Reek of Putrefaction
Reek of Putrefaction is the debut studio album by the English extreme metal band Carcass, released in July 1988 through Earache Records.[1] The record compiles 22 blisteringly short tracks—totaling just under 40 minutes—originally derived from the band's early demos, featuring relentless blast beats, guttural vocals, and graphic, medically inspired lyrics centered on decomposition and pathology.[2] Divided into two conceptual sides titled "Faecal Disarticulation" and "Anal Disgorgement," each containing 11 songs, it exemplifies the raw, lo-fi production typical of early grindcore.[2] Carcass formed in Liverpool in 1985, initially as a D-beat punk outfit named Disattack by guitarist Bill Steer and drummer Ken Owen, before vocalist and bassist Jeff Walker joined and the group rebranded to focus on extreme metal.[3] The album was recorded at Rich Bitch Studios in Birmingham, England, between December 1987 and March 1988, with Steer, Walker, and Owen comprising the lineup.[4] Its cover artwork, depicting a mutilated cadaver, underscores the band's signature gore aesthetic, which pushed boundaries in extreme music visuals.[5] Reek of Putrefaction is widely recognized as a foundational release in the grindcore and goregrind subgenres, blending punk aggression with death metal elements to pioneer a style defined by its visceral themes and intensity.[5] The album's influence extends to the broader extreme metal landscape, helping to shape the sound of subsequent bands and contributing to Carcass's evolution toward more melodic death metal in later works.[3] Despite its abrasive production and shocking content, it has achieved cult status, with numerous reissues over the decades attesting to its enduring impact.[2]Background
Formation of Carcass
Carcass was formed in Liverpool, England, in 1985 by guitarist Bill Steer and drummer Ken Owen as a D-beat punk band initially named Disattack.[6][7] The band emerged from the local punk and hardcore scene, with Steer and Owen drawing on influences from the era's anarcho-punk and D-beat styles during their school years.[8] In late 1986, following the departure of Disattack's original bassist after their 1986 demo, the band recruited Jeff Walker—also known as J. Jeff—who took on bass and vocal duties, prompting a name change to Carcass to reflect their evolving extreme metal aspirations.[6][7] This transition marked a shift from pure D-beat punk toward a more aggressive, grind-infused sound.[9] By early 1987, the lineup had stabilized with Steer handling guitar and vocals, Walker on bass and vocals, and Owen on drums, forming the core trio that would define the band's initial years.[8][9] This configuration allowed for greater creative control, as Steer and Owen had previously clashed with earlier members over songwriting and direction.[9] In 1987, Steer briefly joined Napalm Death as a guitarist from 1987 to 1989, an overlap that introduced grindcore elements to Carcass's developing style.[10] This period of dual band involvement helped refine Carcass's intensity ahead of their debut album.[7]Early influences and demos
Carcass drew significant early influences from the burgeoning grindcore and hardcore scenes, blending the chaotic energy of punk acts like the Sex Pistols with the relentless speed of American hardcore bands such as Siege, Dirty Rotten Imbeciles, and Millions of Dead Cops.[11] This foundation merged with thrash metal elements from Slayer and the atmospheric heaviness of early death metal pioneers like Celtic Frost, shaping the band's raw, aggressive sound.[12] Additionally, proximity to local grindcore innovators Napalm Death provided direct inspiration, as guitarist Bill Steer had previously contributed to their debut album Scum.[13] The band's initial recordings captured this intensity in primitive form, beginning with 1986 rehearsal tapes that featured rudimentary setups of blistering riffs and blast beats, often limited to Steer on guitar and drummer Ken Owen. These sessions, conducted in Liverpool shortly after the band's 1985 formation, laid the groundwork for their sonic assault without formal production. This culminated in Disattack's only demo, A Bomb Drops, released in 1986.[14] Following Walker's recruitment and the name change, Carcass released the demo Flesh Ripping Sonic Torment in 1987, a raw grindcore outing comprising tracks like "Genital Grinder," "Regurgitation of Giblets," "Festerday," and "Limb from Limb," which previewed the unrelenting ferocity and short, explosive song structures that would define Reek of Putrefaction.[15][14] Lyrically, the band underwent a conceptual shift toward gore and medical themes, initially driven by Owen's fantasy-oriented horror imagery before Walker assumed primary writing duties. Walker's fascination with pathology—drawn from medical textbooks rather than formal study—and horror films informed this evolution, infusing lyrics with precise anatomical terminology and visceral decay motifs to evoke disgust and dark humor.[16][17][18] This thematic direction distinguished Carcass from peers, emphasizing clinical horror over mere shock value. The demo's circulation garnered attention from Earache Records, who had recently championed grindcore through Napalm Death; impressed by the tape's extremity, the label signed Carcass in 1987, prompting the decision to expand their material into a full-length debut album.[19] This pivotal step transformed the band's rehearsal and demo experiments into a professional recording opportunity, solidifying their path in the extreme metal underground.Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording of Reek of Putrefaction took place from December 1987 to March 1988 at Rich Bitch Studios in Birmingham, England, with basic tracking of guitars, bass, drums, and vocals completed over four intensive days in a rushed schedule dictated by limited studio availability.[4][20] Due to their relative inexperience in studio environments, Carcass members handled much of the setup and preparation themselves, with the engineer's role confined primarily to basic capture of the performances.[21][22] The overall process was tightly constrained by Earache Records' deadline, aiming for a summer 1988 release.Technical challenges
The production of Reek of Putrefaction was marked by significant technical difficulties stemming from the band's inexperience and constrained resources during the four-day recording sessions at Rich Bitch Studios in Birmingham, England. Guitarist Bill Steer reflected on this period, stating, "We were totally inexperienced as far as studio work went, and it really showed in the end result. The album is completely sloppy. We hated it at the time and now we just look back on it with amusement more than anything." This lack of studio savvy contributed to an unfocused audio balance and overall low fidelity, as the young trio navigated unfamiliar equipment and processes without prior guidance.[21] A primary source of frustration was the studio engineer Mike Ivory, whom Steer blamed for destroying the recordings, particularly through excessive compression on the drum tracks that rendered them muddy and distorted.[22][23] Steer described the engineer's work as that of "an incompetent fool," noting that "there are some good riffs on Reek, unfortunately most of them are ruined by the production" and that the result was "the most horrible sounding record of all time. We created a monstrosity." The limited mixing time—restricted to just a few hours—exacerbated these issues, preventing any meaningful adjustments to achieve clarity or separation in the instrumentation.[24] Earache Records enlisted producer Paul Talbot to attempt salvaging the sessions, handling mixing, re-recording, and engineering duties in a bid to refine the raw material. Despite these efforts, Steer characterized the final sound as largely accidental, a byproduct of the band's novice status rather than intentional artistic choice, which inadvertently shaped the album's signature lo-fi, chaotic aesthetic.[22]Musical style and themes
Genre classification
Reek of Putrefaction is widely recognized as the inaugural album in the goregrind subgenre, pioneering a fusion of grindcore's relentless speed and brevity with death metal's guttural heaviness and pathological gore-themed lyrics.[20] This classification stems from the band's deliberate emphasis on visceral, horror-infused extremity, distinguishing it from earlier grindcore works by incorporating more elaborate death metal structures.[25] The album's core characteristics include frenetic blast beats on drums, down-tuned guitar riffs that deliver a thick, oppressive tone, and extremely short song durations averaging 1 to 2 minutes across its 22 tracks.[26][27] These elements create a chaotic, high-velocity assault that prioritizes intensity over melody, with occasional whammy bar solos adding brief flashes of technical flair.[28] While rooted in grindcore's punk-derived aggression—influenced briefly by acts like Napalm Death and Celtic Frost—the album departs from pure grindcore through enhanced riff complexity and integrated soloing, laying groundwork for subsequent deathgrind hybrids.[26][29] Its production, unintentionally "muddy" and raw due to the band's inexperience and studio limitations, amplifies the chaotic, visceral atmosphere, turning technical shortcomings into a defining, immersive quality that enhances the album's putrid aesthetic.[26][29]Lyrics and gore motifs
The lyrics of Reek of Putrefaction center on forensic pathology, human decomposition, and surgical horror, drawing inspiration from medical textbooks and the band's fascination with visceral, clinical descriptions of death.[16][18] Bassist and vocalist Jeff Walker borrowed a medical dictionary from his sister, a nursing student, to incorporate grotesque terminology, aiming to create the most repulsive imagery possible.[16] Drummer Ken Owen contributed by introducing complex medical jargon, elevating the gore beyond simple shock value into a pseudo-scientific lexicon of decay and mutilation.[18] This approach rooted the themes in reality, focusing on universal bodily horror rather than targeted violence.[18] Representative examples illustrate the album's obsession with graphic bodily processes. In "Genital Grinder," Walker depicts mutilation through lines evoking the grinding of flesh and organs into a pulpy mass, emphasizing emasculation and evisceration.[30] Similarly, "Maggot Colony" portrays infestation and putrefaction, with imagery of larvae consuming rotting tissue from within a corpse, underscoring the inexorable breakdown of human remains.[30] These motifs recur across tracks, blending forensic detail with morbid humor to explore the indignity of death.[20] The vocals integrate these themes through a delivery style of growled and screamed utterances, often rendered indecipherable by the album's raw production, prioritizing atmospheric immersion over lyrical clarity.[31][32] Jeff Walker's raspier growls and Bill Steer's guttural contributions create a tortured, chaotic sound that mirrors the lyrical frenzy of decomposition.[31] This lyrical extremity played a pivotal role in establishing goregrind as a subgenre, distinguishing Reek of Putrefaction from the political and social critiques prevalent in contemporaneous grindcore acts like Napalm Death.[20] By prioritizing forensic gore over activism, the album set a benchmark for thematic intensity in extreme metal, influencing subsequent bands to adopt similar medical-infused horror.[20]Release
Initial release
Reek of Putrefaction was released on 28 July 1988 by Earache Records, initially available in vinyl and cassette formats, with the first standalone CD version following in 1994.[1][2] The album's promotion relied heavily on the underground metal scene, including features in fanzines, live performances alongside grindcore contemporaries such as Napalm Death, and Earache's established distribution channels within the independent music network.[33][34] The initial pressing showcased a controversial cover featuring a collage of autopsy photographs sourced from forensic medicine texts, designed by bassist/vocalist Jeff Walker to provoke extreme metal enthusiasts and align with the album's gore-themed aesthetic.[20] BBC Radio 1 DJ John Peel endorsed the album as his favorite release of 1988, which significantly increased its airplay on his influential show and enhanced its visibility in the UK underground circuit.[20][26] Upon release, it peaked at No. 6 on the UK Indie Chart.[20]Reissues and variants
In 1994, Earache Records issued a CD reissue of Reek of Putrefaction with a clean cover.[35] A 2002 edition followed, produced with a censored outer cover that blacked out graphic images to address distributor concerns over content sensitivity, though the interior retained the unaltered original artwork.[33] The album received a significant remaster in 2008 to coincide with Carcass's reunion, released as a limited-edition DualDisc by Earache Records; this version included the core tracks alongside 13 bonus tracks sourced from the band's 1987 Flesh Ripping Sonic Torment demo, as well as part 1 of a mini-documentary series titled The Pathologist's Report.[36] In 2020, Earache released the MMXX edition, a remastered version using Full Dynamic Range (FDR) mastering, available on CD and limited vinyl in three colors.[37] During the 2010s, Reek of Putrefaction became available through various digital platforms, including streaming services and downloads, preserving the original track order without additional alterations.[38][39] Vinyl re-pressings continued into the 2020s, such as the 2021 white vinyl edition from Earache Records, which maintained the standard track listing and uncensored artwork in a limited run.[2]Artwork
Original design
The original cover art for Reek of Putrefaction was designed by Carcass bassist and vocalist Jeff Walker, who compiled a grotesque collage from autopsy photographs sourced from forensic medicine books and medical journals. These images prominently featured dismembered human corpses, exposed viscera, and other pathological details to visually embody the album's themes of bodily decay and decomposition.[20][40] Walker's design choices were deliberately provocative, aiming to evoke the visceral process of putrefaction while challenging listeners' tolerances and reinforcing Carcass's commitment to an uncompromised goregrind aesthetic. Encouraged by Earache Records founder Digby Pearson, the artwork sought to surpass conventional metal visuals in extremity, establishing the band as a boundary-pushing force in the underground scene.[20][16]Censorship and alterations
Upon its 1988 release, Reek of Putrefaction encountered no outright bans but provoked scrutiny, including concerns raised by an Australian MP in parliament, due to the album's intensely graphic cover art consisting of a collage of autopsy photographs sourced from medical textbooks.[41] A 1994 reissue featured a censored "clean" cover with anatomical drawings sourced from medical books.[42] The 2002 Earache Records reissue responded to pressures from US retailers by using a censored outer cover stating "Original artwork contained inside," while preserving the unaltered original images within the packaging.[2][42] The 2008 remastered edition, issued as a DualDisc in a deluxe digipak, incorporated the full original artwork but enclosed it in a white medical bag slipcase to align with contemporary distribution standards without compromising the album's visual intent.[43] Carcass vocalist and bassist Jeff Walker has defended the artwork as essential to the band's goregrind ethos, describing it as a deliberate act of exposing hidden medical imagery to confront societal taboos on decay and mortality, a stance that has fostered a dedicated collector culture among fans seeking uncensored variants and limited pressings.[41]Track listing and personnel
Track listing
All songs on Reek of Putrefaction were written by Carcass.[2] No singles were released from the album.[4] The original 1988 vinyl release divides the 22 tracks across two sides, with a total runtime of 39:41.[44] The track sequencing and numbering have remained consistent across subsequent editions.[1]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Faecal Disarticulation | ||
| 1. | "Genital Grinder" | 1:28 |
| 2. | "Regurgitation of Giblets" | 1:18 |
| 3. | "Maggot Colony" | 1:32 |
| 4. | "Pyosisified (Rotten to the Gore)" | 2:47 |
| 5. | "Carbonized Eye-Sockets" | 1:06 |
| 6. | "Frenzied Detruncation" | 0:54 |
| 7. | "Vomited Anal-Tract" | 1:38 |
| 8. | "Festerday" | 0:19 |
| 9. | "Fermenting Innards" | 2:29 |
| 10. | "Excreted Alive" | 1:17 |
| 11. | "Suppuration" | 2:14 |
| Anal Disgorgement | ||
| 12. | "Foeticide" | 2:38 |
| 13. | "Microwaved Uterogestation" | 1:22 |
| 14. | "Feast on Dismembered Carnage" | 1:23 |
| 15. | "Splattered Cavities" | 1:49 |
| 16. | "Psychopathologist" | 1:15 |
| 17. | "Burnt to a Crisp" | 2:37 |
| 18. | "Pungent Excruciation" | 2:26 |
| 19. | "Manifestation of Verrucose Urethra" | 0:58 |
| 20. | "Oxidised Razor Masticator" | 3:06 |
| 21. | "Mucopurulence Excretor" | 1:05 |
| 22. | "Malignant Defecation" | 2:10 |
Personnel credits
The album Reek of Putrefaction was performed by Carcass's core trio, with no guest musicians contributing to the recordings.[44] Band members- Bill Steer – guitar, vocals
- Jeff Walker – bass, vocals
- Ken Owen – drums, vocals[44]
- Carcass and Paul Talbot – producers
- Mike Ivory – engineer (initial recording)
- Paul Talbot – engineer (re-recording, mixing)
- Dig Pearson – executive producer[44]