Decade of Aggression is
Slayer's live double disc. It was recorded in 1990 and 1991, with mobile units in Lakeland, FL, at Wembley Arena in London, and in San Bernardino. A live set from this band is risky business because it's
Slayer live that gained an international reputation for taking on all comers and ripping them to shreds on a stage. The fear is simply that the audio recording alone -- without the subsequent live DVDs they've issued -- won't capture the sheer overblown intensity of the unit in a concert setting. The bad news is that it doesn't; the good news is that it comes a lot closer than one might imagine before hearing it. It's a double live album that approaches the league of
Ted Nugent's
Double Live Gonzo!,
the Who's
Live at Leeds, and
the Allman Brothers'
At Fillmore East when it comes to representing a band perfectly. This is the original incarnation of
Slayer with blastbeat progenitor
Dave Lombardo beating hell out of the drum kit, guitarists
Kerry King and
Jeff Hanneman, and vocalist/bassist
Tom Araya. They run through the material on virtually all of their studio albums to that point, going all the way back to 1983's
Show No Mercy with the tracks "The Anti-Christ" and "Black Magic." While it's true that the majority of the tunes here come from
South of Heaven,
Reign in Blood, and
Seasons in the Abyss, that's as it should be, reflecting live the band's compositional and overdriven blend of thrash, hardcore, and classic death metal. Producer
Rick Rubin stays out of the way; his production seems to be in terms of shaping the live sound to make it sound like this is all one gig. It's exhilarating ("South of Heaven") and exhausting ("Dead Skin Mask"), and by the time they get to "Angel of Death" closing the first disc, most listeners will be drained. That said, disc two is just as furious, with classic
Slayer performances of "Born of Fire," "Spirit in Black," and the closer, "Chemical Warfare."
Decade of Aggression is a record for any serious
Slayer fan to own, and one that serves as a fine -- if excessive -- introduction to any late bloomers out there. ~ Thom Jurek