Coroner: Punishment For Decadence (CD)
Century Media

Coroner: Punishment For Decadence (CD)

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The third album from the Swiss thrash pioneers.

Coroner – the artisans of thrash metal. Playful, yet full of raw power; delicate and brutal at the same time; driving rhythms coupled with dizzying guitar solos ... Coroner is all this and more. Is it thrash metal? Is it speed metal? Is it technical death metal? This Swiss band cannot be pigeonholed. It is unique ... even after 30 years on the go.

The early 1980s was a tumultuous time in Zurich. This usually oh-so-quiet city on the River Limmat was seething with unrest. It was a time of protest marches and riots. Young people were fighting for the freedom and space to express themselves. The atmosphere was highly charged. It was against this backdrop that two bands emerged from the small Zurich metal scene determined to conquer the world: Coroner and Celtic Frost. They were hungry for new, fresh, original music, and decided to make it themselves.

Back then, the Coroner line-up was Tommy Vetterli aka Tommy T. Baron (guitar), Marky Edelmann aka Marquis Marky (drums), and Ron Broder aka Ron Royce (bass). The vocals on the band's first demo tape (Death Cult) were provided by Tom G. Warrior of Celtic Frost. This was before Ron became the band's vocalist.

Death Cult got Coroner a record deal with the German label Noise Records, which was at the time a force to be reckoned with when it came to discovering exciting new metal bands. The five studio albums Coroner made with Noise Records proved that it was so much more than a run-of-the-mill thrash metal band: R.I.P (1987) was unpolished high-speed metal, Punishment for Decadence (1988) was musically complex, No More Color (1989) and Mental Vortex (1991) demonstrated the band's technically maturity, while Grin (1993) marked a shift towards a more straightforward sound with drive. Coroner also proved their mettle on stage with tours of Europe and the USA.

Coroner's brand of metal is all about complex rhythms and intricate melodies coupled with outstanding technique. The band's music is driven by Ron's accurate bass sequences, which push his instrument to the limit of what is possible, and Marky's drum patterns, that just cannot stick to the straight-and-narrow of four-four time. All of this underpins Tommy's virtuoso guitar sequences, razor-sharp masterpieces with a neoclassical touch that earned him a reputation as one of the world's best metal guitarists.

But this uniqueness was also a liability: the band was often underrated; most metal fans had no time for the artistic complexity of Coroner's music. Tension arose between the band members. Their perfectionism and the resurgence of a desire to explore other musical styles drove the three men apart.

coroner split after one last tour in they may not have performed with each other for years but certainly were inactive. tommy vetterli toured swiss pop star stephan eicher and became a member of the german metal band kreator. marky joined tom g. warrior project apollyon sun experimented electronic music. ron withdrew from scene occasionally playing bass variety projects.

But the fans never forgot Coroner. In fact, the demand from concert organisers for Coroner to perform live again was so great in 2010 that it seemed the time was ripe for a reunion. Coroner went back into the rehearsal room and practiced their old songs with new vigour. What followed was a triumphant tour of the largest metal festivals on the planet: 30,000 people saw Coroner perform live at Hellfest in Clisson (France); Coroner also played Wacken in northern Germany, the Maryland Death Fest in Baltimore (USA), and Bloodstock Openair in England. To top it all, they even went on a musical cruise with 70,000 Tons of Metal. But it didn't end there: they also played sell-out headliner shows in clubs right across Europe.

The trio was invigorated by its success. After three years and dozens of reunion concerts, Tommy Vetterli and Ron Broder were hungry: they wanted to write new songs and record a new album, 20 years after Grin. But Marky Edelmann was not on board. As far as he was concerned, his personal history with Coroner had come to a dignified end. After a farewell concert in Zurich, Marky left the band in February 2014 and was replaced by Diego Rapacchietti, drummer with 69 Chambers.

  1. Intro
  2. Absorbed
  3. Masked Jackal
  4. Arc-Lite
  5. Skeleton On Your Shoulder
  6. Sudden Fall
  7. Shadow Of A Lost Dream
  8. The New Breed
  9. Voyage To Eternity
  10. Purple Haze



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