Ordo Ad Chao
Ordo ab chao is a Latin phrase translating to "order out of chaos," adopted as the motto of the 33rd degree of Sovereign Grand Inspector General in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish Rite of Freemasonry.[1][2] The emblem signifies the transformation of disorder into structured harmony, mirroring the Masonic process of refining the individual from a state of moral confusion—symbolized by the rough ashlar—to enlightened perfection.[1] It draws parallels to creation myths where form emerges from primordial void, emphasizing themes of enlightenment emerging from ignorance, akin to the companion motto lux ex tenebris ("light from darkness").[1] Historically, the phrase entered Masonic documentation in the early 19th century, notably in a 1802 patent issued by Count Alexandre François Auguste de Grasse under the Supreme Council at Charleston, reflecting efforts to impose order on the proliferating and chaotic array of higher Masonic degrees.[3] Its adoption by Supreme Councils worldwide underscores the Scottish Rite's foundational aim to standardize rituals derived from earlier French and continental sources, as preserved in documents like the Francken Manuscripts.[2] The motto appears prominently on seals, flags, and regalia of the Order of the Sovereign Grand Inspectors General, often paired with symbols like the Teutonic cross and nine-pointed star.[3] In Masonic philosophy, ordo ab chao encapsulates not a blueprint for societal upheaval but a personal and ritualistic imperative for discipline amid entropy, central to the 33rd degree's conferral of honorary leadership within the Rite's hierarchy.[1][2]
Background
Band History and Context
Mayhem was founded in 1984 in Oslo, Norway, by guitarist Øystein Aarseth (Euronymous), bassist Jørn Stubberud (Necrobutcher), and drummer Kjetil Manheim, initially drawing influence from bands like Venom, Slayer, and Celtic Frost to pioneer elements of what became the Norwegian black metal scene.[4][5] In 1988, vocalist Per Yngve Ohlin (Dead) and drummer Jan Axel Blomberg (Hellhammer) joined, solidifying a core lineup amid early demos and live performances that emphasized raw aggression and corpse paint aesthetics.[6] Dead's suicide by self-inflicted knife wounds and shotgun blast on April 8, 1991, in the band's rehearsal space—where Euronymous reportedly photographed the body for the 1991 bootleg album cover Dawn of the Black Hearts—intensified the band's cult notoriety, though such acts stemmed from personal psychological turmoil rather than coordinated ideology.[7][8] The band's trajectory shifted dramatically on August 10, 1993, when bassist Varg Vikernes murdered Euronymous by stabbing him 23 times in his Oslo apartment, an event rooted in escalating personal and ideological disputes within the scene, including Vikernes's rejection of Euronymous's perceived commercialization of black metal.[9][10] This led to temporary disbandment and lineup flux, with Necrobutcher departing amid internal conflicts and Hellhammer maintaining continuity; the posthumous release of De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas on May 24, 1994, featured Hungarian vocalist Attila Csihar's contributions from 1992 sessions, marking a sonic peak in atmospheric black metal despite the chaos.[11] Following a period of inactivity, the band reformed with vocalist Sven Erik Kristiansen (Maniac), issuing the EP Wolf's Lair Abyss on October 31, 1997, which reaffirmed raw black metal roots, before the experimental Grand Declaration of War in 2000 diverged into industrial elements, prompting fan division.[12][13] Mayhem's history unfolded amid the second-wave Norwegian black metal scene of the early 1990s, characterized by overt anti-Christian rhetoric and acts like church arsons—perpetrated by scene affiliates such as Vikernes, who confessed to burning historic stave churches like Fantoft in 1992 as symbolic rejection of institutionalized Christianity—reflecting youth-driven backlash against Norway's state Lutheran church amid broader cultural secularization, though not all participants shared pagan revivalist motives and many acts were isolated criminal impulses rather than organized movement.[14] The band's pivotal role in fostering this milieu through Euronymous's Helvete record shop as a scene hub amplified their influence, yet post-1993 instability, including Maniac's volatile tenure leading to Chimera's release on March 29, 2004—a return to stripped-down black metal aggression—demonstrated resilience amid personnel turnover and legal shadows from the era's violence.[15][7]Path to the Album
Following the release of Chimera on April 5, 2004, Mayhem experienced a significant lineup shift when vocalist Sven Erik Kristiansen (Maniac) departed in November 2004, citing personal issues and an inability to commit to touring.[16] The band quickly recruited Attila Csihar as replacement, marking his return since performing on the 1994 album De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas.[16] This decision was driven by a aim to recapture the vocal ferocity and atmospheric depth that defined De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, thereby reinforcing continuity with Mayhem's foundational black metal sound rather than pursuing further experimentation.[17] Drummer Jan Axel Blomberg (Hellhammer), the band's longest-standing member and primary compositional anchor, spearheaded the songwriting for Ordo ad Chao amid this transition.[18] With guitarist Rune Eriksen (Blasphemer) and bassist Jørn Stubberud (Necrobutcher) retaining their roles from Chimera, Hellhammer focused on distilling the material to its aggressive essence, eschewing the electronic and progressive flourishes of earlier works like Grand Declaration of War (2000).[19] The core lineup's stability enabled this inward pivot, emphasizing rhythmic intensity and structural primitivism over layered production.[20] The creative direction prioritized a return to black metal's unadorned aggression, deliberately avoiding symphonic or orchestral augmentations that had crept into some Norwegian scene contemporaries.[21] Hellhammer's drumming, recorded with minimal processing—relying on natural room sound and selective bass drum triggering—underscored this ethos, yielding a "necro" aesthetic that rejected polished sterility in favor of visceral, chaotic immediacy.[22] This approach reflected a conscious reclamation of the genre's raw origins, positioning Ordo ad Chao as a corrective to prior deviations while leveraging Csihar's reunion to amplify thematic and sonic extremity.[23]Title and Conceptual Framework
Etymology and Inversion
The Latin phrase ordo ad chao translates to "order to chaos," employing the preposition ad to denote direction toward or into chaos, in contrast to the traditional formulation ordo ab chao, meaning "order out of chaos." This alteration shifts the implication from emergence of structure amid disorder—a concept rooted in Hermetic and alchemical traditions—to an intentional progression from imposed order into dissolution.[24] The phrase ordo ab chao serves as a motto in Freemasonry, particularly associated with the 33rd degree of the Scottish Rite, symbolizing the fraternity's philosophical aim of deriving harmony from primordial disarray through rational and esoteric principles.[25] Mayhem's adoption of the inverted form deliberately subverts this Masonic emblem, announced initially as Ordo Ab Chao before correction to emphasize the reversal, signaling a philosophical rejection of constructive order in favor of precipitating entropy.[18] Guitarist Blasphemer (Rune Eriksen) articulated this intent in a 2007 interview, describing the title as evoking "a path towards chaos," aligning with the band's exploration of themes dismantling societal and metaphysical constructs.[26] This inversion draws from occult inversions common in black metal aesthetics, repurposing esoteric symbols to critique perceived artificial hierarchies rather than affirm them, as evidenced by the album's raw production eschewing polished modernity for primal dissonance.[27] Within black metal's broader ideological framework, the title encapsulates a causal realism toward modernity's "order"—state institutions, religious dogmas, and cultural homogenization—as stifling illusions warranting deliberate unraveling, verifiable in Mayhem's consistent output prioritizing sonic and thematic upheaval over accessibility.[18] The artwork, featuring fragmented, shadowy motifs evoking crumbling edifices against void-like backgrounds, reinforces this descent, symbolizing the band's empirical stance against Enlightenment-derived progress narratives as veils over inherent disorder. Such elements underscore an anti-establishment ethos, prioritizing existential rupture over restorative synthesis, without reliance on unverified conspiratorial interpretations.Thematic Philosophy
The thematic philosophy underlying Ordo ad Chao posits chaos not as mere disorder, but as the authentic state of existence, preferable to the artificial orders imposed by modern societal structures. The album's title, deliberately inverting the traditional Latin phrase "ordo ab chao" (order from chaos), symbolizes a deliberate regression from contrived harmony to primal entropy, reflecting black metal's rejection of synthetic stability in favor of raw, unmediated reality.[28] Vocalist Attila Csihar articulated this as a commentary on "a sick society," interpreting "Ordo" as denoting a societal system inherently geared "towards chaos" or destined to precipitate it through its own contradictions.[29] [30] This view critiques progressive or egalitarian frameworks as illusions that suppress natural hierarchies and vital forces, leading to inevitable breakdown rather than genuine resolution. Central to this philosophy is a first-principles affirmation of entropy as the causal driver of life, where imposed moral or social orders—often rooted in Judeo-Christian paradigms—stifle authentic human impulses toward extremity and self-assertion. Drummer Jan Axel Blomberg (Hellhammer), a foundational figure in Mayhem, has consistently framed black metal as a liberation from such frameworks, emphasizing in interviews the genre's role in dismantling inherited moral constraints to reclaim pre-Christian vitality.[31] This aligns with observable patterns in the Norwegian black metal scene of the early 1990s, where acts like church arsons served as symbolic repudiations of institutionalized order, prioritizing pagan primalism and individual will over collective harmony. Empirical evidence from the era's documented events underscores this causal realism: suppressed primal energies, when denied outlet, erupt as chaotic extremism rather than dissipating into conformity. Influences manifest in Nietzschean eternal recurrence, demanding full embrace of chaos's repetitive flux without recourse to redemptive narratives, and Gnostic dualism, which rejects the demiurge's flawed creation as false order in favor of transcendent, disruptive truth. These elements underpin the album's conceptual intent, portraying chaos as the liberating force against demiurgic impositions, with pagan primalism evoking pre-modern Europe's untamed naturalism as a model for existential authenticity. Band members' statements reinforce this without idealizing disorder; instead, it emerges as the honest alternative to decaying societal artifices, evidenced by the album's dense, atonal sonics mirroring philosophical entropy.[18]Production Process
Recording Sessions
The recording sessions for Ordo ad Chao occurred primarily at Mølla Studio in Gjerstad, Norway, from November 13 to December 4, 2006, encompassing the majority of the album's tracks.[32] This roughly three-week timeframe facilitated the capture of the band's core instrumentation, including drums by Hellhammer, guitars and bass by Blasphemer, bass by Necrobutcher, and vocals by Attila Csihar, who also served as a producer alongside Blasphemer.[32][33] A portion of the album, specifically the second half of the opening track "A Wise Birthgiver," was recorded separately in September 2006 at Myhome-Yourtomb Studio in Almada, Portugal.[34] These sessions marked the first full-length Mayhem album to feature Csihar on vocals since 1994's De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, with the logistical coordination enabling the band's return to a stable recording lineup following lineup changes.[32] The expedited schedule at Mølla Studio prioritized efficiency in tracking, aligning with the band's approach to delivering a raw black metal sound without extended delays.[33]Technical and Artistic Decisions
The production of Ordo ad Chao, influenced heavily by drummer Hellhammer, employed a deliberate raw and necrotic sound to mirror themes of decay and disorder, eschewing the high-fidelity norms of modern metal production. This intentional lo-fi aesthetic, marked by minimal compression and dynamic restraint, creates a visceral, unbalanced mix where low-end frequencies overwhelm stereo imaging and guitar tones sustain feedback-laden distortion, fostering an auditory experience of controlled chaos rather than technical deficiency.[19][35] Such choices causally amplify the album's thematic intent, as the necrotic haze—described by Hellhammer himself—evokes entropy without compromising the band's anti-commercial ethos.[35] Mixing decisions prioritized the rhythm section's primal aggression, with drums captured raw sans equalization to preserve unpolished ferocity, allowing bass and percussion to drive the sonic assault amid obscured melodic layers. This minimalist approach, diverging from clarity-focused paradigms, aligns with black metal's purity by emphasizing live-like intensity and sonic bleed, where elements collide to heighten tension and reject polished accessibility.[36][37] Artistically, the cover and packaging, designed by Kim Sølve and Trine Paulsen of Trine + Kim Design Studio, incorporate chaotic infernal motifs—fractured symbols and abyssal voids—that visually echo the album's philosophical inversion, reinforcing perceptual disorder through abstract, hellish iconography.[38][39]Musical Elements
Style and Sonic Characteristics
Ordo ad Chao exhibits a raw black metal style defined by hypersonic blast beats from drummer Hellhammer, relentless tremolo-picked riffs, and dissonant, eerie atmospheres that evoke the band's foundational 1990s sound while amplifying tension through abrupt shifts and unstructured progressions.[40][41][18] This approach represents a stylistic pivot from the more experimental and industrial elements of Chimera (2004), embracing sustained ferocity across tracks averaging about 5 minutes, with minimal repetition and an emphasis on improvisational intensity over melodic accessibility.[42] Riff constructions and Hellhammer's drumming patterns draw from early Mayhem aggression and peers like Darkthrone, prioritizing primal dissonance and volume swells over conventional song structures, resulting in a lo-fi yet potent sonic assault.[19][20][18]Composition and Instrumentation
The compositions for Ordo ad Chao were primarily crafted by guitarist Blasphemer (Rune Eriksen), who handled the core riffing, arrangements, and much of the bass tracking, resulting in a dense, layered foundation that eschews conventional verse-chorus progressions in favor of disjointed, riff-driven sequences.[26][43] This approach fosters cohesion through interlocking guitar patterns that form impenetrable walls of sound, with Blasphemer's dual role on guitar and bass enabling tight synchronization and harmonic depth without external contributions from bassist Necrobutcher, who received credit but did not participate in the recordings.[28][40] Drummer Hellhammer (Jan Axel Blomberg) provided essential input on rhythmic structures, emphasizing asynchronous blasts and fills that propel the tracks' chaotic momentum and prevent stagnation, often prioritizing percussive intensity over strict synchronization to heighten disorientation.[44] His performances were recorded raw, without equalization except for bass drum triggering, preserving an organic, unpolished aggression that aligns with the album's rejection of digital over-processing.[45] Guitars relied on analog amplification for distortion, generating feedback-laden tones that blend into monolithic textures, while bass lines—also analog-tracked—reinforce low-end girth without modern enhancements, contributing to the overall sonic murk that unifies the instrumentation's ferocity.[46] Song structures incorporate repetitive motifs amid abrupt shifts and incremental build-ups, diverging from pop-oriented formats to cultivate sustained psychological tension through accumulation rather than resolution.[19][47]Lyrical Content and Ideology
Core Themes
The lyrics of Ordo ad Chao recurrently explore motifs of cosmic annihilation and apocalyptic dissolution, as evidenced in "Anti," which declares imperatives to "make war with the universe," precipitate the "death of the planet," and induce the "fall of an aeon" through sorcery and deluded revelations.[48] Similarly, "Wall of Water" depicts structural collapse with "pillars supporting sky crumble" and celestial bodies cascading into a deluge that quenches primordial fire, symbolizing engineered order's submersion in primordial flux.[48][49] Blasphemous inversion of creation narratives permeates tracks like "A Wise Birthgiver," framing the demiurgic entity as a "wise birthgiver" who animates "primitive worker" solely to "bear the yoke assigned," thereby rejecting Abrahamic portrayals of benevolent genesis in favor of coercive imposition.[48][50] This extends to occult invocations of disruptive forces, such as in "Great Work of Ages Begins," invoking serpentine wisdom and abyssal awakening to dismantle aeonic cycles.[48] "Illuminate! Eliminate!" critiques purported enlightenment as illusory, urging return to an originary void—"where I came from… I must return"—eschewing "love no hate no faith no memory" and humanity's collective delusions ("fuck the race") for isolated traversal into "another sphere" of utter emptiness.[51][52] Such themes prioritize raw, hierarchical assertions of will—embodied in predatory or self-dissolving autonomy—over ethical collectivism, positing chaos not as mere disorder but as a liberating metaphysical primacy that eclipses imposed stability, inverting the titular ordo ad chao into advocacy for perpetual rupture.[48][53]Controversial Interpretations
The lyrics of Ordo ad Chao, penned primarily by vocalist Attila Csihar, have been defended by band members as abstract philosophical explorations of chaos, renewal, and existential rupture rather than direct calls to action. Drummer Jan Axel Blomhberg, known as Hellhammer, described the album's content in a 2013 interview as multi-dimensional and spiritual, emphasizing its intent to evoke deeper introspection over superficial provocation.[54] This stance aligns with Mayhem's broader artistic philosophy, positioning the work within black metal's tradition of symbolic extremity as a critique of modernity's complacency, not literal incitement. Csihar's contributions, drawing from esoteric and apocalyptic motifs, avoid explicit directives for violence, focusing instead on themes of cosmic upheaval and deconsecration as metaphorical processes.[55] Critics from leftist and mainstream outlets have interpreted these elements as veiled endorsements of hate and disorder, particularly in light of the Norwegian black metal scene's 1990s history of church arsons—over 50 incidents between 1992 and 1996, some linked to scene figures—and Euronymous's earlier manifestos advocating confrontation.[56] Post-release media scrutiny, including accusations tying the album to residual "terrorism" glorification, amplified claims that tracks like "Illuminate Eliminate" and "Deconsecrate" normalize anti-social aggression, potentially inspiring emulation amid rising European concerns over extremism in the mid-2000s. Anti-fascist commentators have highlighted Hellhammer's personal imagery—such as Nazi-era uniforms worn in performances and SS-rune signatures—as evidence of underlying ideological sympathy, framing the lyrics' misanthropy as a dog-whistle for authoritarian rejection of democratic norms.[57] [58] These interpretations, often from ideologically opposed sources like antifascist blogs, overlook the band's disavowal of organized politics while emphasizing perceived risks to societal cohesion. Right-leaning and traditionalist admirers have praised the album's undertones as a realist antidote to egalitarian illusions, interpreting pagan-infused imagery—evident in tracks evoking pre-Christian Nordic motifs and anti-universalist disdain—as affirmations of hierarchical natural orders over imposed equality. This view resonates with black metal's philosophical fringes, where anti-egalitarian thought finds expression in lyrics decrying mass conformity, as noted in analyses portraying the genre as a rare cultural outlet for unfiltered hierarchy and tribal identity amid modern dilutions.[59] Empirical schisms in the scene underscore this: by the 2000s, purist factions rejected "commercial" dilutions incorporating progressive elements, while NSBM (National Socialist Black Metal) subgenres—numbering dozens of acts like Absurd and Grand Belial's Key—explicitly fused pagan revivalism with ethno-nationalism, contrasting with mainstream black metal's apolitical pose but amplifying debates over authenticity. Mayhem's output, neither fully endorsing nor rejecting these edges, has fueled right-leaning appreciation for its unflinching realism against "PC" sanitization. The album's interpretations have sparked enduring debates on artistic liberty versus protective measures, with proponents crediting it for challenging censorship norms—e.g., its 2007 Norwegian chart debut at #12 despite thematic intensity—while detractors cite real-world echoes, such as sporadic copycat arsons in Scandinavia into the 2000s, as evidence of emulation hazards. This tension highlights black metal's dual legacy: a catalyst for free expression in niche subcultures, balanced against the causal potential for isolated radicalization in vulnerable listeners, though no direct causal links to Ordo ad Chao have been empirically established.[56]Release and Market Performance
Launch and Promotion
Ordo ad Chao was released on April 23, 2007, through Season of Mist, available in standard CD formats alongside limited-edition variants such as a digipak and a metal slipcase edition capped at 3,000 units.[60][28] The rollout leveraged the label's established distribution in the European underground metal scene, with initial shipments targeting specialty retailers and mail-order services catering to black metal enthusiasts.[60] Marketing efforts centered on the return of vocalist Attila Csihar, whose prior contributions to Mayhem's 1994 album De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas positioned him as a key draw for purists seeking continuity with the band's foundational era.[61] Promotional materials and interviews, including those with guitarist Blasphemer (Rune Eriksen), underscored the album's deliberate rejection of polished production in favor of a raw, unsettling aesthetic, framing it as a defiant statement of artistic autonomy amid evolving genre trends.[62] Season of Mist's announcements portrayed the release as a resurgence of Mayhem's "infamous" status, emphasizing thematic chaos over broad appeal.[60] The launch integrated with Mayhem's live activities, including a 2007 U.S. tour that showcased tracks from the album alongside staples, reinforcing the band's reputation for visceral, unpredictable performances that echoed Ordo ad Chao's motifs of disorder.[63] European engagements, aligned with black metal festival circuits, further promoted the record through on-stage intensity and merchandise tie-ins, capitalizing on the subculture's emphasis on authenticity and extremity rather than mainstream media outreach.[26]Commercial Metrics and Recognition
Ordo Ad Chao entered the Norwegian albums chart at No. 12 upon its release in April 2007, marking Mayhem's highest chart position to date.[64][65] This performance reflected the band's established status within Norway's metal scene, though black metal's underground orientation limited broader mainstream penetration.[66] The album received the Spellemannprisen, Norway's premier music award akin to the Grammy, for Best Metal Album in the 2007 category, announced in early 2008.[67] This accolade underscored its critical and subcultural impact, distinguishing it among nominees including Dimmu Borgir's In Sorte Diaboli.[68] In September 2025, Season of Mist issued a limited-edition marbled vinyl reissue (gold/orange/black), signaling ongoing collector demand nearly two decades post-release.[69] Such repressions highlight the album's enduring appeal to dedicated fans rather than mass-market sales, consistent with black metal's reliance on niche loyalty over widespread commercial metrics.[70]Reception
Critical Evaluations
Critics lauded Ordo ad Chao for its cohesive aggression and Attila Csihar's commanding vocal delivery, marking a raw return to the band's early intensity following more polished efforts like Chimera (2004).[41] [71] Csihar's performance, featuring guttural croaks, shrieks, and maniacal inflections, was frequently praised for amplifying the album's psychotic and oppressive mood, with one review describing it as a "beast behind the microphone" that evoked nightmares.[23] [72] Aggregated professional and enthusiast critiques on platforms like Encyclopaedia Metallum yielded an average rating of 79% across 23 reviews, underscoring appreciation for the album's unyielding ferocity and departure toward dissonant black metal elements.[73] Conversely, the production—handled by the band itself at the Red Room Studio in Oslo from late 2006—drew substantial criticism for its deliberate murkiness, which buried riffs and details under a layer of distortion, rendering parts inaudible even on high-end systems.[73] [46] Reviewers debated whether this "necro" opacity, echoing 1980s demos, constituted an artistic triumph for evoking primal chaos or a technical flaw that compromised the material's impact after the clearer mixes of prior releases.[74] [71] Some outlets, such as Metal Temple, labeled it "incredibly awful," arguing it undermined the otherwise strong songwriting.[23] Additional detractors pointed to compositional stagnation, with repetitive riffs and mid-tempo plodding failing to advance beyond the band's 1994 blueprint on De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas, despite Csihar's reprise from that era.[75] [76] Genre traditionalists countered such views by defending the unadulterated aggression as essential to black metal's ethos, prioritizing atmospheric immersion over accessibility or novelty.[19]Audience and Subcultural Response
Fans on platforms such as Reddit and Encyclopaedia Metallum frequently praise Ordo ad Chao for its authenticity and chaotic intensity, positioning it as Mayhem's premier effort following their 1990s classics like De Mysteriis Dom Sathanas.[77][18] Discussions in black metal communities highlight its rewarding depth for dedicated listeners, with users describing it as a "killer" return to form that demands repeated engagement to appreciate its power and atmosphere.[78][79] The album's production, characterized by a dense, smothered, and low-fidelity mix, divides subcultural opinions along generational lines. Old-school enthusiasts value its raw, "necro" murkiness as a purist affirmation of black metal's underground ethos, arguing it evokes an ancient, cavernous relic-like quality that enhances the thematic disorder.[80][18] In contrast, newer or broader metal fans often decry the muffled sound—particularly the obscured highs and thin drums—as a flaw hindering clarity and accessibility, though some concede its gradual sonic evolution across tracks adds intrigue.[79][81] Contrarian voices within these forums reject the hype, labeling Ordo ad Chao as erratic, unfocused, and derivative amid black metal's mid-2000s proliferation, with critiques pointing to its abrupt shifts and poor mixing as undermining the riff-driven core rather than elevating it.[76][82] Such dissent underscores a broader subcultural tension between innovation and adherence to genre purity, though acclaim for its unhinged vocal delivery and atmospheric grit persists among defenders.[83][84]Personnel
- Attila Csihar – vocals, producer, mastering[85]
- Blasphemer (Rune Eriksen) – guitar, bass, backing vocals[85][86]
- Hellhammer (Jan Axel Blomberg) – drums[85][86]
- Necrobutcher (Jørn Stubberud) – bass[85]
- Knut Valle – engineering[85]
- Kim Sølve, Trine Paulsen – artwork[85]
Track Listing
| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "A Wise Birthgiver" | 3:30[87][88] |
| 2 | "Wall of Water" | 4:40[87][88] |
| 3 | "Great Work of Ages" | 3:52[87][88] |
| 4 | "Deconsecrate" | 4:07[87][88] |
| 5 | "Illuminate Eliminate" | 9:40[88][89] |
| 6 | "Psychic Horns" | 2:34[88][89] |
| 7 | "Key to the Storms" | 3:12[89][90] |
| 8 | "Antireligioso" | 4:31[89][90] |