
Tracklist
1 | Seven Faces | 3:42 |
2 | Threshold | 2:28 |
3 | War Zone | 2:46 |
4 | Exile | 3:57 |
5 | New Faith | 3:05 |
6 | Disciple | 3:37 |
7 | Here Comes The Pain | 4:31 |
8 | Darkness Of Christ | 1:30 |
9 | God Send Death | 3:46 |
10 | Payback | 3:05 |
11 | Bloodline | 3:36 |
12 | Cast Down | 3:28 |
13 | Deviance | 3:09 |
Versioni
Category | Artist | Title (Format) | Label | Category | Country | Year |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
586 394-1 | Slayer | God Hates Us All (LP, Album, Ltd, Red) | American Recordings | 586 394-1 | Europe | 2001 |
none | Slayer | God Hates Us All (CD, Unofficial) | Not On Label | none | Russia | 2001 |
UICL-1012 | Slayer = スレイヤー | Slayer = スレイヤー - God Hates Us All = ゴッド・ヘイツ・アス・オール (CD, Album) | Island Records, American Recordings | UICL-1012 | Japan | 2001 |
586 386-2 | Slayer | God Hates Us All (CD, Album, Sli) | American Recordings | 586 386-2 | Australia | 2001 |
586 331-2 | Slayer | God Hates Us All (CD, Album, Unofficial) | American Recordings | 586 331-2 | Russia | 2001 |
Note
180gr vinyl, gatefold cover.
Includes a voucher to download MP3 version of the entire album.
Codici a barre
- Barcode: 600753441626
Video
Album
God Hates Us All - Slayer. Лента с персональными рекомендациями и музыкальными новинками, радио, подборки на любой вкус, удобное управление своей коллекцией. God Hates Us All is the ninth studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer, released on September 11, 2001 by American Recordings. It was recorded over three months at The Warehouse Studio in Vancouver, and includes the Grammy Award-nominated Disciple. Guitarist Kerry King wrote the majority of its lyrics, taking a different approach from earlier recordings by exploring topics such as religion, murder, revenge, and self-control. The band experimented, recording most of the album in C tuning. Slayer - God Hates Us All. God Send Death. Incredibly brutal, God Hates Us All is Slayer's most effective album since Seasons in the Abyss 1990, thanks in large part to Matt Hyde's raw production and a handful of killer songs. The previous few Slayer albums - Divine Intervention 1994, Undisputed Attitude 1996, and Diabolus in Musica 1998 - were relatively disappointing, at least for anyone familiar with the band's defining triptych of Reign in Blood 1986, South of Heaven 1988, and Seasons in the Abyss 1990. While God Hates Us All isn't on a par with those classics, without much argument one could cal. Slayer hates their fans. May 17th, 2004. Mallcore you say 58. God hates the people who. March 12th, 2003. Slayer hates the trends. February 12th, 2003. Slayer - God Hates Us All 2001. Name Slayer USA. Album Name God Hates Us All. Type Album. Released date 11 September 2001. I consider Slayer to be similar to Motorhead. Not musically, but because both bands, throughout their careers, have played the exact same sounding music without making any major alterations to their sound AT ALL. But because that sound is so fucking AWESOME and since it was crafted to make room for a lot of creativity, its never gotten old and neither of them have worn out their welcome. God Hates Us All is the eighth studio album by Slayer. It was recorded in three months at The Warehouse Studio in Canada, and includes the Grammy Award-nominated Disciple. The album was the bands last to feature drummer Paul Bostaph until his return twelve years later. Guitarist Kerry King wrote the majority of the lyrics, taking a different approach from earlier recordings by exploring topics such as religion, murder, revenge and self-control. The album was titled God Hates Us All not because they are anti-religious, but because it's Kerry King's expression of having a bad day one where you think that God just hates you. Neoteric December 3rd 2005. Mazing Very good review but I noticed the band list at the top O. God Hates Us All is the ninth studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer. It was recorded in three months at The Warehouse Studio in Canada, and includes the Grammy Award-nominated Disciple. The album is the band's last to feature drummer Paul Bostaph until their 2015 Repentless. Guitarist Kerry King wrote the majority of the lyrics, taking a different approach from earlier recordings by exploring topics such as religion, murder, revenge and self-cont