Snowed in today… how about a classic:
Sarcofago - “I.N.R.I.”

As far as I can tell from the information in the auction this is the original Cogumelo pressing of the album with an orange tinted cover photo, (COG 007).

A lot of necrolords out there love to throw this one in the ring as a band that helped lay the foundations for modern black metal. Honestly I think it’s a bit exaggerated. 2 notable aspects of this record later adopted by black metal bands:

1) corpse painted members (it’s not like they were the first band to do this)
2) heavy use of blast beats, even in places where a more standard fast beat would do

Riffwise there’s really very little in common with what’s considered “black metal” now , and it’s a lot more like what you’d consider “black thrash”, sort of a post thrash metal grey area between black and death metal. Somewhere between a mix of Hellhammer, Slayer, Bathory, Possessed, and Sodom. As for the blasting, it’s helped along considerably by some kind of heavy studio magic. I can’t say if it’s triggering or if it’s an extremely heavily gated/EQ’d sound, but it’s definitely the most processed snare I’ve ever heard on a metal record. I honestly thought it was a drum machine the first time I listened, also partially due to the relative loudness of the snare in the drum mix. It’s much louder than any of the other drums, and the cymbals are barely audible at points, giving it a very artificial, and drum machine-ish sound. It’s emphasized more by the relatively high number of beats-per-minute due to the blasting. Drummer D.D. Crazy, despite the weird drum sound though, does come pretty hard on this and really does set the pace for a lot of extreme metal thereafter. He also went on to play on another landmark Brazilian lp, Sex Trash’s “Sexual Carnage”, another album your Mom should never know about.

There’s just no denying I.N.R.I. is an extreme and landmark album. The riffs, while inspired by the bands mentioned above, seem determined to make absolutely no concessions for anything other than all out brutality. Whereas Possessed were getting experimental via Larry Lalonde, Slayer were working with a major label, and most of Hellhammer were making avant-garde doom in Celtic Frost, Sarcofago are pushing in the opposite directions here. Determined to violate the listener with stomach churning tasteless thrash that in the end sounds most like the early Sodom offerings beefed up to much more disgusting and focused levels of evil. If extreme metal that followed in subsequent years is comparable to the horror movie genre, then I.N.R.I. is Last House On The Left. A completely shocking and new level of sickening garbage to inspire future death and black metal shut-ins and freaks. Even though it’s technically been surpassed since it was released, it still remains gruesome and affecting. In the 80’s parents were worried about bands like Judas Priest or maybe Slayer, but if they’d been aware there were records being released that sounded like this I really think a lot of them would have died of shock. Vocalist “Antichrist” (birth name: Wagner Lamounier – currently a professor of economic science and applied statistic at Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais in Belo Horizonte, Brazil), shrieks, howls, and gurgles his way through numerous new (at the time) lows in the lyrical department (I’ll leave it to you to google for lyrics). Vocals drown in tons of canned reverb at some points, and at others double and triple over pitch shifted versions of themselves. At this point Lamounier also began cultivating a long standing feud with his former band Sepultura, probably the biggest band in the Brazilian metal underground at the time. Eventually this also led to encompass Ratos De Porao (who took the Sepultura side).

4 Responses to “Sarcofago - INRI (Cogumelo w/ orange sleeve)”

  1. Pat WIlding said:

    I remember “Rotting” getting a terrible review in Metal Maniacs when it came out, which was during the Borijov Krjinn, Katherine Ludwig era of that rag. It totally made me want to hear it even more.
    Along with Nuclear Death, Sarcofaygo (ICP flavored?) is an essential for mind bending aural bullshit.

  2. Never quite understood the hype behind this record. There are tons of records (both punk and metal) that predate this one and sound far more primitive, brutal, disgusting, etc. The production definitely holds it back - it’s far too clean, sterile, and well…metal. The drums also don’t do much for me - I guess it’s a pretty neat trick to play fast in terms of sheer bpm and simultaneously fail to communicate any speed, energy, or urgency. The cover photograph is the best part of this record.

  3. ahhhh the dissenting opinion. i think there’s definitely records that predate it that are wilder both in the HC and metal spectrum, but it’s been name checked by a lot of bands as a key influence and that’s a big part of the “legend” status it has.

  4. Colin Tappe said:

    I like this record. My mom got it for me for Christmas a few years back. How necrokult is that?

    She def doesn’t know abut Sextrash, though.

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