search
Get Started
search
Internal Bleeding - Voracious Contempt - Death Metal Album
zoom_in Click to enlarge

Internal Bleeding - Voracious Contempt

description Internal Bleeding - Voracious Contempt Overview

Voracious Contempt is the 1995 debut studio album by Internal Bleeding, a death metal band formed in Long Island, New York. The recording combines low-tuned guitar riffs, guttural vocals, forceful drumming, and pronounced rhythmic breakdowns associated with the developing slam death metal style. It is intended for listeners of brutal death metal and documents an early stage of the New York scene's emphasis on groove-driven heaviness alongside conventional death metal aggression.

insights Ranking position

Internal Bleeding - Voracious Contempt ranks #219 of 497 in the Death Metal Album ranking, behind Death - Scream Bloody Gore, ahead of Carnage - Dark Recollections.

help Internal Bleeding - Voracious Contempt FAQ

Why is Voracious Contempt important to the development of slam death metal?

Internal Bleeding's 1995 debut placed slow, heavily accented breakdowns inside a brutal death metal framework. Its rhythmic approach helped define the New York slam style later associated with bands such as Pyrexia and Devourment.

Which songs are best known from Voracious Contempt?

The album includes tracks such as "Languish in Despair," "Anointed in Servitude," and "Prophet of the Blasphemes." These songs demonstrate the record's shifts between rapid death metal passages and slower, groove-centered slams.

Was Voracious Contempt Internal Bleeding's first release?

It was the Long Island band's first full-length studio album, released in 1995. Internal Bleeding had already circulated demos and built an underground following before recording the album.

How does Voracious Contempt differ from Internal Bleeding's The Extinction of Benevolence?

Voracious Contempt has a raw debut-era sound and establishes the band's breakdown-heavy formula. The Extinction of Benevolence followed in 1997 with a more developed production and a similarly central role for low-tuned rhythmic riffs.

Reviews & Comments

Write a Review

rate_review

Be the first to review

Share your thoughts with the community and help others make better decisions.

Save to your list

Save your favorites and follow how their scores change over time.

Save favorites
Get updates
Compare scores

Already have an account? Sign in

Compare Items

See how they stack up against each other

Comparing
VS
Select 1 more item to compare