Danzig III: How the Gods Kill

Danzig III: How the Gods Kill is the third album by American heavy metal band Danzig, and the highest to chart at the time of its release in 1992 on Def American Recordings. It was reissued in 1998 by Def American's successor, American Recordings.

Danzig III: How the Gods Kill
Cover art by H. R. Giger
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 14, 1992
RecordedNovember 1991 – April 1992[1]
StudioRecord Plant
Hollywood Sound Recorders
GenreHeavy metal, blues rock, hard rock
Length49:12
LabelDef American
ProducerGlenn Danzig, Rick Rubin
Danzig chronology
Danzig II: Lucifuge
(1990)
Danzig III: How the Gods Kill
(1992)
Black Aria
(1992)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[2]
College Music Journal(favorable)[3]
Hit Parader(favorable)[4]
Pitchfork8.7/10[5]
Request Magazine(favorable)[6]
Rock Hard[7]
Rolling Stone[8]
Spin(unfavorable)[9]
Trouser Press(favorable)[10]

Music and recording

How the Gods Kill was a departure from the previous Danzig albums and featured more of a doom and gothic metal sound.

Eerie Von considers the album to be Danzig's best, with the band at its peak and able to record most of the basic tracks for each song within a couple of takes.[11]

John Christ noted how a lot of time was spent perfecting the guitar sounds for the album.[12] For the quieter moments on the songs "Anything", "Sistinas" and "How the Gods Kill", Christ used a Strat guitar previously played by Jeff Beck.[13]

The title song "How the Gods Kill" concerns a search for knowledge and an understanding of oneself.[14] According to John Christ, “That was a real tricky song to write and record. It has so many level jumps and changes in the sound of the guitar. I had to go from a very soft section to a very loud section to an in-between section. If you listen closely, you can hear a hissing noise in the vocals in the intro because we were using a real noisy vocal preamp. We tried everything to get rid of it, but Glenn's performance was so good that we decided to leave it - the mood was just right.”[15]

The song "Sistinas" was written during a drum track recording session, as John Christ recalled: “We were in the studio recording drum tracks, and while we were on a break Glenn picked up my guitar and started getting an idea for a song. Then I came up with a little chorus part, and in about an hour or two we had the basic structure of the song. He wanted it to have a Roy Orbison type of vibe with some timpani and keyboards. We used an old Fender amp with a vibrato on it, and we cranked up the vibrato to get those really big chords - it was perfect for that song.”[15]

Opening track "Godless" is about feelings of frustration caused by organised religion.[16]

"Heart of the Devil" was the first song on the album to be performed live by the band, during the European Lucifuge tour in 1991.[17] Later in the same year, it was confirmed that the tracks "Bodies" and "Do You Wear the Mark" had been written for the album.[17] Blues legend Willie Dixon had agreed to guest on the track "Heart of the Devil", but died before the recording session was scheduled.[18] The avant-garde metal band Lux Occulta recorded a cover version of "Heart of the Devil" for their 1998 EP Maior Arcana: The Words That Turn Flesh into Light.

The tracks "How the Gods Kill" and "Dirty Black Summer" became popular and remain a permanent fixture in the band's set list.

Artwork and packaging

The album's cover is a 1976 painting called Meister und Margeritha (The Master and Margarita) by famous Swiss artist H. R. Giger, named after Mikhail Bulgakov's novel The Master and Margarita. For the album cover, Giger modified the original painting slightly, covering "the Master's" erect penis with a dagger bearing his interpretation of the Danzig skull symbol. Giger's version of the Danzig skull was later used on T-shirts and as the cover art for the "Dirty Black Summer" single.

Like Danzig's other three albums with the original lineup, this album was issued a Parental Advisory sticker, later complete with a "strong language" warning, despite the total absence of profanity. In some markets, the earliest pressings were issued in a CD longbox.

Reception

Allmusic wrote, "Danzig's third album continues to expand the band's musical range" and called it "arguably the definitive Danzig album".[19] Rolling Stone wrote, "Danzig the group has evolved, in the course of three albums, into a resourceful, tightly meshed unit...Danzig embodies the best in contemporary hard rock while displaying an originality that transcends genres...Rock is alarmingly short of visionaries these days; Danzig is the genuine article".[8]

Hit Parader, while saying that the album is too unrelenting to cause Danzig to break into the mainstream, wrote, "They deserve whatever recognition they get simply for having the guts to play metal the way it was meant to be played."[4]

Trouser Press called it "a roaring slab of leathery rock that isn't overly troubled by his lyrical obsessions", highlighting "Do You Wear the Mark" and "Heart of the Devil" as examples of Danzig's interest in dark topics. The review also describes Danzig's "confidence (or hubris, same difference here)" in "Sistinas", which is performed "as a ridiculous croony gothic ballad". The review concludes, "Economical and efficient, an organic blend of vocals and instrumental intensity, How the Gods Kill is great bleak fun."[10]

Bob Mack of Spin called the band "too goofy to be taken seriously as regular rockers but not goofy enough for the cartoon metal crowd" and wrote that the lyrics to "Heart of the Devil", instead of sending a shiver down his spine, caused him to roll his eyes. He did compliment "Left Hand Black" and called "Sistinas" the "best Orchestral Manoeuvres in the Dark song since OMD's 1984 LP Junk Culture".[9]

Daina Darzin of Request Magazine praised the album for its "solidly crafted melodies" and "lush, malevolent power", along with Danzig's "wonderfully expressive, opulent voice" and the "spectral mystique" added by John Christ's guitar work. Writing about the lyrics she stated that Danzig "has the courage to go for fatalistic grandeur and gets away with it, for the most part", citing lyrics to "Heart of the Devil" as an exception.[6]

Pitchfork described it as the "album that lived up to the mighty image he'd built, where the classic lineup of his solo band in its prime found an emotional maturity unmatched by any record he made before or after. It's Danzig at his most sinister, yet also his most human", adding that the band "achieve a bigger, denser sound than they'd previously had. Danzig's subtle croon only intensifies the effect of the blaze—stoked by desperate longing, he sounds that much more demonic...How the Gods Kill marks the moment when Danzig transcended his punk origins and staked out a deeper place in the modern music canon, patching together the influences of Dixon, Orbison, and Howlin' Wolf into something grand. It's a record about confronting your inner strength, testing if it's enough to endure heartbreak and uncontrollable lust; it's about feeling that God is failing you, and wanting the power of a god all the same".[5]

In a career retrospective, Cam Lindsay of Exclaim! rated it Glenn Danzig's second best album.[20]

Music videos

Music videos were released for the songs "How the Gods Kill", "Dirty Black Summer", "Bodies" and "Sistinas". Glenn Danzig directed all videos, aside from "Dirty Black Summer", which was directed by Anton Corbijn. A live performance of the song "Left Hand Black" has also been released. The "How the Gods Kill" music video appeared on Beavis and Butt-Head, in the episode "Scientific Stuff".[21] All music videos from the album are featured on Danzig's Archive de la Morte DVD.

A documentary was filmed during the making of How the Gods Kill, though it currently remains unreleased.[22]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Glenn Danzig.

No.TitleLength
1."Godless"6:51
2."Anything"4:49
3."Bodies"4:25
4."How the Gods Kill"5:57
5."Dirty Black Summer"5:14
6."Left Hand Black"4:30
7."Heart of the Devil"4:40
8."Sistinas"4:25
9."Do You Wear the Mark"4:47
10."When the Dying Calls"3:31
Total length:49:12

Credits

Production

  • Producers: Glenn Danzig and Rick Rubin
  • Executive Producer: Rick Rubin
  • Engineers: Nick DiDia, Craig Brock, Jim Labinski, Randy Wine
  • Mixing: Jason Corsaro
  • Mastering: Howie Weinberg
  • Design: Dirk Walter
  • Illustrations: H.R. Giger
  • Photographer: Peter Darley Miller

Charts

Album - Billboard (North America)

Year Chart Position
1992 Billboard 200 24

References

  1. "Danzig Recording Sessions". misfitscentral.com. Retrieved January 15, 2017.
  2. Steve Huey (July 14, 1992). "Danzig III: How the Gods Kill - Danzig | Songs, Reviews, Credits, Awards". AllMusic. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
  3. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 24, 2007. Retrieved July 22, 2010.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  4. "Hit or Miss - DANZIG III - How the Gods Kill". Hit Parader. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  5. https://pitchfork.com/reviews/albums/danzig-danzig-iii-how-the-gods-kill
  6. "Request Magazine, 7/92". MisfitsCentral.com. Retrieved June 13, 2014.
  7. "Danzig III: How the Gods Kill". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  8. Mack, Bob (August 1992). "Spins: Danzig: Danzig III: How the Gods Kill". Spin. Vol. 8 no. 5. p. 76.
  9. "DANZIG". Trouser Press. Retrieved October 8, 2013.
  10. "Interview with Eerie Von". Live4Metal. June 2008. Archived from the original on February 12, 2009. Retrieved December 23, 2009.
  11. Gilbert, Jeff (September 1993). "Danzig Riot Act". Guitar World. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  12. Christ, John (February 1994). "I Walked with a Zombie". Guitar for the Practicing Musician. Retrieved July 25, 2010.
  13. Chirazi, Steffan (September 1992). "DANZIG - Back in Black". RIP magazine. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  14. Kitts, Jeff (July 1994). "Prime Cuts: John Christ". Guitar School. Retrieved August 23, 2010.
  15. Russell, Tom (September 3, 1992). "Glenn Danzig Interview". 102.5 Clyde 1. Retrieved June 21, 2010.
  16. Sherman, Lee. "It Ain't Easy Being Danzig". Faces Magazine. Retrieved May 4, 2010.
  17. "Danzig Biography". MusicMight.com. Archived from the original on January 5, 2010. Retrieved October 9, 2009.
  18. Huey, Steve. "Danzig III: How the Gods Kill - Review". Allmusic. Retrieved May 12, 2010.
  19. Lindsay, Cam (August 30, 2016). "An Essential Guide to Glenn Danzig". Exclaim!. Retrieved November 2, 2016.
  20. "Beavis and Butt-head: The Episode Guide". Beavis-Butthead.ru. 1998. Archived from the original on December 6, 2000. Retrieved December 23, 2009.
  21. Gitter, Mike (December 1999). "Glenn Danzig interview". Metal Maniacs. Retrieved December 28, 2011.
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