“Formed in 2000, when Doomy G. Blackthrash met Vic. Mike joined in 2002. After a 14-year run with that line-up, their only personnel change took place when Sean joined as the new drummer. Sauron are heavily influenced by German thrash bands. In the works of J.R.R. Tolkien, Sauron was Morgoth's abominable lieutenant during the First Age. He was also the creator of the Rings of Power and the Dark Lord of Mordor, whom the Fellowship of the Ring sought to defeat.” –Encyclopedia Metallum
Ripped from the bowels of Hell!!! MRSA take you into the sickening dark world of horror films. Exposing you to the terrors that lie within the human condition. They know what scares you. Curated by your host (singer) Dean Corpse. The wretched undead serial killer vomiting his obsession with fright flicks.
MRSA brings the horror experience to life. Death Metal has never had a full horror theatrical experience like this! Each song is performed to the particular theme of a selection of films. The performances sometimes include scare actors, full effects and props.
“Experiencing this album, as a first time listener of Nuclear Tomb, is pretty jarring, since the band aren’t going for the conventional thrash/death metal attack to see you pinned to the wall; rather, Nuclear Tomb opt for a more cerebral, Voivod-inspired sound where their guitar tone makes it abundantly apparent this is not your typical old school sounding thrash attempt. While the band do play fast, they don’t seem to get so completely carried away in their tempo that they forget they’re here to engage and entertain you, and seeing how Nuclear Tomb write some pretty weird riffs, it’s good to see they’ve got their eyes focused on the important things. The guitar work always feels like it’s forever scraping the very edge of sanity and, at any moment, the band could break out into riff-induced insanity which they seem to be perfectly adept at portraying herein. Their soundscape doesn’t feel boisterous as much as it does piercing; Nuclear Tomb immediately pull you in by the sheer malignancy their sound induces and, out of brazen curiosity, you can’t help but be lulled further into their record.” –the razors edge