Fact-checked by Grok 2 weeks ago

Cannibal Corpse


Cannibal Corpse is an American death metal band formed in , in December 1988. The band, consisting of vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher, guitarists and , bassist , and drummer , has maintained core members Webster and Mazurkiewicz since inception while undergoing several lineup changes, including the replacement of original vocalist Chris Barnes with Fisher in 1996.
Renowned for technically demanding compositions featuring rapid blast beats, guttural vocals, and intricate guitar riffs, Cannibal Corpse has released sixteen studio albums through , achieving combined worldwide sales surpassing two million units as of 2015. Their most recent albums, (2021) and (2023), underscore their enduring productivity and influence in shaping death metal's sonic and thematic extremities. The band's explicit lyrics and album artwork depicting , , and extreme violence have sparked significant controversies, leading to sales bans in from 1996 to 2006, restrictions in until alterations to covers, and a 2014 on their music and imagery for purportedly endangering youth . Despite such obstacles, Cannibal Corpse remains a commercial benchmark in the genre, with consistent touring and a dedicated fanbase valuing their uncompromised commitment to horror-infused extremity.

History

Formation and Initial Demo (1988–1989)

Cannibal Corpse was formed in December 1988 in , by on bass and on guitar, both from the local band Beyond Death; on vocals and on drums, from Leviathan; and Bob Rusay on guitar, from Tirant Sin. The group's inception occurred within the emerging underground, where local acts sought to push beyond thrash metal's boundaries through accelerated tempos, down-tuned guitars, and intricate riff structures emphasizing technical proficiency over melodic accessibility. This formation reflected a collective drive among Buffalo's metal musicians to explore extreme horror-inspired brutality, drawing from influences like early and Possessed while prioritizing instrumental complexity in composition. In early 1989, the band recorded their self-titled demo tape at the home studio of producer and local Scott Burns, featuring three tracks: "A Full of Maggots," "The Undead Will Feast," and "Psychotic Perversions Sedated Surgery" in raw, unpolished production that highlighted Barnes' guttural vocals, Owen and Rusay's rapid picking, and Webster's precise bass lines amid beats from Mazurkiewicz. The demo's content centered on graphic depictions of and , aligning with the band's enthusiasm for visceral horror themes sourced from and , though executed through musically demanding arrangements rather than mere provocation. Distributed through tape trading networks, approximately 1,000 copies were produced, circulating within the scene and garnering positive reception for its ferocity. The demo's impact was immediate, impressing Metal Blade Records executive Brian Slagel after a live performance opening for Dark Angel in 1989, which prompted the label to offer a recording contract for their debut album. This early validation underscored Cannibal Corpse's appeal in a niche scene valuing sonic extremity and skill, setting the foundation for their trajectory amid a growing roster of death metal acts prioritizing innovation in heaviness over commercial viability.

Eaten Back to Life and Butchered at Birth (1990–1991)

Cannibal Corpse issued their debut full-length album, Eaten Back to Life, on August 17, 1990, via Metal Blade Records. The recording took place at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, with production handled by Scott Burns, capturing the band's raw aggression through Chris Barnes' low guttural vocals and Alex Webster's prominent, intricate bass lines that intertwined with the guitar riffs. Featuring 10 tracks clocking in at approximately 31 minutes, the album established the band's signature approach to gore-themed lyrics and relentless death metal intensity. Less than a year later, the group released on July 1, 1991, again through and produced by Scott Burns at Morrisound. This second album built on the debut by incorporating refined elements of speed and groove, with songs like "Covered with Sores" highlighting blast beat drumming from and down-tuned guitar tones from and Bob Rusay. The quick succession of releases demonstrated the band's productivity and commitment to advancing their sound within the burgeoning scene. In support of these albums, Cannibal Corpse conducted early tours opening for prominent metal acts, including a 1990 performance alongside and Forced Entry for at The Sky Club in South . These grassroots efforts in regional venues fostered organic growth among enthusiasts, relying on word-of-mouth and live performances rather than extensive promotional campaigns from the label. The band's underground momentum during this period laid foundational support from dedicated fans in metal circuits, independent of mainstream media exposure.

Tomb of the Mutilated and Bob Rusay's Departure (1992–1993)

, Cannibal Corpse's third studio album, was released on September 22, 1992, via . Recorded at Morrisound Recording in , and produced by Scott Burns, the album showcased technical advancements in the band's style, including complex guitar solos by Bob Rusay and dual-rhythm precision between Rusay and . Lyrical content focused on extreme depictions of and , as in tracks like "," "I Cum Blood," and "Necropedophile." These elements, combined with Burns' clear production emphasizing guttural vocals and blast beats, marked a maturation in songwriting complexity from prior releases. The record reinforced the band's underground prominence, with its gore-centric themes and musicianship drawing acclaim from death metal enthusiasts while maintaining sales momentum through niche distribution and touring, absent any Billboard charting or broad commercial breakthrough. In support, Cannibal Corpse joined the 1992 Complete Control tour alongside and , honing material amid growing scrutiny over explicit artwork and lyrics that prompted bans in markets like . Post-release, founding guitarist Bob Rusay was dismissed in 1993 owing to persistent drug and alcohol abuse that undermined his reliability in rehearsals and commitments. Malevolent Creation's auditioned and replaced him, stabilizing the lineup for upcoming sessions and emphasizing professional discipline amid the band's intensifying schedule. This transition, occurring without halting momentum, facilitated more consistent live execution, as Barrett's integration aligned with the group's rigorous practice ethic.

The Bleeding and Chris Barnes' Dismissal (1994–1996)

Cannibal Corpse released their fourth studio album, The Bleeding, on April 12, 1994, through Metal Blade Records, marking the final recording featuring vocalist Chris Barnes. Produced by Scott Burns at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, the album showcased a shift toward groovier, mid-tempo riffs compared to prior works, exemplified in tracks like "Stripped, Raped and Strangled," which incorporated discernible melodic elements amid the band's signature brutality. By 1995, escalating internal tensions prompted Barnes' dismissal during sessions intended for the follow-up album, originally titled Created to Kill. Barnes' growing drug dependency led to chronic unreliability, including missed rehearsals and stalled songwriting contributions, which the band viewed as threats to their productivity and touring commitments. Barnes later acknowledged his responsibility for much of the discord, citing personal discomfort with the group's dynamic and lifestyle clashes. The band abruptly terminated his involvement via a phone call while on tour, prioritizing operational stability over personal ties. Following his exit, Barnes transitioned his side project —initially formed in 1993 with ex-Obituary members—into a primary outlet, releasing the full-length in 1995 to capitalize on his established vocal style. Cannibal Corpse recruited George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher, formerly of Monstrosity, as Barnes' replacement, leading to the retitled Vile, released on May 21, 1996, via . Fisher's higher-pitched, relentless growl injected renewed aggression into the vocals, adapting to the band's evolving technical riffing while maintaining intensity during this transitional phase. The album's production under Burns emphasized precision, reflecting the band's pragmatic focus on reliability and forward momentum post-dismissal.

Vile Through Gore Obsessed (1996–2003)

Cannibal Corpse's fifth studio album, Vile, released on May 21, 1996, via Metal Blade Records, introduced vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher following Chris Barnes' dismissal. Fisher's aggressive delivery, characterized by rapid, guttural growls, complemented the band's evolving riff structures and technical precision, refining their death metal approach while preserving gore-centric themes in tracks like "Devoured by Vermin." Recorded at Morrisound Recording with producer Scott Burns, the album solidified lineup stability with Fisher, guitarists Jack Owen and Pat O'Brien (who replaced Rob Barrett post-The Bleeding), bassist Alex Webster, and drummer Paul Mazurkiewicz. The band followed with on April 21, 1998, maintaining thematic consistency through lyrics evoking mutilation and decay, paired with intricate, groove-infused riffs that demonstrated stylistic maturation. This period's output reflected endurance amid external pressures, as the group navigated bans on album sales and performances in countries including and due to graphic content, yet persisted with European expansions that underscored fan loyalty uncorrelated to impacts. Bloodthirst, issued October 19, 1999, further honed riff evolution with tracks emphasizing pounding rhythms and visceral imagery, reinforcing the band's foundation under the stable configuration. Culminating in on February 26, 2002, the era closed with amplified brutality in songs like " to the Head," evidencing refined songwriting that balanced speed and melody within gore motifs. Consistent releases through Metal Blade highlighted a niche yet devoted market, with the band's cumulative sales exceeding two million units by the mid-2010s, attributable to resilient touring and core appeal despite prohibitions. Jack Owen's May 2004 departure announcement, citing waning personal investment after 15 years, loomed over late-period momentum but did not disrupt the prior seven years' productivity.

The Wretched Spawn and Rob Barrett's Return (2004–2005)

Guitarist Jack Owen departed Cannibal Corpse in 2004 after 15 years, stating his enthusiasm for the band had waned, impacting his performances on the previous tours. To replace him, the band brought back Rob Barrett, who had contributed to albums from The Bleeding (1994) to Vile (1996) during his initial tenure from 1993 to 1997. Barrett's prior experience with the band's songwriting process and onstage dynamic facilitated a strategic reunion, prioritizing established chemistry over external recruitment. With Barrett on alongside lead guitarist Pat O'Brien, Cannibal Corpse recorded in 2003 at Studios in . The album, comprising 13 tracks totaling approximately 44 minutes, was released on February 24, 2004, via . Songwriting credits reflected collaborative efforts among , O'Brien, Barrett, and Mazurkiewicz, maintaining the precise riffing, beats, and guttural breakdowns characteristic of their foundation, as evident in tracks like "Psychotic Precision" and "Decency Defied." , penned by , continued explorations of forensic gore and sadistic violence, underscoring continuity in thematic extremity. Barrett's reintegration provided short-term lineup stability, enabling focused production and touring support for the album amid the transition. On December 7, 2005, his position was officially confirmed as permanent, solidifying the configuration of , Barrett, O'Brien, , and Mazurkiewicz for subsequent efforts. This phase reinforced the band's resilience through internal resolutions rather than abrupt overhauls, leveraging historical synergies for .

Kill, Evisceration Plague, and Touring Peaks (2006–2011)

Cannibal Corpse released their tenth studio album, Kill, on March 21, 2006, via Metal Blade Records. Produced by Erik Rutan of Hate Eternal at Mana Recording Studios in Florida, the album emphasized precise, aggressive riffing and improved sonic clarity compared to prior efforts. Kill debuted at number 170 on the US Billboard 200 chart, marking the band's second entry on that list and selling over 6,000 copies in its first week. This performance reflected growing underground appeal within death metal circles. The band's eleventh album, , followed on February 3, 2009, also produced by Rutan at Studios, further refining the mix with tight drum tones and prominent guitar separation. It achieved the group's highest chart position to date, debuting at number 66 on the , alongside strong showings in territories like at number 42. These releases represented career-high commercial benchmarks for Cannibal Corpse, underscoring sustained fan loyalty despite the niche genre's limited mainstream reach. During 2006–2011, Cannibal Corpse intensified live activities, participating in major packages like the 2006 Sounds of the Underground tour alongside acts such as In Flames and , which drew thousands across North American stops. The band headlined extensive US and European runs, solidifying their status through consistent high-energy performances at festivals including and European metal events. Guitarist Pat O'Brien's contributions during this phase featured intricate shredding solos, adding technical flair to tracks from Kill and , enhancing the band's reputation for instrumental proficiency.

Torture to Red Before Black (2012–2019)

Cannibal Corpse released their twelfth studio album, Torture, on March 13, 2012, through Metal Blade Records. The record featured 12 tracks emphasizing rapid blast beats, intricate guitar riffing, and guttural vocals consistent with the band's established death metal approach. Following the album's release, the band undertook extensive touring, including headlining U.S. dates starting April 5, 2012, in Florida. In 2014, Cannibal Corpse issued on September 16 via , marking their thirteenth full-length effort. This album maintained the group's signature intensity with tracks showcasing high-speed aggression and complex instrumentation. That year, they performed on the Mayhem Festival tour, appearing at venues such as the on July 23. The band continued their output with Red Before Black, their fourteenth studio album, released November 3, 2017, on Metal Blade Records. Comprising 12 songs, it upheld the technical ferocity of prior works through relentless rhythms and dual guitar assaults. On December 10, 2018, lead guitarist Pat O'Brien was arrested in Florida on charges of burglary and aggravated assault after allegedly breaking into a neighbor's home armed with a knife, while his own residence burned in a fire accompanied by exploding ammunition. Authorities recovered over 80 firearms from his property amid the incident. The event stemmed from personal circumstances unrelated to band activities or broader genre patterns, representing an isolated legal matter. In response, Cannibal Corpse dismissed O'Brien, solidifying the core lineup's stability by transitioning to temporary replacement Erik Rutan for 2019 live engagements. Rutan, known for Hate Eternal and prior production work with the band, ensured continuity in performances without disrupting the established rhythm section of bassist Alex Webster and drummer Paul Mazurkiewicz alongside vocalist George Fisher and rhythm guitarist Rob Barrett.

Violence Unimagined, Chaos Horrific, and Ongoing Developments (2020–present)

In early 2020, amid the , Cannibal Corpse integrated as a full-time member in February, following his prior role as a touring and recording collaborator. The band adapted to lockdown restrictions by commencing recording sessions for their fifteenth studio album, , in mid-April 2020 at Rutan's Mana Recording studio in . Released on April 16, 2021, via , the album marked Rutan's debut as a permanent and maintained the band's signature intensity across ten tracks, including "Murderous Rampage" and "Inhumane Harvest." The band's sixteenth studio album, , followed on September 22, 2023, also through , featuring Rutan’s contributions on tracks like "Overlords of " and "Frenzied Feeding." Bassist described the effort as a "full-on album, Cannibal Corpse style," emphasizing continuity in their brutal sound. In 2025, Cannibal Corpse announced a fall North American tour with Municipal Waste, Full of Hell, and Fulci, commencing September 15 in . Guitarist opted out due to scheduling conflicts, with former The Black Dahlia Murder member Brandon Ellis filling in as touring guitarist. The band has also begun work on an untitled seventeenth studio album, continuing their pattern of releases every two years since 2021. Social media platform has facilitated fanbase expansion among younger audiences, introducing Cannibal Corpse's music to through viral clips and reactions, thereby sustaining relevance despite genre-specific challenges to broad appeal. This digital growth counters narratives of declining interest in , evidenced by increased attendance from teens and early-20s fans at recent shows.

Musical Style and Influences

Core Instrumentation and Technical Elements

Cannibal Corpse's guitar work centers on down-tuned configurations, frequently Eb standard for enhanced low-end heaviness and aggression, as heard in tracks like "I Cum Blood." Riffs emphasize palm-muted power chords, tremolo-picked sequences, and intricate chugging patterns, delivering a dense, relentless structure that defines brutal death metal's sonic intensity. This approach surpasses the relative simplicity of some contemporaries in raw speed and riff variation, prioritizing technical execution over progressive experimentation. Drummer anchors the rhythm section with precise blast beats, incorporating "bomb-blast" variations for explosive fills and sustained double-bass barrages, as exemplified in "Pit of Zombies." Bassist complements this foundation using speed-picking and advanced finger techniques on four- or five-string instruments, often providing counterpoint melodies that lock tightly with guitars while adding subtle harmonic depth. Vocalist George Fisher employs guttural death growls as the primary delivery, punishing his voice to achieve low-frequency roars, with occasional higher-pitched screams introducing dynamic contrast and rhythmic punctuation. Production techniques have progressed from early raw mixes to clearer separations—evident in albums like Chaos Horrific—preserving aggression through balanced EQ and compression that highlights riff intricacies without softening the overall brutality.

Songwriting and Production Evolution

Alex Webster has directed Cannibal Corpse's songwriting since the band's formation, composing the core riffs on bass or guitar to embed catchy hooks within technical brutality. He typically authors four songs per album, starting with a chosen —often exceeding 200 beats per minute—scale, and rhythmic , then varying elements across tracks for diversity while ensuring memorability through heavy, singable structures like repetitive devouring-themed choruses. This method prioritizes listener retention over complexity for its own sake, yielding extremity that fans revisit repeatedly rather than trend-chasing novelty. Guitarists contribute refinements, with co-writing sections for rhythmic interplay and adding structured solos and pre-production polish since joining in 2020; Webster adapts by writing faster "guitar-ish" riffs on a 7-string to counter age-related stamina limits, producing chunkier bass-led tracks alongside aggressive counterparts. align with musical hooks, emphasizing scannable phrases that reinforce thematic consistency. This collaborative sustains the band's output, responding to audience expectations for escalating precision and heaviness across 16 , without diluting foundational aggression. Production shifted from analog live-to-tape urgency in early releases—such as Eaten Back to Life (August 17, 1990) and Butchered at Birth (July 1, 1991), tracked in single takes at Morrisound Recording under Scott Burns—to layered digital workflows by the 2000s. Burns' raw mixes captured ensemble energy on Tomb of the Mutilated (1992), but subsequent albums like Gallery of Suicide (1998), produced by Jim Morris, introduced cleaner separations. Erik Rutan's involvement from Kill (March 21, 2006) onward—spanning six records—brought pre-demo refinement and balanced clarity, enhancing guitar tones without softening blasts; Mark Lewis engineered A Skeletal Domain (September 16, 2014) for tighter dynamics. Digital adoption, including click tracks from Evisceration Plague (2009) and Pro Tools for minimal edits, enables separate instrument tracking over months—drums first, then rhythms, bass, vocals, and leads—preserving organic punch amid precision. Remote elements, like Webster's home-recorded bass for Violence Unimagined (April 16, 2021) amid COVID-19 disruptions, tested adaptability but upheld standards. This progression refines playback accessibility for global tours and streams, driven by demands for audible intricacy in live settings, not cosmetic trends.

Key Influences from Death Metal Pioneers

Cannibal Corpse's foundational sound was shaped by early pioneers, particularly Possessed, , and , whose emphasis on technical brutality and aggressive precision informed the band's approach to riffing and song structure. Bassist has cited these groups as direct inspirations, noting Possessed's 1983 formation and raw intensity, 's (1987) for pioneering extreme vocals and speed, and 's (1989) for its complex guitar work and David Vincent's prominent bass lines, such as the solo in "Suffocation," which influenced Webster's own playing style. These elements provided a blueprint for Cannibal Corpse's debut (1990), prioritizing razor-sharp picking and blast beats over atmospheric or experimental deviations common in some thrash precursors. Unlike peers who later incorporated melodic harmonies or progressive shifts—such as Death's evolution toward cleaner structures in the early 1990s—Cannibal Corpse deliberately maintained an unrelenting focus on velocity and aggression, drawing from the pioneers' commitment to technical extremity without softening for accessibility. Webster emphasized this in discussions of the band's "old-school" orientation, favoring the "fast and relentless" template of Morbid Angel and Possessed over groove-heavy or melodic death metal variants that emerged in the mid-1990s. This adherence to pure brutality, rooted in the pioneers' innovations, underscored a rejection of melody as a diluting force, ensuring songs remained anchored in high-speed precision and rhythmic onslaught rather than harmonic resolution.

Lyrical Themes and Visual Aesthetics

Exploration of Gore and Horror Motifs

Cannibal Corpse's lyrics extensively depict through themes of , , , and , often framed in scenarios of postmortem violation and bodily . Tracks such as "Under the Rotted Flesh" from the 1990 debut album portray a "cannibalistic necrophile" engaging in acts of against putrefied remains, emphasizing sensory details of and intrusion. Similarly, "I Cum Blood" from (1992) details necrophilic with cadavers, culminating in graphic excretory amid . These motifs parallel the exaggerated violence in slasher films and , where perpetrators methodically hunt and slaughter victims in fantastical, over-the-top sequences. The 2017 track "Code of the Slashers" from invokes slasher archetypes, with lines describing "systematic" attacks on prey in a "habitat" of deviance, where " unfolds" through throat-gripping and soul-ripping without escape. Such content mirrors cinematic tropes of masked killers and inevitable demise, treating violence as narrative spectacle rather than literal advocacy. The band's adherence to these horror elements has remained consistent across their 16 studio albums, spanning from the raw brutality of early works like (1991) to later releases such as (2021), without shifts toward less explicit or sanitized portrayals. Reviews of albums like (2002) highlight this unwavering focus on "hyper-fast technical riffing" paired with unrelenting gore narratives, underscoring a stylistic continuity in thematic extremity. This persistence reflects a deliberate immersion in 's visceral fantasy, akin to the unyielding in , maintained over three decades of output.

Artistic Intent Behind Extreme Content

Cannibal Corpse's bassist has described the band's extreme lyrical content as a form of akin to consuming brutal films, serving as a diversion from everyday reality rather than an endorsement of real-world acts. In a 2014 , Webster emphasized that the narratives constitute "completely fictionalised ," drawing from traditions without basing stories on actual individuals or events. This approach positions the as imaginative constructs designed for cathartic release, allowing listeners to engage with exaggerated in a controlled, artistic context. The band rejects assertions that their content promotes or causes violence, attributing such claims to unsubstantiated assumptions rather than empirical data. has clarified that depictions of and stem from storytelling perspectives—such as those of victims, perpetrators, or observers—without glorifying the acts or admiring the characters involved, who are portrayed as inherently despicable. No verifiable studies demonstrate a causal connection between exposure to such and increased violent behavior; instead, first-principles analysis reveals the content functions as provocative craft, testing the boundaries of descriptive skill in evoking revulsion and fear akin to literary genres. This intent underscores a commitment to artistic expression through technical extremity, where the challenge lies in innovating within motifs to maintain intensity without descending into mundane realism. By prioritizing fictional extremity, Cannibal Corpse differentiates its work from political or , focusing instead on the intrinsic value of mastering visceral prose as a demonstration of creative prowess in death metal's lyrical domain.

Album Covers, Merchandise, and Visual Consistency

Cannibal Corpse's album covers, primarily illustrated by Vincent Locke since the band's 1990 debut Eaten Back to Life, consistently depict hyper-violent scenes of mutilated corpses, eviscerated bodies, and grotesque anatomical distortions rendered in a stark, illustrative style. Locke, a comic book artist specializing in horror themes, has contributed artwork to 16 studio albums as of Chaos Horrific in 2023, with each piece emphasizing raw, unfiltered gore that eschews subtlety for visceral impact. These covers have required alternate, toned-down versions—often replacing explicit imagery with abstract or obscured elements—for distribution in select international markets where graphic content restrictions apply, yet the original designs remain central to the band's promotional packaging and collector editions. Locke's recurring motifs, such as exposed entrails and fragmented limbs, provide a unified aesthetic thread across releases, from the fetal dissection on (1991) to the impaled figures on (2021). Merchandise offerings, including T-shirts, hoodies, and posters sold via official channels and at , replicate these cover elements alongside the band's iconic —a jagged, blood-dripping script in crimson or black introduced in the early . Early items focused on basic tour apparel, such as the 1993 Hammer Smashed Face design, evolving by the 2000s to encompass limited-run prints of Locke's originals and accessories like patches and enamel pins tied to album cycles. This visual continuity extends to packaging and branding, where gore-centric illustrations reinforce the band's auditory hallmarks of blast beats and guttural vocals, fostering instant recognizability in the subgenre without deviation over three decades. The persistent use of Locke's style underscores a deliberate strategy to embody extremity in all media, distinguishing Cannibal Corpse from peers with more varied or subdued aesthetics.

Controversies and Cultural Reception

In the early 1990s, Cannibal Corpse's graphic album artwork and lyrics drew criticism from U.S. politicians amid broader concerns over violent media, with Senator publicly condemning the band alongside artists like during congressional discussions on music's societal impact. These efforts echoed the (PMRC)'s 1985 push for industry self-regulation, which had already prompted the (RIAA) to introduce mandatory labels for explicit content by 1990. Cannibal Corpse albums, starting with their 1990 debut , consistently bore these labels due to themes of gore and violence, but no federal legislation mandating censorship or bans was enacted. Retail chains like and some outlets responded to public and parental complaints by refusing to stock uncensored versions of such as Butchered at Birth (1991) and Tomb of the Mutilated (1992), opting instead for slipcovers, alternative artwork, or outright non-carriage to avoid . These private decisions, while limiting accessibility, did not constitute government-imposed and were circumvented by specialty stores and direct sales through , which continued distributing original editions without interruption. Legal challenges invoking Cannibal Corpse's content largely failed under First Amendment scrutiny, with courts rejecting claims of unprotected speech absent proof of direct or true threats. For instance, in student discipline cases involving band merchandise, such as t-shirts featuring or imagery, suspensions were overturned or deemed unconstitutional unless tied to , as protected expression in schools requires more than offensive content. No criminal convictions have successfully held the band liable for fan actions, despite occasional citations of in crime probes; scholarly analyses emphasize the absence of linking consumption to real-world violence, undermining causal assertions in moral panics. The band's unbroken U.S. output and tours affirm the resilience of free speech protections against overreach.

International Bans and Government Interventions

In , the Classification Board banned the sale and distribution of Cannibal Corpse's albums (1990), (1991), and (1992) in 1996 due to their graphic cover artwork depicting violence and , leading to the removal of existing copies from retail outlets and a blanket prohibition on related merchandise like posters. This restriction extended to all pre-1996 material and persisted for approximately a decade until partial lifting around 2006–2007, after which censored versions or later albums became available, though early works remained classified as refused due to imagery inconsistent with local obscenity standards applied selectively to . Despite the ban, unauthorized bootlegs circulated widely, and the band proceeded with tours, including a 2006 Australian visit that prompted renewed public calls for prohibition but faced no formal government halt. Similar import and sales restrictions occurred in , where albums up to were prohibited from retail display and sale upon release owing to violent and lyrical extremity, necessitating alternate censored covers for subsequent European pressings to comply with youth protection indexing under the Federal Department for Media Harmful to Young Persons. These measures, in place until approximately 2006, reflected culturally specific thresholds for "harmful" content that diverged from broader European norms, yet failed to curb fan access via imports or digital means, with maintaining active performances in the country. More recently, in 2023, the band's Official Cannibal Corpse Colouring Book—featuring gore-themed illustrations—was indexed for youth protection, restricting sales to minors but allowing adult purchase, underscoring ongoing but inconsistently enforced scrutiny of visual motifs. In , a court ruling in banned the distribution of Cannibal Corpse's lyrics translations and album artwork nationwide, citing risks to children's from depictions of , , and non-sexual , as examined in a prosecutorial of tracks like those from (2000). This followed tour disruptions earlier that year, where activist protests led to cancellations in multiple cities under claims of inciting religious enmity, though the band completed some dates amid heightened security. Such interventions, rooted in post-2013 extremism laws applied unevenly to foreign media, did not halt underground dissemination or international streaming, with bootleg copies proliferating despite official prohibitions.

Moral Panics, Media Exaggerations, and Free Speech Defenses

In the 1990s, outlets and advocacy groups frequently depicted Cannibal Corpse as a catalyst for societal decay, associating the band's graphic lyrics with fears of youth violence during events like the shooting in 1999, where was scapegoated alongside other cultural factors despite no direct evidentiary ties to the perpetrators' actions. This portrayal echoed broader moral panics over , amplified by congressional hearings and lawsuits against record labels for bands including Cannibal Corpse, yet empirical studies have consistently found no causal connection between exposure to violent lyrics in death metal and increased aggression or desensitization in listeners. attributes fan attraction to such content to morbid curiosity rather than endorsement of real-world harm, with listeners distinguishing fantasy from reality akin to . Band members have consistently defended their work as protected artistic expression, emphasizing that the gore motifs serve cathartic and exaggerated narrative purposes without intent to incite violence, comparable to slasher films or pulp novels. Drummer , in a 2021 interview, rejected pressures by affirming the band's adherence to their creative boundaries, stating they produce material "within the confines of being Cannibal Corpse" to explore extreme themes responsibly as fantasy. This stance aligns with First Amendment protections , where courts have upheld similar extreme content against challenges, provided no imminent threat is posed, underscoring the absence of verifiable harm from the lyrics themselves. In August 2024, Cannibal Corpse trended on the X platform (formerly Twitter) amid viral posts from younger users, often identified as Generation Z, decrying the band's lyrics—particularly those depicting violence against women—as promoting misogyny and warranting cancellation, sparking debates over cultural standards. Fans rebutted these efforts by highlighting perceived hypocrisy, noting tolerance for analogous explicit content in mainstream rap, horror media, or even social media trends, while pointing out the band's decades-long career without linked incidents of inspired violence. Defenders argued the backlash exaggerated fictional content's influence, ignoring research showing no behavioral correlation, and framed it as selective outrage amid broader free speech erosions on digital platforms. The band's resilience was evident as the uproar subsided without material impact, reinforcing arguments for contextual artistic liberty over reactive moralism.

Recent Social Media Backlash and Genre Resilience

In August 2024, Cannibal Corpse trended on the X platform (formerly Twitter) following comparisons of their lyrics to those of Mindless Self Indulgence, prompting criticism from some younger users who labeled the content misogynistic and outdated, advocating for cancellation despite the band's material predating their critics' lifetimes. This backlash, often framed as generational moralizing, drew sharp rebuttals from metal enthusiasts who emphasized the lyrics' roots in exaggerated horror fiction rather than literal endorsement of violence, viewing the outrage as selective and performative akin to past media panics. Such critiques overlook the genre's deliberate embrace of grotesque fantasy as cathartic escapism, detached from real-world advocacy, a distinction reinforced by the band's consistent disavowal of interpreting their work as prescriptive. Parallel discussions on amplified the debate, with videos dissecting lyrics like those from "Necropedophile" to argue for contextual irrelevance in modern , while others highlighted the hypocrisy of targeting death metal's stylized gore amid broader cultural tolerances for explicit content in other media. Defenders countered that the band's thematic extremity serves as a bulwark against , channeling primal fears into structured artistic expression rather than passive acceptance of societal decay, a resilience rooted in death metal's foundational rejection of sanitized narratives. Despite these frictions, has bolstered the genre's endurance by exposing technical elements—such as intricate guitar riffs and blast beats—to novice audiences via short-form clips, fostering beyond traditional fanbases. In 2024, demonstrated vitality through prolific releases and sustained listener engagement, with platforms like and X inadvertently amplifying the subgenre's appeal by contrasting backlash with demonstrations of instrumental complexity and historical depth. This dynamic underscores the format's dual role: igniting transient outrage while reinforcing the music's unyielding draw through verifiable skill and thematic consistency, uncompromised by external pressures.

Band Members and Lineup Dynamics

Current Core Lineup

The current core lineup of Cannibal Corpse features vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher, who joined in late 1995 following the departure of original singer Chris Barnes, providing guttural vocals and stage energy central to the band's live performances and recordings. Bassist , a founding member since 1988, handles songwriting and technical bass lines, while drummer , also a founder from 1988, delivers the precise, high-speed rhythms defining their sound. Guitarists , returning in 2017 after prior stints from 1993–1997 and 2005–2006, and , who became a full-time member in 2021 after serving as producer and live fill-in, contribute dual riffing and solos to maintain the band's brutal intensity. This configuration has underpinned the band's output on albums like Violence Unimagined (2021) and Chaos Horrific (2023), where Rutan's production expertise and Barrett's riff contributions enhanced song structures and extremity. The stability stems from longstanding mutual respect among members and a shared dedication to , rather than commercial or external influences, enabling over three decades of consistent creativity and touring as long as health permits.

Notable Departures and Replacements

Founding guitarist Bob Rusay departed Cannibal Corpse in May 1993 during the recording of the album , leading to his immediate replacement by , who completed the guitar tracks for the release. The exit was prompted by Rusay's inconsistent performance and personal struggles, allowing the band to maintain its recording schedule without significant delay. Vocalist Chris Barnes, another founding member, exited on October 31, 1995, amid heightened internal tensions during sessions for the follow-up to The Bleeding. The split stemmed from accumulated conflicts, including disputes over creative direction and Barnes' conduct, which the band described as disruptive; Barnes later acknowledged his role in fostering much of the friction. These issues, compounded by personal differences, necessitated a change to preserve the group's cohesion and productivity. Guitarist left in May 2004 after 15 years, citing a loss of enthusiasm for the band's routine and a desire to pursue diverse projects, as evidenced by his subdued stage presence in prior years. This professional shift enabled Owen to join shortly thereafter, while Cannibal Corpse recruited Barrett back into the fold to fill the rhythm guitar role alongside O'Brien, facilitating uninterrupted touring and recording. Pat O'Brien's tenure as lead guitarist ended in late 2018 following his on for , aggravated with a , and possessing illegal weapons after breaking into a neighbor's home during a at his own residence. The incident, involving threats to with a knife and the discovery of over 80 firearms, including illegal suppressors, marked the culmination of prior strains, prompting the band to part ways and replace him with for sustained operations. Rob Barrett's recurrent involvement—first supplanting Rusay and later rejoining post-Owen—exemplified the band's strategy for lineup stability, drawing on proven collaborators to adapt to changes without compromising their technical precision or output momentum. These transitions, driven by individual circumstances rather than collective failures, ultimately bolstered Cannibal Corpse's resilience, as each replacement integrated swiftly and contributed to subsequent albums' success.

Temporary Substitutes and Session Contributions

In September 2025, Cannibal Corpse announced that guitarist would sit out the band's fall tour dates, citing personal reasons, with Brandon Ellis—formerly of The Black Dahlia Murder and Arsis—serving as the temporary touring guitarist. The tour, commencing on September 15, 2025, in , alongside Municipal Waste, Full of Hell, and Fulci, marked Ellis's first major post-departure gig from The Black Dahlia Murder earlier that year, emphasizing his technical proficiency in contexts. Historically, Cannibal Corpse has maintained a stable core lineup with limited reliance on session or guest contributions, particularly in live settings or recordings, to preserve its established sound and identity. Early demos, such as the 1989 Cannibal Corpse release and Scattered Remains, Splattered Brains, were performed and recorded by the founding members without external musicians. Side projects involving band members, like "Corpsegrinder" Fisher's solo efforts under the Corpsegrinder moniker, have occasionally featured collaborations but not as substitutes for Cannibal Corpse obligations. This approach underscores the band's preference for internal resolution of lineup needs over frequent external hires, with the 2025 Ellis substitution representing a rare exception tied to scheduling constraints rather than a shift in creative direction.

Discography and Commercial Performance

Studio Albums and Chart Achievements

Cannibal Corpse has issued sixteen studio albums through from 1990 to 2023, maintaining label loyalty amid the niche market without pursuing major-label distribution. This consistency has supported steady commercial performance, with combined album sales surpassing two million units by February 2015. Early releases like (August 17, 1990) and (July 1, 1991) established their sound but lacked mainstream chart entry, reflecting limited initial distribution beyond underground circuits. Later albums achieved modest Billboard 200 debuts, peaking at No. 32 for (September 16, 2014), which sold 8,800 copies in its first U.S. week. Violence Unimagined (April 16, 2021) reached No. 45, while Kill (2006) entered at No. 128, marking an early chart breakthrough. Chaos Horrific (September 22, 2023) secured No. 7 on Billboard's independent Album Sales chart, underscoring enduring fan-driven sales in physical and digital formats.
Album TitleRelease DateBillboard 200 Peak
August 17, 1990
July 1, 1991
September 22, 1992
The BleedingApril 12, 1994
VileMay 7, 1996
March 16, 1998
BloodthirstOctober 19, 1999
February 26, 2002
February 23, 2004
KillMarch 21, 2006128
February 3, 2009
March 13, 2012
September 16, 201432
November 3, 2017
April 16, 202145
September 22, 2023
Note: Dashes indicate no Billboard 200 entry; peaks drawn from verified first-week sales and chart reports where applicable.

Live Releases, Compilations, and Side Projects

Live Cannibalism, Cannibal Corpse's only official live album, was released on September 26, 2000, by , featuring recordings from 1998 and 1999 performances that showcase the band's ferocious onstage delivery of tracks from their initial discography. The 2003 EP Worm Infested, issued July 1 via Metal Blade, compiles two original tracks alongside covers of Accept's "Demon's Night" and live renditions of the band's own material, serving as a collection of obscurities for dedicated listeners. Box sets like 15 Year Killing Spree, released November 4, 2003, aggregate remastered selections from the first five across three , supplemented by a DVD of live clips and interviews, a , , and photo card, catering to archival enthusiasts. Band members have channeled excess creativity into side endeavors, with bassist contributing to the instrumental progressive death metal outfit Conquering Dystopia, whose self-titled 2014 album pairs his intricate bass lines with guitars from and Keith Merrow. Vocalist George Fisher leads Serpentine Dominion, a death metal supergroup that debuted with a self-titled 2016 release featuring guitarist , emphasizing heavier riffs within melodic frameworks. Drummer drums for Umbilicus, a hard rock project that debuted live in 2023, and hardcore act , reflecting diversions from core death metal aggression.

Legacy and Broader Impact

Influence on Extreme Metal Subgenres

Cannibal Corpse's emphasis on graphic, horror-inspired lyrics detailing mutilation and viscera established a template for the subgenre within , distinguishing it from broader thematic explorations in earlier acts like by prioritizing unrelenting, forensic-level descriptions of violence. This approach, evident from their 1990 debut onward, influenced subsequent bands in brutal death and slam variants, such as , which incorporated a Cannibal Corpse ("") on their 2013 album Conceived in Sewage, signaling direct stylistic homage in riff construction and thematic extremity. Bands emulating this gore fixation, including Disconformity, have explicitly named Cannibal Corpse alongside as formative influences for their old-school aggression. In parallel, the band's instrumental —particularly Alex Webster's labyrinthine bass lines and interlocking guitar —raised benchmarks in , fostering emulation in subgenres prioritizing complexity over raw speed. Decapitated's Wacław "Vogg" Kiełtyka has cited Cannibal Corpse as a primary listening influence during his formative years, crediting their Florida-style for shaping his riffing and overall extremity, which contributed to Decapitated's evolution into . This causal link is substantiated by Vogg's repeated references to Cannibal Corpse's role in inspiring his early compositions, blending their brutality with progressive elements. While Necrophagist's neoclassical leanings diverge, shared touring circuits with Cannibal Corpse in 2006 exposed acts to their , indirectly reinforcing standards of riff intricacy amid brutal tempos. Such peer acknowledgments, drawn from interviews rather than promotional claims, underscore Cannibal Corpse's substantive impact on elevating execution across branches.

Commercial Longevity and Fanbase Expansion

Cannibal Corpse has maintained operational continuity since its formation in , spanning over 37 years without disbanding, a rarity in the volatile scene where many contemporaries dissolved amid lineup shifts or creative burnout. This endurance stems from stable core membership and consistent output, enabling to headline extensive tours that demonstrate persistent demand. For instance, in November 2022, they played a sold-out at the in , drawing full capacity crowds for a 90-minute set. Ongoing activity includes a announced North American headlining tour in fall 2025 with support acts Municipal Waste and Fulci, underscoring sustained touring viability into the late 2020s. The band's commercial resilience extends to the digital streaming landscape, where metrics refute assumptions of marginal appeal for graphically intense death metal. On Spotify, Cannibal Corpse garners approximately 638,000 monthly listeners as of late 2025, positioning them among the top acts with hundreds of thousands of active streams monthly. This volume, accumulated over decades of catalog depth, translates to tens of millions of total plays, as evidenced by milestones like 20 million streams celebrated in for key tracks. Fanbase expansion in the era has further bolstered longevity, with platforms like introducing the band to younger demographics uninterested in traditional metal circuits. A 2025 Los Angeles Times report highlights how viral clips of tracks like "Hammer Smashed Face"—famously featured in the 1994 film Ace Ventura: Pet Detective—have propelled Cannibal Corpse toward new audiences via short-form video algorithms, sustaining relevance nearly four decades post-debut. This digital influx counters narratives of static niche confinement, as algorithmic discovery amplifies gore-themed extremity to global users, evidenced by active communities and under hashtags like #cannibalcorpse. Such growth mechanisms have preserved a dedicated yet expanding listener base, enabling Cannibal Corpse to defy expectations of commercial obsolescence in an oversaturated music market.

Debunking Myths of Societal Harm from Extreme Lyrics

Critics, including the founded by in 1985, have long argued that explicit lyrics in and its subgenres, such as , promote aggression, antisocial behavior, and societal decay by desensitizing youth to violence and . The PMRC's campaign targeted bands with graphic content, claiming such music could incite real-world harm, leading to voluntary labeling and bans on albums like those by Cannibal Corpse in countries including (1993) and (2014), where courts cited risks to children's without presenting causal data. However, these assertions rely on anecdotal fears rather than empirical validation, echoing moral panics that overlook the distinction between fictional expression and behavioral causation. Peer-reviewed research has failed to establish a causal link between exposure to extreme lyrics, including Cannibal Corpse's hyperbolic depictions of and , and increased real-world or rates. While experiments demonstrate short-term elevations in aggressive thoughts or minor behaviors (e.g., allocating as a proxy for ) following violent song lyrics, these effects do not persist longitudinally or translate to societal metrics like rates or delinquency. A comprehensive of heavy metal's psychosocial impacts concludes that fans often use aggressive-themed music for emotional and regulation, with no of heightened antisocial outcomes compared to non-fans; instead, it may buffer against stress without amplifying real . Demographic studies of heavy metal enthusiasts, including death metal listeners, reveal no elevated crime propensity, countering stereotypes of inherent danger. Surveys indicate fans skew toward higher sensation-seeking but exhibit arrest rates 18% below population averages across urban samples, attributing this to the genre's role in fostering community and identity without deviant spillover. Heavy metal adherents, often middle-class and educated, report psychological well-being benefits from violent themes, akin to horror film consumption, where graphic narratives serve as safe outlets for taboo exploration without inciting harm—evidenced by stable societal violence trends despite decades of extreme metal's popularity. Cannibal Corpse vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher has emphasized the lyrics' fictional, non-instructional nature, intended as artistic extremity rather than endorsement of acts, aligning with broader findings that such content remains confined to fantasy.

References

  1. [1]
    Cannibal Corpse - Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives
    Jul 18, 2002 · Pictured from left to right: Rob Barrett, Paul Mazurkiewicz, George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher, Alex Webster, Erik Rutan. Cannibal Corpse was ...
  2. [2]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE | Chaos Horrific
    Since 1988, Cannibal Corpse have been at the forefront of death metal, shaping and defining the genre, creating a seminal, incomparable body of work over the ...Missing: bio | Show results with:bio<|control11|><|separator|>
  3. [3]
    Cannibal Corpse sold how many albums? - Metal Insider
    Feb 12, 2015 · The bands' combined 13 studio albums (all on Metal Blade) have now sold a combined two million copies.
  4. [4]
    13 Rock + Metal Artists Who Were Banned From Countries - Loudwire
    Nov 20, 2023 · Cannibal Corpse: Germany, Australia, Russia. Where do we start with this one? Australia halted the sale of any of the band's material for a ...
  5. [5]
    Russian court bans music and artwork of Cannibal Corpse
    Dec 2, 2014 · A Russian court has issued a ban on Cannibal Corpse's music and artwork, denouncing the death metal band's potential to “damage the mental health of children”.Missing: controversies | Show results with:controversies
  6. [6]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE – 1988-2013: 25 Years Of Metal, Part One ...
    Tampa, Florida-based death metal outfit Cannibal Corpse formed in December 1988, its members pooled from two Buffalo, New York-based groups, namely Beyond ...<|separator|>
  7. [7]
    Sunday Old School: Cannibal Corpse - Metal Underground.com
    Mar 4, 2012 · ... 1989 opening for Dark Angel. Not long after this impressive debut, Cannibal Corpse was snapped up by Metal Blade Records after the manager ...
  8. [8]
    Eaten Back To Life | Cannibal Corpse - Bandcamp
    Free deliveryEaten Back To Life by Cannibal Corpse, released 17 August 1990 1. Shredded Humans 2. Edible Autopsy 3. Put the to Death 4. Mangled 5.Missing: tracklist | Show results with:tracklist
  9. [9]
    35 Years Ago: Cannibal Corpse Release 'Eaten Back to Life'
    Aug 17, 2023 · Like many major '90s US death metal bands, Cannibal Corpse recorded their debut album Eaten Back to Life at Tampa, Florida's Morrisound Studios.Missing: production | Show results with:production
  10. [10]
    Cannibal Corpse - Eaten Back to Life - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    Oct 3, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse ; Type: Full-length ; Release date: August 16th, 1990 ; Catalog ID: 3984-14024-2 ; Label: Metal Blade Records ; Format: CD ...
  11. [11]
  12. [12]
    Cannibal Corpse “Butchered At Birth” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Butchered At Birth RELEASE DATE: 07/01/1991. 01. Meathook Sodomy 02. Gutted 03. Living Dissection
  13. [13]
    Cannibal Corpse - Butchered at Birth - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    Oct 20, 2024 · Release date: July 1st, 1991 ; Catalog ID: 3984-14072-2 ; Label: Metal Blade Records ; Format: CD ; Reviews: 23 reviews (avg. 79%).
  14. [14]
  15. [15]
    Obituary - Metallipromo
    04/08/1990; Concert at The Sky Club, South Buffalo, NY, USA. opening for Sacred Reich, with Cannibal Corpse & Forced Entry. 05/08/1990; Concert at The ...
  16. [16]
    Cannibal Corpse interview with Chris Barnes from 1991
    Oct 27, 2020 · An interview with Chris Barnes from Cannibal Corpse at the "A Day of Death" festival in 1990, appearing in Disposable Underground.
  17. [17]
    Cannibal Corpse Concert & Tour History (Updated for 2025)
    Cannibal Corpse tours & concert list along with photos, videos, and setlists of their live performances.
  18. [18]
    Cannibal Corpse “Tomb of the Mutilated” - Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Tomb of the Mutilated RELEASE DATE: 09/22/1992. 01. Hammer Smashed Face 02. I Cum Blood<|separator|>
  19. [19]
  20. [20]
    Album of the Week: Cannibal Corpse – Tomb of the Mutilated (1992)
    Sep 4, 2020 · Tomb of the Mutilated has been described as a “high-concept album concerned with extreme necrophilia and sadism” by reviewers Jack Murray and ...Missing: style themes
  21. [21]
    Cannibal Corpse - Tomb of the Mutilated - Reviews
    Jul 5, 2010 · This album probably has the best guitar sound on any Cannibal Corpse album, it really does rule. The production on this album isn't bad ...
  22. [22]
    Tomb of the Mutilated - Cannibal Corpse | Rele... - AllMusic
    Released in 1992, Tomb of the Mutilated helped establish Cannibal Corpse's reputation as one of metal's goriest, most vile outfits. Boasting some of the sickest ...
  23. [23]
    That Tour Was Awesome: Complete Control (1992)
    Jan 31, 2019 · The idea of getting Obituary, Cannibal Corpse and Malevolent Creation out together on a tour in 1992 is awesome but not altogether ...Missing: impact | Show results with:impact
  24. [24]
    [PDF] Encyclopedia of Heavy Metal Music - Hugo Ribeiro
    CANNIBAL CORPSE (1988–PRESENT). Chris Barnes (vocals, replaced by ... ingly problematic drug and alcohol abuse, he was fired from the band at the end of.
  25. [25]
    Rob Barrett | Metal Wiki - Fandom
    In 1993 Barrett was contacted by Alex Webster and asked to join Cannibal Corpse, shortly after the recording of Tomb of the Mutilated, as a fill-in for Bob ...
  26. [26]
    Interview: Rob Barrett of Death Metal Legends, Cannibal Corpse
    Aug 4, 2014 · Cannibal Corpse is indisputably one of those names. Formed in 1988, they helped shape the budding underground metal scene at the time, and ...
  27. [27]
    Cannibal Corpse - The Bleeding Lyrics and Tracklist - Genius
    Apr 12, 1994 · The Bleeding is the fourth studio album by American death metal band Cannibal Corpse, released in 1994 through Metal Blade Records.
  28. [28]
    The Bleeding | Metal Wiki | Fandom
    Producer, Scott Burns. The Bleeding is the fourth studio album by American death metal band Cannibal Corpse, released in April 12, 1994 through Metal Blade ...
  29. [29]
    Cannibal Corpse - "The Bleeding" - Decibel Magazine
    Mar 28, 2017 · The Bleeding marked the close of Cannibal Corpse's first era. Vocalist and lyricist Chris Barnes was fired during the Vile sessions in 1995 and ...Missing: tracks | Show results with:tracks<|separator|>
  30. [30]
    Inside CANNIBAL CORPSE's 1995 Decision To Fire CHRIS BARNES
    Nov 7, 2023 · The following passage takes readers back inside the hallowed halls of Morrisound in 1995 and the growing tensions between then-CANNIBAL CORPSE vocalist Chris ...
  31. [31]
    I'm responsible for most of the tension in CANNIBAL CORPSE
    Barnes exited CANNIBAL CORPSE in 1995, one year after the release of the band's “The Bleeding” album. Seven years ago, he told “The Chainsaw Symphony” radio ...
  32. [32]
    Cannibal Corpse: the story of the Vile album - Louder Sound
    Aug 16, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse may have garnered notoriety with original singer Chris Barnes, but it was his departure and the arrival of replacement ...
  33. [33]
    Chris Barnes of Six Feet Under is the Lord of Death
    Jun 26, 2024 · Six Feet Under's Haunted came out in 1995, the same year that Barnes left Cannibal Corpse. This year's Killing for Revenge is their 14th studio ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  34. [34]
    CHRIS BARNES explains why SIX FEET UNDER didn't tour the U.S. ...
    SIX FEET UNDER was initially formed as a side project for Barnes during his final years with the band that he co-founded, CANNIBAL CORPSE. It became the ...
  35. [35]
    Vile (album) | Metal Wiki - Fandom
    Vile is the fifth studio album by American death metal band Cannibal Corpse. It was released in May 21, 1996 through Metal Blade Records.
  36. [36]
    Vile - Cannibal Corpse | Release Info - AllMusic
    Vile Review by Vincent Jeffries. Released on Metal Blade in 1996, Vile is the first Cannibal Corpse recording to feature vocalist George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher.
  37. [37]
    Cannibal Corpse - Vile - Reviews - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    So "Vile" is the opening of a new (and very successful) chapter for Cannibal Corpse. By this release, the Americans hired a new frontman, and at the same time, ...
  38. [38]
    Cannibal Corpse “Vile” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Vile RELEASE DATE: 05/21/1996. 01. Devoured by Vermin 02. Mummified in Barbed Wire
  39. [39]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Vile May 20th 1996 Recorded at Morrisound ...
    May 19, 2025 · CANNIBAL CORPSE Vile May 20th 1996 Recorded at Morrisound Recording, produced by Scott Burns & Cannibal Corpse, cover artwork by Vincent Locke, ...
  40. [40]
    Cannibal Corpse “Gallery of Suicide” - Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Gallery of Suicide RELEASE DATE: 04/21/1998. 01. I Will Kill You 02. Disposal of the Body
  41. [41]
    Cannibal Corpse “Bloodthirst” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Bloodthirst RELEASE DATE: 10/19/1999. 01. Pounded Into Dust 02. Dead Human Collection
  42. [42]
    Cannibal Corpse “Gore Obsessed” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Gore Obsessed RELEASE DATE: 02/26/2002. 01. Savage Butchery 02. Hatchet to the Head
  43. [43]
    JACK OWEN Explains Decision to Leave CANNIBAL CORPSE
    May 3, 2004 · "After 15 years with CANNIBAL CORPSE, I've decided to leave the group. My heart just wasn't in it anymore, and it was reflected in my appearance ...
  44. [44]
    Guitarist Jack Owen quit Cannibal Corpse! | Ultimate Metal Forum
    May 3, 2004 · "After 15 years with CANNIBAL CORPSE, I've decided to leave the group. My heart just wasn't in it anymore, and it was reflected in my appearance ...<|separator|>
  45. [45]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE: Guitarist ROB BARRETT Officially Rejoins ...
    Dec 7, 2005 · Guitarist Rob Barrett has officially rejoined CANNIBAL CORPSE as a permanent replacement for guitarist Jack Owen, who left the band in 2004.
  46. [46]
    CoC : Cannibal Corpse : Interview : 5/15/2006 - Chronicles of Chaos
    May 15, 2006 · CoC: Getting to Rob and him rejoining the band: aside from his history in Cannibal Corpse, what made you decide that he was the guy to replace ...
  47. [47]
  48. [48]
    Cannibal Corpse - The Wretched Spawn - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    Oct 3, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse > The Wretched Spawn > 2004, CD + DVD, Metal Blade ... Cannibal Corpse discography (main). < · Gore Obsessed (2002), Kill
  49. [49]
    Cannibal Corpse - The Wretched Spawn Lyrics and Tracklist - Genius
    Feb 24, 2004 · The Wretched Spawn. Cannibal Corpse. Released February 24, 2004.
  50. [50]
    Cannibal Corpse “Torture” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Torture RELEASE DATE: 03/13/2012. 01. Demented Aggression 02. Sarcophagic Frenzy 03. Scourge of Iron
  51. [51]
    Cannibal Corpse Announce Headlining 2012 Tour Dates
    Feb 7, 2012 · Cannibal Corpse have just announced a run of headlining shows for the U.S. that kicks off April 5 in the band's home state of Florida.<|separator|>
  52. [52]
    Cannibal Corpse “A Skeletal Domain” - Metal Blade Records
    ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: A Skeletal Domain RELEASE DATE: 09/16/2014. 01. High Velocity Impact Spatter 02. Sadistic Embodiment 03. Kill or Become
  53. [53]
    Cannibal Corpse Setlist at Mayhem Festival 2014
    Jul 23, 2014 · Get the Cannibal Corpse Setlist of the concert at Saratoga Performing Arts Center, Saratoga Springs, NY, USA on July 23, 2014 from the ...Missing: 2012-2019 | Show results with:2012-2019
  54. [54]
    Cannibal Corpse “Red Before Black” - Metal Blade Records
    ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Red Before Black RELEASE DATE: 11/03/2017. 01. Only One Will Die 02. Red Before Black 03. Code of the Slashers 04. Shedding My ...
  55. [55]
    Cannibal Corpse's Pat O'Brien Arrested for Burglary, Assaulting Cop
    Dec 11, 2018 · Cannibal Corpse guitarist Pat O'Brien was arrested Monday for burglary and assaulting a police officer after a fire broke out at his home in Florida.
  56. [56]
    Ex-Cannibal Corpse Guitarist Pat O'Brien Sentenced for Infamous ...
    May 1, 2021 · Cannibal Corpse guitarist Pat O'Brien was arrested for a bizarre incident that involved assault, burglary, a house fire, more than 80 firearms, and three ...
  57. [57]
    Former Cannibal Corpse guitarist Pat O'Brien sentenced for role in ...
    May 4, 2021 · Former Cannibal Corpse guitarist Pat O'Brien has been sentenced for his role in a bizarre incident that saw him being arrested for assault and burglary.
  58. [58]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Guitarist Erik Rutan Will Not End HATE ...
    Feb 3, 2021 · Guitarist Erik Rutan (Hate Eternal, ex-Morbid Angel) has been filling in live for Pat O'Brien in Cannibal Corpse since 2019.
  59. [59]
    Erik Rutan Joins Cannibal Corpse Full-Time, Hate Eternal to Go On
    Feb 3, 2021 · On Facebook, Rutan declared he was now a full-time member of the band. "I am super excited and honored and honestly it still seems a bit surreal ...
  60. [60]
    Erik Rutan - "Cannibal Corpse has been such a huge part of my life ...
    Mar 23, 2021 · I ended up joining the band permanently in Feb 2020 and we started to record in mid-April 2020 so I was playing all day and night writing the ...Missing: integration | Show results with:integration
  61. [61]
    Cannibal Corpse “Violence Unimagined” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Violence Unimagined RELEASE DATE: 04/16/2021. 01. Murderous Rampage 02. Necrogenic Resurrection
  62. [62]
    Cannibal Corpse “Chaos Horrific” | Metal Blade Records
    Buy iTunes Artist Page. ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Chaos Horrific RELEASE DATE: 09/22/2023. 01. Overlords of Violence 02. Frenzied Feeding
  63. [63]
    Cannibal Corpse to Release Sixteenth Studio Album, “Chaos ...
    Jun 22, 2022 · Death metal icons CANNIBAL CORPSE will unleash their sixteenth studio album, Chaos Horrific, on September 22nd via Metal Blade Records.
  64. [64]
    I will be playing guitar with Cannibal Corpse this fall ... - Facebook
    Sep 3, 2025 · See you there! CANNIBAL CORPSE w/ Municipal Waste, Full of Hell & Fulci: 9/15/2025 Marathon Music Works – Nashville, TN 9/17/2025 ...Missing: second stint
  65. [65]
    New CANNIBAL CORPSE Touring Guitarist BRANDON ELLIS
    Sep 20, 2025 · New CANNIBAL CORPSE Touring Guitarist BRANDON ELLIS: 'It's An Amazing Opportunity To Get' This Gig. September 20, 2025. Listen to ...
  66. [66]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Working On New Album - Metal Injection
    Cannibal Corpse has announced they're beginning work on the new album with no further details yet divulged.
  67. [67]
    Cannibal Corpse keeps head banging, from 'Ace Ventura' to TikTok ...
    Oct 3, 2025 · Death metal pioneers Cannibal Corpse are finding new fans through TikTok after nearly four decades of brutal, controversial music.
  68. [68]
    I CUM BLOOD Lesson / Tutorial [ Eb Standard Tuning] DMT Episode ...
    Mar 17, 2022 · CANNIBAL CORPSE - I CUM BLOOD Lesson / Tutorial [ Eb Standard Tuning] DMT Episode 18 · Comments.
  69. [69]
    The 20 Best Death Metal Guitar Riffs of All Time - Riffhard
    Mar 18, 2025 · If there's one riff that screams death metal, it's this one. Cannibal Corpse's “Hammer Smashed Face” is a classic, with its brutal chugging and ...
  70. [70]
    Answering Most Frequently Searched Questions About Death Metal
    May 4, 2023 · You have to have a really fine-tuned ear to appreciate it and a lot of the guys in these bands are incredible musicians," Cannibal Corpse ...
  71. [71]
    11 Blastbeats To Master: Improve Your Technique With This ...
    Dec 22, 2016 · Paul Mazurkiewicz used these to great effect with Cannibal Corpse, and Ex. 5 is taken from the band's song “Pit of Zombies.” Here, he ...
  72. [72]
    Features - Interview: PAUL MAZURKIEWICZ Of CANNIBAL CORPSE
    Feb 19, 2021 · Peeling Skin: An Exclusive Audio Interview With PAUL MAZURKIEWICZ Of CANNIBAL CORPSE ... Drummer and innovator of the "bomb-blast" drum technique, ...<|separator|>
  73. [73]
    Extreme Metal Bass – Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse - Amazon.com
    Suitable for five-string and four-string bass players, the book explores essential techniques, including speed picking, finger strength exercises, and advanced ...
  74. [74]
    Alex Webster Interview/Lesson in Sick Sounds Issue 1 - YouTube
    Apr 25, 2010 · Alex Webster Interview/Lesson: the Cannibal Corpse bassist shows you the secrets behind his frightening right-hand technique.
  75. [75]
    George “Corpsegrinder” Fisher on the art of perfecting the death growl
    Jul 18, 2023 · As the man responsible for the guttural vocals at the centre of Cannibal Corpse's musical extremism, George “Corpsegrinder” Fisher knows a ...
  76. [76]
    “I had to punish my vocals constantly”. How George 'Corpsegrinder ...
    Jul 18, 2023 · As the man responsible for the guttural vocals at the centre of Cannibal Corpse's musical extremism, George “Corpsegrinder” Fisher knows a ...
  77. [77]
    Cannibal Corpse - Chaos Horrific (Album Review)
    Oct 22, 2023 · While still packed with distortion, the production on Chaos Horrific has a bit more clarity and focus compared to Violence Unimagined, which ...
  78. [78]
    Cannibal Corpse - Kill - Reviews - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    Aug 16, 2009 · ... Erik Rutan has taken over producer duties with this album. The band, being impressed by Rutan's work on Hate Eternals "I, Monarch" album ...
  79. [79]
    Alex Webster / “We want the Cannibal Corpse songs to be memorable”
    Apr 7, 2021 · Alex Webster: “Yeah I wrote four of the songs musically and three of those I did lyrics for. The fourth song, 'Cerements of the Flayed', our ...
  80. [80]
    Interview: Alex Webster of CANNIBAL CORPSE - Antihero Magazine
    Mar 3, 2021 · I find that the things I want to write with the guitar are different than the things I want to write on bass. It's helped me add a little ...
  81. [81]
  82. [82]
  83. [83]
    Cannibal Corpse | Metal Blade Records
    He's produced six Cannibal Corpse albums–starting with 2006′s Kill–and this is Rutan's second release as a full-fledged member, since officially joining in 2020 ...
  84. [84]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Bassist: 'We're Not Content To Just Live Off ...
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Bassist ... At the time, when we were starting, we were very influenced by ... inspired by original death metal bands like POSSESSED, DEATH, MORBID ...
  85. [85]
    Interview: Cannibal Corpse's Alex Webster - Invisible Oranges
    Nov 5, 2012 · I was about three when he began playing the pipes. He picked it up fairly quickly and the band would play songs that weren't overly difficult, ...
  86. [86]
    Cannibal Corpse interview - 2010 - Disposable Underground
    Oct 27, 2024 · An interview with Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse in 2010, from Disposable Underground.
  87. [87]
    Alex Webster of Cannibal Corpse: Interview - At The Barrier
    Apr 8, 2021 · We spoke to Alex Webster about Violence Unimagined, touring, influences, digital streaming, vinyl and much, much more. Cannibal Corpse (L-R): ...
  88. [88]
    Cannibal Corpse – Under the Rotted Flesh Lyrics - Genius
    Nausation, cannibalistic necrophile [Verse 2] Violating the body, putrefied ... Cannibal Corpse, Jack Owen, Alex Webster, Chris Barnes, Paul ...
  89. [89]
    I Cum Blood (live) lyrics - Cannibal Corpse - Last.fm
    Find Cannibal Corpse – I Cum Blood (live) lyrics and search for Cannibal Corpse ... Out of the Womb · Regurgitation. Tales of Necrophilia Play track. Silent Night ...
  90. [90]
    Cannibal Corpse – Code of the Slashers Lyrics - Genius
    Sep 19, 2017 · This song is about a group of psychopathic murderers. They claim to thrive off of the murder of innocent people, and they view their murder victims as prey.
  91. [91]
    The 5 most gruesome Cannibal Corpse songs - Louder Sound
    Sep 27, 2020 · Cannibal Corpse have become synonymous with grotesque, horror movie imagery in their lyrics, telling many a tale of bloodshed and murder.
  92. [92]
    Gore Obsessed - Review by Noktorn - Encyclopaedia Metallum
    Oct 4, 2007 · Consistency is a part of it: in all honesty, do you dislike certain Cannibal Corpse albums because they genuinely suck, or simply because they' ...
  93. [93]
    Cannibal Corpse - Gore Obsessed - Reviews - The Metal Archives
    This album is standard Cannibal Corpse, complete with all the blast beats and hyper-fast technical riffing that all of the fans love.
  94. [94]
    Cannibal Corpse Albums Ranked From Worst to Best - Loudwire
    Mar 19, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse's 16 album catalog is ridiculously strong, which makes ranking them from worst to best a real challenge.<|separator|>
  95. [95]
    The Live Challenges Facing Cannibal Corpse - TheMusic.com.au
    Jul 30, 2014 · “I've always viewed Cannibal Corpse as an escape – it's like watching a brutal horror movie to get away from reality. Our stories are completely ...Missing: escapism | Show results with:escapism
  96. [96]
    Getting Horrified with Alex Webster of CANNIBAL CORPSE
    Mar 26, 2012 · When looking at the Cannibal Corpse back catalogue, you see two things rampant, especially in the early days: gore and misogyny. Why did those ...<|separator|>
  97. [97]
    Cannibal Corpse | Product tags | The Art of Vince Locke
    Cannibal Corpse · 15 Year Killing Spree, Giclée Print · Amber Smashed Face · Butchered at Birth, Giclée Print · Cannibal Corpse, Rogue's Gallery – Giclée Print.
  98. [98]
    Cannibal Corpse's Unholy Alliance With Artist Vincent Locke
    Oct 15, 2021 · Cannibal Corpse might remorselessly rip out your genitals and eat them for lunch with a side order of plump eyeballs scooped out of your face ...
  99. [99]
    Behind the Cover: CANNIBAL CORPSE - Violence Unimagined
    Mar 9, 2021 · We go Behind the Cover of Violence Unimagined with CANNIBAL CORPSE drummer Paul Mazurkiewicz and artist Vince Locke to reflect on the decades of an iconic ...
  100. [100]
    The Art of Vince Locke | Official website for Vince Locke, artist and ...
    The new Cannibal Corpse album is out now! Pick up a copy now, lots of art is included in the release. You can get prints of the cover art here. Posted in ...Cannibal Corpse · Shop · Prints · Portfolio
  101. [101]
  102. [102]
    Cannibal Corpse 1993 Tour Shirt and Personal Experiences
    Aug 7, 2024 · Here's a cannibal corpse tour shirt from their 1993 tour that has a corpus date! Cannibal Corpse tour shirt discussion with personal ...Missing: merchandise visual style
  103. [103]
    When Politicians Blame Bad Behavior on Pop Culture - Retro Report
    Mar 20, 2018 · MAN: The First Amendment is not under attack here. ARCHIVAL ... SENATOR JOSEPH LIEBERMAN: Marilyn Manson, Tupac Shakur, Cannibal Corpse, Snoop Doggy Dogg.
  104. [104]
    The Brutal History of Censorship - Loudwire
    Apr 2, 2020 · The PMRC took their case all the way to United States Senate. ... United States at the time, used his platform to attack Cannibal Corpse.
  105. [105]
    A Look Back At The Filthy Fifteen – Part Two - The Crooked Wanderer
    Jan 14, 2022 · If nothing else, we at least got a sticker out of it to let us know that Cannibal Corpse records might contain explicit lyrics. ... censorship in ...
  106. [106]
    18 album covers that were banned or censored | Kerrang!
    Aug 23, 2021 · Where to start with Cannibal Corpse?! All their albums were banned ... This was also covered in paper – this time brown – when the majority of ...
  107. [107]
    50 Most Controversial Hard Rock + Metal Album Covers - Loudwire
    $$19.90 deliveryNov 3, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse are the poster band for vulgar and controversial artwork. 'Butchered at Birth' is about as gruesome as it gets. The cover drew ...
  108. [108]
    Pa. high court finds school district violated First Amendment in ...
    Nov 24, 2021 · ... Cannibal Corpse” T-shirt. Cannibal Corpse is a musical group in the ... school officials can discipline the student without violating the First ...
  109. [109]
    [PDF] Rock 'n' Roll Suicide: Why Heavy Metal Musicians Cannot Be Held ...
    "Stripped, Raped and Strangled" and "She Was Asking For It,''30 Cannibal. Corpse brought death metal to a surprisingly (and somewhat disturbingly) widespread ...
  110. [110]
    Meet The Band Whose Music Was Banned In Australia For 10 Years
    Aug 28, 2014 · In 1996, the sale of any Cannibal Corpse audio recording then available was banned in Australia and all copies of such had been removed from music shops.
  111. [111]
    13 Mind-Blowing CANNIBAL CORPSE Facts That Will Shock You
    Apr 29, 2025 · Q2: Who are the original members of Cannibal Corpse? The original lineup consisted of Chris Barnes (vocals), Jack Owen (guitar), Bob Rusay ( ...
  112. [112]
    Controversy seems to follow Cannibal Corpse - Reading Eagle
    Oct 8, 2015 · ... Cannibal Corpse. Their albums were banned in Australia from 1996 until 2006-2007 because of their graphic cover art; they are still only ...
  113. [113]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE's Australian Tour Sparks Outrage, Calls For ...
    Jul 9, 2006 · CANNIBAL CORPSE's October concert in Perth, Australia has sparked calls for the band to be banned over its alleged glorification of child rape, suicide, murder ...
  114. [114]
    The album was banned in Germany (censored versions ... - Facebook
    Aug 17, 2025 · All Cannibal Corpse albums up to and including Tomb of the Mutilated were banned upon release from being sold or displayed in Germany due to ...
  115. [115]
    Cannibal Corpse (Music) - TV Tropes
    Cannibal Corpse is an American Death Metal band formed in 1988. They are one ... Germany until 2006, and they were prohibited from performing any songs ...
  116. [116]
    Cannibal Corpse's new colouring book has been banned in Germany
    Nov 6, 2023 · The book – like much of Cannibal Corpse's earlier albums – has been banned for sale in Germany over explicit content and graphic imagery.Missing: import | Show results with:import<|separator|>
  117. [117]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Lyrics Banned In Russia - Blabbermouth
    Nov 29, 2014 · According to RAPSI, a court ruled on Friday (November 28) that the translations of lyrics by CANNIBAL CORPSE be banned from distribution in ...<|control11|><|separator|>
  118. [118]
    Cannibal Corpse's Russian Tour Goes Awry - The Hollywood Reporter
    Oct 13, 2014 · Several dates of the U.S. death metal band Cannibal Corpse's Russian tour were canceled following protests from local Orthodox activists.
  119. [119]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Lyrics & Artwork Banned in Russia
    Translations of Cannibal Corpse lyrics, along with the band's album covers, have been banned from distribution in Russia according the Russian Legal Information ...
  120. [120]
    [PDF] Extreme music for extreme people? - Anti-Fascist Archive
    Oct 28, 2012 · brought against the record labels of Cannibal Corpse, Deicide and Slayer in the. 1990s, and metal's implication in the Columbine High School ...
  121. [121]
    Dissecting the Bloodthirsty Bliss of Death Metal | Scientific American
    Oct 30, 2018 · Those lyrics, from “Hammer Smashed Face” by the band Cannibal Corpse ... violent lyrics. “That never happens with just one risk factor, and ...
  122. [122]
    Listening to death metal does not desensitise you to violence, study ...
    Mar 14, 2019 · Cannibal Corpse have attracted a lot of attention for their violent lyrics. ... Other research has found a link between violent TV shows ...Missing: evidence | Show results with:evidence
  123. [123]
    Understanding the attraction to music containing violent themes
    Aug 13, 2023 · Renowned artists such as Cannibal Corpse and Digga D have ... I like the sound, despite the lyrics being violent or alluding to violence.
  124. [124]
    Morbid curiosity for music containing violent themes - ScienceDirect
    Violently themed music, predominantly found in subgenres of extreme metal and violent rap, has achieved worldwide popularity with groups such as Cannibal Corpse ...
  125. [125]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Bassist Talks Censorship - Blabbermouth
    Jan 21, 2009 · Censorship and extreme music have clashed on many occasions, and more than once death metal's CANNIBAL CORPSE has been the catalyst for ...
  126. [126]
    Paul Mazurkiewicz - Cannibal Corpse 'Crushing Cancel Culture ...
    Apr 13, 2021 · And when it comes to Cannibal Corpse's subject matter, NO ONE comes close to their extreme levels of horror and gore when writing and producing ...Missing: artistic | Show results with:artistic
  127. [127]
    The Horror! The Horror! In Defence Of Cannibal Corpse | The Quietus
    Mar 13, 2012 · Who is responsible for the horrific events which inspire Cannibal Corpse's songwriting? Society itself, and it is you and I who make up society.
  128. [128]
    Why Are People Outraged Over Cannibal Corpse Lyrics Suddenly?
    Aug 7, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse has been trending on the X social media platform, but the fact that it's over their lyrical content has many metalheads up in arms.Missing: interview | Show results with:interview
  129. [129]
    Cannibal Corpse Is Under Attack By Gen Z Trying To Cancel The Band
    Aug 9, 2024 · Gen Z is trying to cancel Cannibal Corpse on X, but fans are defending Corpsegrinder. The discussion started when someone mentioned the band Mindless Self ...Missing: social media backlash
  130. [130]
    Cannibal Corpse Is Under Attack By Gen Z, But Are They Right?
    Aug 21, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse is facing criticism from Generation Z for their controversial lyrics. But is the backlash justified, or is it just a ...Missing: social media
  131. [131]
    Cannibal Corpse Is Under Attack By Gen Z Trying To Cancel The ...
    Aug 9, 2024 · Cannibal Corpse Is Under Attack By Gen Z Trying To Cancel The Band ... backlash, it just used to be through mainstream media rather than social ...
  132. [132]
    Watching twats being performatively offended at Cannibal Corpse ...
    Aug 8, 2024 · Green Day and Gojira sending conservatives into a tailspin, Cannibal Corpse lyrics causing an uproar, it's like Tipper Gore is rising from the ...Why do a lot of metal heads hate Cannibal Corpse? - RedditThis is Eminem all over again… : r/Cannibalcorpse - RedditMore results from www.reddit.com
  133. [133]
    The 10 best death metal albums of 2024 - Louder Sound
    Dec 23, 2024 · From the cosmic death exploration of Blood Incantation to the welcome return of Nails and Job For A Cowboy, these are the 10 albums that defined death metal in ...
  134. [134]
    George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher: Life Story, Net Worth, and Career ...
    Jan 21, 2025 · In late 1995, Fisher replaced Chris Barnes as the lead vocalist of Cannibal Corpse. His debut album with the band, “Vile,” marked a new era for ...
  135. [135]
    Cannibal Corpse hometown, lineup, biography - Last.fm
    Oct 7, 2025 · Founding member and rhythm guitarist Jack Owen left Cannibal Corpse in 2004 to spend more time on his second band, Adrift. He joined Deicide in ...
  136. [136]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE's ROB BARRETT Says ERIK RUTAN Is ...
    Feb 13, 2021 · Filling in live on guitar since 2019, in 2020 he became a full member, contributing to the writing process. Speaking to Eclectic Arts, CANNIBAL ...
  137. [137]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE's Rob Barrett on Erik Rutan - Metal Injection
    Cannibal Corpse's new album Violence Unimagined is the band's first to feature guitarist Erik Rutan (Hate Eternal, ex-Morbid Angel). Rutan wrote three songs ...
  138. [138]
    Will CANNIBAL CORPSE Go Down As 'The Most Brutal, Intense ...
    Jun 12, 2021 · In a 2017 interview with Aesthetic Magazine, Mazurkiewicz stated about CANNIBAL CORPSE's longevity: "It's about the love of the music. We're ...
  139. [139]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Drummer On Band's Longevity: 'It's Been A ...
    Dec 2, 2022 · Mazurkiewicz told Laughingmonkeymusic about how long he thinks · CANNIBAL CORPSE can keep going: "As long as we're all healthy, then who knows ...Missing: stability | Show results with:stability
  140. [140]
    Cannibal Corpse | burning ambulance
    Apr 20, 2021 · Cannibal Corpse are the best-selling death metal band in the world ... Jack Owen stayed until 2004. Pat O'Brien joined in 1997, and stayed ...
  141. [141]
    Cannibal Corpse guitarist Bob Rusay was fired in 1993. He turned a ...
    May 31, 2025 · Cannibal Corpse guitarist Bob Rusay was fired in 1993. He turned a negative situation into a positive one by swapping out a guitar for a golf club.Missing: departure | Show results with:departure
  142. [142]
    Do you miss Chris Barnes in Cannibal Corpse? - Facebook
    Oct 31, 2024 · Do you miss him in CANNIBAL CORPSE? Chris Barnes left 29 years ago today (October 31st, 1995). Cannibal Corpse fans discuss Chris Barnes' ...Chris Barnes' Departure from Cannibal Corpse - FacebookWhy is Barney shitting on Cannibal Corpse and death metal?More results from www.facebook.com
  143. [143]
    Chris Barnes Says He Quit CANNIBAL CORPSE Because They ...
    Feb 7, 2017 · Barnes says he quit the band because he was being ridiculed by members of Cannibal Corpse at the time, and because of various differences in personality.
  144. [144]
    Jack Owens Calls it Quits......... | Ultimate Metal Forum
    May 4, 2004 · Jack Owens quits Cannibal Corpse.... "After 15 years with Cannibal Corpse, I've decided to leave the group. My heart just wasn't in it ...Guitarist Jack Owen quit Cannibal Corpse! | Ultimate Metal ForumFormer CANNIBAL CORPSE Guitarist JACK OWEN Joins SIX FEET ...More results from ultimatemetal.comMissing: 1996-2003 | Show results with:1996-2003
  145. [145]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Break Silence On Guitarist PAT O'BRIEN's ...
    Cannibal Corpse have broken their silence in regards to guitarist Pat O'Brien, who was arrested on December 10th and charged with aggravated assault on a ...
  146. [146]
    Pat O'Brien arrested and charged with aggravated assault
    Dec 12, 2018 · "Cannibal Corpse guitarist Pat O'Brien, 53, has been arrested and charged with aggravated assault on a law enforcement officer with a deadly ...
  147. [147]
    Cannibal Corpse Announce Fill-In For Longtime Guitarist on Tour
    Sep 3, 2025 · What Cannibal Corpse Said About the Touring Lineup Switch. Cannibal ... changes, instantly memorable riffing, clever arrangements and a ...
  148. [148]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Recruits Ex-THE BLACK DAHLIA MURDER ...
    Brandon Ellis (ex-The Black Dahlia Murder) will stand in for Cannibal Corpse guitarist Rob Barrett on the death metal legends' upcoming U.S. trek this fall.
  149. [149]
    Cannibal Corpse FULL DEMO (1989) - YouTube
    Jan 31, 2014 · Band: CANNIBAL CORPSE Album: Cannibal Corpse (Demo) Year: 1989 Tracklist 01.A Skull Full of Maggots (00:00) 02.The Undead Will Feast (02:08) ...
  150. [150]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE's GEORGE 'CORPSEGRINDER' FISHER ...
    Dec 24, 2021 · In addition to having spent more than a quarter of a century fronting CANNIBAL CORPSE, he has been involved in several side projects, including ...
  151. [151]
  152. [152]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Awarded With Plaque Signifying Sales Of ...
    Feb 11, 2015 · CANNIBAL CORPSE's new album, "A Skeletal Domain", sold 8,800 copies in the United States in its first week of release to debut at position No.
  153. [153]
    Cannibal Corpse (Studio Albums Timeline) - Timetoast
    Aug 17, 1990. Eaten Back To Life. Shredded Humans · Jul 1, 1991. Butchered At Birth. Meat Hook Sodomy · Advertisements · Sep 22, 1992. Tomb Of The Mutilated.
  154. [154]
    Cannibal Corpse: First Week Chart Numbers Revealed + Official ...
    Sep 24, 2014 · In Canada, the record also broke Cannibal Corpse's previous chart ... charts and position #19 on the Media Market charts. Elsewhere, the ...Missing: Tomb Mutilated sales
  155. [155]
    Cannibal Corpse album debuts in Top 50 - Lambgoat
    Apr 28, 2021 · 45 on the Billboard 200, tallying 13,500 in pure sales (nearly 14,500 in total activity). Additionally, the new record bowed at No. 6 on the Top ...
  156. [156]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE Latest Album "Chaos Horrific" Earns No.7 ...
    Oct 7, 2023 · CANNIBAL CORPSE Latest Album “Chaos Horrific” Earns No.7 Position On Billboard's Album Sales Chart And More · 180g Black (EU exclusive) · Burned ...Missing: performance | Show results with:performance
  157. [157]
    Cannibal Corpse Albums and Discography - Genius
    All Albums by Cannibal Corpse ; Chaos Horrific. September 22, 2023 ; Violence Unimagined. April 16, 2021 ; Red Before Black. November 3, 2017 ; A Skeletal Domain.
  158. [158]
    Live Cannibalism - Cannibal Corpse - Bandcamp
    Free deliveryLive Cannibalism by Cannibal Corpse, released 26 September 2000 1. Staring Through the Eyes of the Dead 2. Blowtorch Slaughter 3.
  159. [159]
    Cannibal Corpse “Worm Infested” - Metal Blade Records
    ARTIST: Cannibal Corpse ALBUM: Worm Infested RELEASE DATE: 07/01/2003. 01. Systematic Elimination 02. Worm Infested 03. Demon's Night 04. The Undead Will ...
  160. [160]
  161. [161]
    Conquering Dystopia - Keith Merrow
    Collaborative album consisting of Jeff Loomis (ex-Nevermore) on lead guitar, Keith Merrow on rhythm guitar, Alex Webster (Cannibal Corpse) on bass, and Alex ...<|separator|>
  162. [162]
    Serpentine Dominion - Metal Blade Records
    Adam Dutkiewicz: Guitars George "Corpsegrinder" Fisher: Vocals Shannon Lucas: Drums. Imagine Killswitch Engage at their heaviest, with the immediately ...
  163. [163]
    CANNIBAL CORPSE's PAUL MAZURKIEWICZ Sets Record Straight
    Apr 18, 2025 · He is also currently the drummer for assorted side projects including UMBILICUS and HEAVEN'S GATE. Besides drumming, he also plays the ...
  164. [164]
    I'm Listening to Death Metal #11: Cannibal Corpse and the ...
    Jan 31, 2020 · The issue with Cannibal Corpse is not that they are slipping in quality, but instead that they raised the bar too high for themselves to the ...
  165. [165]
    Devourment is an American death metal band from Dallas, Texas ...
    Oct 1, 2024 · ... (Cannibal Corpse cover) Conceived in Sewage is the fourth studio album by American death metal band Devourment. It was released by Relapse ...
  166. [166]
    DISCONFORMITY - Brutal death from Japan
    And we are also influenced by some old school DEATH METAL bands-CANNIBAL CORPSE, GORGUTS, etc.. ... -Vocalist/SHO-GUN is influenced by DEVOURMENT-Wayne and Ruben.
  167. [167]
    Decapitated - The First Damned - Nuclear Blast Records
    30-day returnsJun 4, 2021 · ... Cannibal Corpse were the main things I listened to all the time. ... Sometimes shit just happens!” Decapitated Band. Decapitated. Music and ...
  168. [168]
    Cannibal Corpse - Wikipedia
    As of 2015, they achieved worldwide sales of two million units for combined sales of all their albums. Cannibal Corpse received its best "first week" sales of ...Cannibal Corpse discography · Kill (Cannibal Corpse album) · Alex Webster
  169. [169]
    Interview with Wacław “Vogg” Kiełtyka (Decapitated) | Metal Invader
    I think because Decapitated is influenced by good traditional metal music ... Cannibal Corpse. Even though we keep adding more elements on our music, like ...
  170. [170]
    Cannibal Corpse Play Sold-Out Show in San Diego - Metalchondria
    Nov 23, 2022 · Cannibal Corpse still put forth a fantastic 90-minute set, leaving this sold-out San Diego venue, a parting Thanksgiving gift to enjoy the food coma, awaiting.Missing: commercial | Show results with:commercial
  171. [171]
    Cannibal Corpse Announce Fall 2025 US Tour
    May 6, 2025 · Cannibal Corpse have announced a Fall 2025 US tour with support from Municipal Waste and Fulci. See the dates and learn how to get tickets.Missing: commercial longevity
  172. [172]
    Cannibal Corpse | Spotify
    Listen to Cannibal Corpse on Spotify. Artist · 638.2K monthly listeners ... Cannibal Corpse. 638,236 monthly listeners. Follow. Popular. Hammer Smashed Face.
  173. [173]
    Cannibal Corpse - 20 Million streams of pure fucking DEATH METAL!!!
    Dec 6, 2019 · I don´t use spotify, but i listen lots of hours of Cannibal a month, using cd´s and mp3´s, youtube videos, specially from Tomb, Bleeding, ...<|separator|>
  174. [174]
    #cannibalcorpse | TikTok
    #cannibalcorpse #cannibalcorpseshow #cannibalcorpselive #fyp #securityman #show #metal #live #deathmetal · son original - Pelle_Yngve_Ohlin · New Cannibal ...
  175. [175]
    Black Mass Murder: Extreme Metal and the PMRC - PopMatters
    Oct 30, 2015 · A mainstream metal band like The Black Dahlia Murder is more explicit than anything the Parents Music Resource Center sought to regulate in 1985.
  176. [176]
    Cannibal Corpse lyrics and artwork banned in Russia for 'damaging ...
    Dec 2, 2014 · Cannibal Corpse lyrics and artwork banned in Russia for 'damaging the mental health of children'. Russian court say the band promote 'violence, ...
  177. [177]
    Psychosocial risks and benefits of exposure to heavy metal music ...
    May 25, 2022 · Concerns have been raised that prolonged exposure to heavy metal music with aggressive themes can increase the risk of aggression, anger, antisocial behaviour.
  178. [178]
    [PDF] The Effects of Songs With Violent Lyrics on Aggressive Thoughts ...
    Five experiments examined effects of songs with violent lyrics on aggressive thoughts and hostile feelings. Experiments 1, 3, 4 and 5 demonstrated that ...
  179. [179]
    A meta-analysis on the relationships between violent song lyrics and ...
    Apr 7, 2025 · Violent lyrics in heavy metal music can increase aggression in males. North American Journal of Psychology, 13(1), 63–64. Merz, Z. C., Lace ...
  180. [180]
    Passion for Violently Themed Music and Psychological Well-Being
    Nov 30, 2022 · Themes of violence in music are primarily found within extreme metal and rap subgenres and are characterised by lyrics that explicitly depict ...
  181. [181]
    Debunking the Persistent Myths About Heavy Metal Music and Its Fans
    Aug 7, 2025 · In a groundbreaking study spanning 47 cities, researchers discovered heavy metal fans exhibited 18% lower arrest rates than average citizens.
  182. [182]
    Are heavy metal music listeners more likely to commit crimes?
    Apr 3, 2012 · It has been suggested (particularly in the 1980s) that individuals that listen to heavy metal are more likely to be commit a crime.
  183. [183]
    George Fisher on the "Harm" of Cannibal Corpse Lyrics - YouTube
    Oct 30, 2024 · George Fisher on the "Harm" of Cannibal Corpse Lyrics. 552 views · 11 months ago #robbarrett #cannibalcorpseofficial #chrisbarnes ...more ...Missing: debunked | Show results with:debunked