
Search only database of 7.4 mil and more summaries. 12 Torture (2012) Torture posed a challenge for the band having to follow up their smash hit record Evisceration Plague, and despite all odds, Torture was a fantastic death metal album with some real highlights on display.

Can be used as content for research and analysis. Like a lot of Cannibal Corpse’s post-Barnes era, Kill is another solid effort into the band’s fierce discography. So we decided to rank the band’s full-lengths in order of greatness, if only to see which body ends up at top of the pile. Collected from the entire web and summarized to include only the most important parts of it.

But while there are really no bad Cannibal albums, one must admit that some of their records are superior to others. Staring down the Cannibal Corpse discography is as intimidating as facing off against a towering masked man with a meat cleaver in his hand and a tent in his pants. But true fans know that more than anything, Cannibal Corpse are backed up by their incredible body of work, with fourteen studios releases cataloging a musical progression that has somehow never strayed from the path of sonic mass murder. The Bleeding marks the end of an era for Corpse fans, as it was their last album featuring the lyrics and vocals of Chris Barnes. The song, whose subject matter should require no explanation, reaches a huge apex before descending into a solo that, were it 1992, would certainly belong to James Murphy. With their undeniably punishing sound, their offensively violent subject matter and album art (the latter courtesy of the inimitable Vincent Locke), and their complete dedication to playing straightforward brutal death metal, the Tampa-cum-Buffalo quintet have easily become the genre’s most identifiable act. Cannibal Corpse have always matched their splatter lyrics with the appropriate musical themes but it’s rare they utilize abject melodrama. When one thinks of death metal, the band their mind immediately conjures is Cannibal Corpse.
