous album 'Envenomed,' then you obviously know how I feel about this one. There's no doubt that this is one of the band's best, and like 'Envenomed,' everything is perfect on this CD for an extreme metal album! The one thing that I like most though is the drum work, it's absolutely INCREDIBLE!! The drumming is like a jack hammer going rampant in your head & it's just so clear & precise like all metal albums should have the drums recorded, but not always are. Oh, ...



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - You Need 7 Copies of This. Now.
I'd argue this CD is possibly Malevolent Creation's best studio album to date.

For one, the vocals don't suck like Brett Hoffman's did (why anyone liked him, I cannot understand for the death of me.) They're not as low as former vocalist Jay Blachowicz's, but they're as good regardless (though certainly different.)

The guitars are the same as they've always been: full of fast strumming and interesting riffs.

The drums are also similar to what Malevolent Creation is known ...



Rating: 5 out of 5 stars - I can't believe they're STILL getting better!
I was kind of bummed out when Malevolent Creation booted Brett Hoffman again, but realistically, you can't have someone around with those problems. I won't state them here, research them if you really want to know.
Kyle definately has a different vocal flavor, but it fits in perfectly with this album. The writing style has gotten more technical and I believe this was the next logical step for MC. Envenomed was my favorite release until this one came out. Right from the beginning you have a break neck ...