Slowly We Rot
Slowly We Rot is the debut studio album by American death metal band Obituary, released on May 16, 1989, through R/C Records.[1][2] Recorded at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, and produced by Scott Burns, the album features a lineup consisting of vocalist John Tardy, lead guitarist Allen West, rhythm guitarist Trevor Peres, bassist Daniel Tucker, and drummer Donald Tardy.[3][4] It marks the only Obituary release with Tucker on bass, as he was replaced by Frank Watkins for subsequent albums.[3] The record comprises 12 tracks, including the title song "Slowly We Rot," and runs for approximately 35 minutes, showcasing the band's early sound characterized by slow, sludgy riffs, guttural vocals, and themes of death and decay.[2][5] Critically acclaimed within the metal community, Slowly We Rot is regarded as a foundational work in the death metal genre, influencing numerous bands with its raw production and atmospheric heaviness.[6] It holds an average review score of 83% across 23 user reviews on Encyclopaedia Metallum, often praised for its originality and brutality despite some criticisms of its lo-fi sound.[6] The album has been reissued multiple times, including by Roadrunner Records, and remains a staple for fans of early Florida death metal scenes.[2]Background and development
Band formation and early years
Obituary originated in the Tampa Bay area of Florida, where brothers John Tardy (vocals) and Donald Tardy (drums) formed the band in 1984 initially as Executioner, alongside guitarist Trevor Peres. The group quickly evolved amid the vibrant local metal scene, renaming to Xecutioner by 1986 and incorporating guitarist Allen West into the lineup. Bassist Daniel Tucker joined around 1988, completing the lineup for their debut album.[7][8] The band's formative years were deeply intertwined with Tampa's burgeoning death metal underground, a hotbed of innovation in the mid-1980s fueled by acts like Death—pioneered by Chuck Schuldiner with early demos such as Death by Metal (1984)—and Morbid Angel, whose aggressive, occult-infused style set a benchmark for extremity. Local venues like the Sunset Club hosted packed shows, while demo trading among bands fostered a collaborative yet competitive environment that pushed Xecutioner to refine their thrash-tinged death metal approach. John Tardy later recalled moving to Tampa as kids and drawing inspiration from neighborhood connections to groups like Nasty Savage and Savatage, which ignited their passion for heavy music.[9][8] Xecutioner's early output included the raw, Slayer-influenced Metal Up Your Ass demo in 1985, recorded as high schoolers at Morrisound Recording, followed by a 1986 tape featuring tracks like "Find the Arise" that showcased their shift toward slower, groove-heavy riffs. The band appeared on the Raging Death compilation that year with "Find the Arise" from their 1986 demo, while their separate 1987 demo featured songs such as "Enter the Gate of Hell" and "Fight to the Death," capturing a more mature death metal ferocity and exposing them to a wider audience. This final demo directly led to a multi-album deal with R/C Records (an imprint of Roadrunner), prompting the name change to Obituary in late 1988 as they prepared for their debut album.[7][10][11]Album conception and songwriting
Following the positive reception to their early demos recorded as Xecutioner, which included tracks that showcased the band's emerging death metal sound, Obituary decided to pursue a full-length debut album with R/C Records. Due to an accident forcing the original producer to leave the sessions, Scott Burns, an engineer at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, took over production, leveraging his growing reputation in the local scene for capturing raw, heavy tones. This decision marked a pivotal step in transitioning from garage-based experimentation to a professional recording project.[12][13] Songwriting for Slowly We Rot was a collaborative effort, with guitarists Trevor Peres and Allen West taking the lead on crafting the album's signature sludgy, groove-laden riffs, often starting from simple rhythm ideas. The Tardy brothers—vocalist John and drummer Donald—then layered in the rhythms, with Donald's double-bass patterns providing the foundation for the tracks' lumbering pace, while John developed his guttural vocal delivery to match the music's intensity. Key tracks such as "Internal Bleeding" and "Slowly We Rot" evolved from material initially explored in the band's demos, refining raw ideas into the album's cohesive structure.[12][14] The thematic focus on horror, decay, and mortality drew heavily from early influences like Slayer's aggressive thrash and Celtic Frost's dark, atmospheric doom, evolving the band's sound toward a more morbid, introspective death metal aesthetic. Songwriting primarily took place in 1988, with intensive rehearsals conducted in informal garage settings around Tampa, allowing the group to hone their material in a low-pressure environment before entering the studio.[14][12]Recording and production
Studio sessions
The recording sessions for Slowly We Rot took place at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, primarily in 1989, with initial tracking beginning in late 1988 and additional work completed in March.[15] The band self-funded the project on a limited budget of $500, which constrained the overall process.[16] Scott Burns served as engineer, stepping in after the originally scheduled engineer departed due to an emergency on the first day, and the band tracked much of the album live to preserve its raw, aggressive energy on the limited 8-track setup.[17] The tight finances resulted in rushed sessions and minimal overdubs on several tracks, contributing to the album's unpolished, visceral sound despite the logistical hurdles.[16]Production techniques and challenges
The production of Slowly We Rot employed analog recording methods at Morrisound Recording in Tampa, Florida, on the limited 8-track setup. Scott Burns, in his first major production role, engineered and mixed the album, focusing on a raw aesthetic to preserve the live energy of the music; guitars were tracked singly rather than double-tracked to maintain high-gain distortion during fast passages, using EMG 81 pickups through Marshall 100-watt Valve State heads and 4x12 cabinets loaded with 25-watt Celestion speakers tuned to E standard.[18][2] A heavy emphasis was placed on the down-tuned guitar tones and John Tardy's guttural, low-register vocals, which were recorded with minimal processing to emphasize their visceral quality, contributing to the album's signature density. Burns applied reverb to the drums to create a death metal "wall of sound," though the studio's equipment limitations—such as the analog tape's inherent noise floor and basic monitoring—restricted more polished effects, resulting in noticeable tape hiss and a gritty overall texture.[18] The band and Burns deliberately retained this unpolished, lo-fi character to align with death metal's underground ethos, avoiding overproduction that could dilute the aggression. The recording sessions spanned roughly two weeks in March 1989, constrained by the group's limited budget.[19][18] The album was mastered at Fullersound in Miami, Florida, by Mike Fuller, finalizing the analog-to-digital transfer with a SPARS code of AAD to balance the raw source material's intensity for vinyl and CD release.[20]Musical style and themes
Genre influences and sound characteristics
Slowly We Rot stands as a pioneering effort in death metal, blending slow, sludgy tempos with bursts of faster thrash elements to create a distinctive heavy sound that helped define the early Florida scene.[6] The album draws influences from Possessed, whose early death metal ferocity informs the overall intensity, while doomy atmospheres nod to Celtic Frost's tonal weight, contributing to the album's grounded, crypt-like heaviness. Thrash-infused riffing adds bursts of speed.[6] Hallmark sound features revolve around monolithic, groove-oriented riffs that deliver a visceral, sludgy tone often likened to treacle or static distortion, prioritizing rhythmic heft over relentless speed.[6] John Tardy's deep, guttural growls establish a menacing vocal presence that became emblematic of the genre, evoking raw menace without extreme pitch drops.[6] Drumming provides a solid backbone with double bass, enhancing the tracks' brutal momentum while maintaining a mid-tempo decay.[6] Innovations in the album include a deliberate shift from the speed-centric death metal of the era toward mid-tempo explorations of heaviness and rot, which influenced the "Florida death metal" aesthetic by emphasizing atmospheric groove over pure velocity.[6] Instrumentation highlights dual guitars from Trevor Peres and Allen West, featuring harmonic riffing and chaotic solos that drive the harmony, supported by straightforward bass lines that reinforce the sludgy rhythm section.[6] Tracks such as "'Til Death" exemplify this approach through their prominent, groove-heavy structures that balance aggression with deliberate pacing.[6]Lyrical content and artwork
The lyrics of Slowly We Rot, written by vocalist John Tardy, center on themes of death, decomposition, and existential horror, reflecting a preoccupation with mortality and human frailty.[21] Songs like the title track portray the inexorable process of bodily decay and futile resistance against death, as seen in lines such as "Slowly rot and you die / You fight death as you slowly realize / Kill them all / Fight death and slowly rot in your grave / Fight them all, join me / Slowly we rot."[22] Similarly, "Words of Evil" evokes supernatural torment and insanity, with imagery of suffering in hell: "Rotting in hell / Hear the screams of pain / Suffering, the curse / Insanity's domain / Words of evil."[23] Tardy's writing style employs abstract phrasing and repetition to build atmospheric dread, prioritizing sonic impact over graphic descriptions of gore and often rendering words more as guttural sounds than literal narratives.[24] This approach underscores the album's nihilistic undertones, emphasizing the inevitability of demise without delving into explicit violence.[6] The album's visual artwork reinforces these motifs of rot and decay. The front cover illustration, created by Rob Mayworth, depicts a rotting, slime-covered corpse in jeans and a t-shirt sprawled in the middle of a street, accompanied by the band logo and title.[21][25] This imagery directly echoes the title track's theme of gradual decomposition, evoking a sense of urban horror and finality. The inner sleeve features black-and-white photographs of the band members, shot by Tim Hubbard, capturing their early, raw aesthetic amid the album's low-budget production.[21]Release and promotion
Initial release details
Slowly We Rot was initially released on May 16, 1989, through R/C Records.[1][2] The album carried the catalog number RC 9489. It was later reissued by Roadrunner Records in 1997 as part of a remastered edition.[26] The release was available in vinyl and cassette formats, with a CD version following in 1989.[4] R/C Records, an imprint of Roadrunner Records that specialized in underground heavy metal acts, handled distribution primarily in the United States and Europe.[27] No singles were issued from the album, with promotion emphasizing the complete record.[2]Marketing and distribution
The promotion of Slowly We Rot adopted a grassroots, DIY strategy emblematic of the late-1980s underground death metal scene, where the band initially circulated demo tapes to generate interest before the album's official release on May 16, 1989. Roadrunner Records supported these efforts with advertisements in key metal publications, announcing the debut as a pivotal release from the Tampa, Florida contingent. Features in outlets like Metal Forces emphasized the album's emergence from the local scene, helping to position Obituary amid contemporaries such as Morbid Angel and Nocturnus.[15] Distribution centered on independent networks suited to niche metal releases. In the US, Important Record Distributors handled logistics, ensuring availability through specialty retailers and mail-order services. Internationally, the album reached markets via partnerships with CBS for broader European reach, alongside Indisc, SPV GmbH, and Echo for targeted regional rollout. Subsequent Roadrunner reissues, including a 1997 remastered edition with bonus tracks "Find the Arise" (demo version) and "Inferred," broadened access to global audiences via expanded retail and licensing deals.[4][28] To build momentum post-release, Obituary embarked on targeted live outings. Late 1989 saw regional US and Mexican shows, including openers for Nuclear Assault and Death, alongside Florida gigs with acts like Morbid Angel and Malevolent Creation. In 1990, the band escalated with the "Rotting Slow In America" tour supporting Sacred Reich, a European mini-tour dubbed "Gore And Agony All Over Europe" alongside Demolition Hammer and Morgoth, and a North American jaunt opening for Sepultura. These performances amplified the album's exposure within tight-knit metal circuits.[29] The album's underground positioning posed inherent challenges, with virtually no mainstream radio airplay due to death metal's extremity and the band's nascent profile. Instead, buzz proliferated through tape trading among fans, a pre-Internet staple that vocalist John Tardy later described as essential to unearthing obscure acts: "People aren’t discovering music in the same way we used to with tape trading, the underground, and where you really had to fucking dig to find these bands." Mail-order fan clubs further sustained this organic growth, underscoring reliance on community-driven dissemination over conventional marketing.[12][30]Reception and impact
Contemporary critical response
Upon its release in 1989, Slowly We Rot garnered praise in underground fanzines and early metal publications for its raw aggression and unrelenting heaviness, marking Obituary as a key player in the emerging Florida death metal scene. Reviews highlighted the album's sludgy, deliberate tempos as an innovative departure from the faster thrash-influenced sounds of the era. The primal vocals of John Tardy and the band's doomy atmosphere were frequently lauded for evoking a sense of slow, inevitable rot.[31][32] Criticisms centered on the production's muddiness, a common trait in early death metal recordings at Morrisound Studios, which some felt buried the instrumentation under a layer of grit despite enhancing the overall visceral impact. Other metal press outlets noted this rawness as both a strength and a flaw. The album's sound was seen as a gritty evolution from thrash roots, emphasizing conceptual weight through themes of death and torment rather than technical speed.[33][34] Media attention positioned Slowly We Rot prominently in 1989's "best underground albums" compilations within fanzines and metal newsletters, where it was compared favorably to Morbid Angel's debut Altars of Madness for its role in defining death metal's heavier, groove-oriented side. This exposure helped build buzz in the tight-knit extreme metal community. Its cult status grew largely through word-of-mouth promotion among fans and live shows, without major label backing.[6][35]Long-term legacy and influence
Slowly We Rot has seen multiple reissues that have kept it accessible to new generations of fans. In 1997, Roadrunner Records released a remastered edition featuring the original 12 tracks alongside two bonus demo recordings, "Find the Arise" and "Like the Dead," enhancing its appeal with previously unreleased material from the band's early days.[36] A 2019 vinyl reissue on 180-gram audiophile pressing by Music on Vinyl coincided with the album's 30th anniversary, offering improved sound quality for collectors and emphasizing its enduring status as a death metal cornerstone.[37] The album became available on major streaming services like Spotify in the early 2010s, broadening its reach beyond physical formats.[38] The album's sludgy riffs, downtuned guitars, and guttural vocals established a blueprint for old-school death metal, profoundly influencing the genre's evolution and revival in subsequent decades.[34] It is frequently cited as a seminal work that shaped the sound of later acts within the Florida death metal scene and beyond, with its raw production and thematic brutality serving as a reference point for bands seeking to recapture early extreme metal intensity.[39] Critics and fans alike regard it as essential listening, highlighting its role in pushing death metal toward heavier, more atmospheric territories compared to contemporaries.[6] Culturally, Slowly We Rot received formal recognition in Decibel magazine's 2013 list of the Top 100 Death Metal Albums of All Time, where it ranked at #19, underscoring its lasting impact on the subgenre.[40] The album's influence extends to broader metal discourse, appearing in discussions of death metal's foundational era and its contributions to extreme music's sonic palette.[41] In recent years, the album's legacy continues through modern reissues and live celebrations. A remastered CD edition was released in Brazil in 2024, providing updated audio fidelity for international audiences.[42] Obituary has maintained its prominence by performing the full album on tour, including a dedicated 2019 North American run marking the 30th anniversary and a 2020 livestream series that captured complete renditions amid the COVID-19 pandemic.[43] These efforts culminated in the 2022 release of Slowly We Rot: Live & Rotting, a live album and Blu-ray documenting a full performance, ensuring the record's visceral energy reaches contemporary fans.[44] As of 2025, the band continues to celebrate the album with live performances at major festivals such as Bloodstock Open Air and Wacken Open Air.[45][46]Track listing and personnel
Track listing
The original edition of Slowly We Rot consists of ten tracks, all written by the band members John Tardy, Donald Tardy, Trevor Peres, and Allen West.[1]| No. | Title | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | "Internal Bleeding" | 3:01 |
| 2 | "Godly Beings" | 1:55 |
| 3 | "'Til Death" | 3:55 |
| 4 | "Slowly We Rot" | 3:36 |
| 5 | "Immortal Visions" | 2:25 |
| 6 | "Gates to Hell" | 2:47 |
| 7 | "Words of Evil" | 2:33 |
| 8 | "Suffocation" | 3:10 |
| 9 | "Dead" | 2:32 |
| 10 | "Denial" | 2:31 |