Blood-soaked and incomprehensible, the Black Throne stands before the sacrificial monolith. The nameless worshiper eradicates his soul while the Red Oracle executes his monstrous melody in front of the effigy of the Forbidden. Now and for all the times to come, the receptacle of vision opens its doors.
The Horned Lord will inexorably emerge out of the flames, in a vast expanse made of mountainous peaks under scorching skies, populated with viscous beings eager for domination.
supported by 125 fans who also own “The Holocaust Of Fire In The Temple Of The Red Oracle”
never been a big death metal fan but this is actually super accessible for the genre, has fun concepts, and personally i'm always a fan of albums with short tracklists and huge runtimes (for individual songs) Great time, good jumping on point for newbies too. alienasu
supported by 115 fans who also own “The Holocaust Of Fire In The Temple Of The Red Oracle”
PSA: if there was an album you heard a couple years ago and thought it was ok, listen to it again and you might love it.
That's what happened to me with this album. I cannot fathom why it didn't stick with me back then. Same thing happened with Decoherence's Unitarity for that matter. Matten