Interviews

An Interview with Satan's Host
Interview with Eli Elixir
Butcher's Block Interrogation
Lords of Metal, Eli Elixer
Interview with Eli Elixir (vocals)
Living For Metal.com Interview: Patrick Evil
Metal Psalter: Interview- L.C.F. Eli Elixir 418

Reviews

Power~Purity~Perfection...999

The Metal Crypt: CD Review
Noch's: CD Review
Absolute Zero Media: CD Review
Metal Rules CD Review
Metal Psalter: CD Review
Metal Psalter: Interview- L.C.F. Eli Elixir 418
The Gauntlet: CD Review
Examiner.com/Denver: CD Review
All Music: CD Review
Sea of Tranquility: CD Review
Metal Reviews.com: CD Review
Infernal Masquerade: CD Review
Blistering.com: CD Review
Canadian Assault zine: CD Review
Lords of Metal: CD Review
Masterful-Magazine.com: CD Review
Metal Storm: CD Review
Santa Fe Metal Music Examiner: CD Review
Decibel Magazine: CD Review

Great American Scapegoat

Living For Metal CD Review
MetalEater.com CD Review
tMetal.com CD Review
Winter Heathen Review
Metal Observer Review
Leviatan Magazine Review
Old Curtis St. Bar Show Review Nov. 11, 2008
Deadtide.com CD Review
Living For Metal.com Interview: Patrick Evil

Satanic Grimoire: A Greater Black Magick

Metal-Rules.com CD Review
Metal Coven CD Review
Voices: From the Darkside CD Review
Deadtide.com CD Review
Living For Metal.com CD Review

Burning the Born Again (A New Philosophy)

Voices: From the Darkside CD Review
Metal Side CD Review
Xtreem Music Review
Metal-Rules CD Review
Vampire Magazine CD Review
Music Extreme CD Review
Amazon.com User Review
Wildside.no CD Review
Explicitly Intense Magazine Review - Moribund Release
Deadtide.com CD Review
MetalUniverse.Net CD Review
The Metal Crypt: CD Review
Living For Metal.com CD Review

Archidoxes of Evil

Metal-Rules CD Review

In Articulo Mortis

Metal Rules CD Review

Midnight Wind

Midnight Wind

Metal From Hell

Metal From Hell

All Music: CD Review

This Colorado-based death/thrash band are apparently quite serious about their Satanism; they don't go in for the cartoonish theatrics of Mercyful Fate or Slayer, instead writing songs full of names and mystical numbers pulled straight from demonological texts. They're not bad, and the production is pretty solid, with a bass drum sound that actually resembles a drum and not a typewriter. Vocalist L.C.F. Eli Elixer enunciates quite clearly, his relatively high-pitched utterances reminiscent of Arch Enemy's Angela Gossow, while his lyrics strike a tone somewhere between the ultra-committed evilness of early Darkthrone, and more philosophically rigorous black metal bands like Deathspell Omega or Antaeus. But their roots in power metal can still be heard quite clearly, as guitar solos ring out throughout songs like album opener "Sitra-Ahra (Power 9)," and the slow, meditative "333 (Purity 9)" is practically progressive metal, with its liquid bass intro, eight-minute running time, and gradual buildup to manic blastbeats. A pair of under-90-second acoustic tracks offer momentary respite between assaults. Satan's Host are very serious about what they're doing, and they deserve respect for their commitment to their art.

- Phil Freeman

Rating 4.5/5

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