After the extremely well received re-recordings of the first two Sepultura releases ("Bestial Devastation" (1985), "Morbid Visions" (1986), 3m streams combined), founding brothers Max and Iggor Cavalera now also re-recorded their 1987 landmark album "Schizophrenia". An all time classic that was just lacking a proper production. Arthur Rizk (Soulfly, Kreator) gave these newly recorded songs the punch and atmosphere that they needed, making "Schizophrenia" an album to be revisited and not to be missed in 2024.
After the extremely well received re-recordings of the first two Sepultura releases ("Bestial Devastation" (1985), "Morbid Visions" (1986), 3m streams combined), founding brothers Max and Iggor Cavalera now also re-recorded their 1987 landmark album "Schizophrenia". An all time classic that was just lacking a proper production. Arthur Rizk (Soulfly, Kreator) gave these newly recorded songs the punch and atmosphere that they needed, making "Schizophrenia" an album to be revisited and not to be missed in 2024.
After the extremely well received re-recordings of the first two Sepultura releases ("Bestial Devastation" (1985), "Morbid Visions" (1986), 3m streams combined), founding brothers Max and Iggor Cavalera now also re-recorded their 1987 landmark album "Schizophrenia". An all time classic that was just lacking a proper production. Arthur Rizk (Soulfly, Kreator) gave these newly recorded songs the punch and atmosphere that they needed, making "Schizophrenia" an album to be revisited and not to be missed in 2024.
Sepultura first album re-recorded by Cavalera brothers including an unreleased song "Burn the Dead".
Nearly four decades into their illustrious careers, the Cavalera brothers have re-recorded the cataclysmic debut releases that started it all for them, "Morbid Visions" & "Bestial Devastation". As the thrashers from Brazil kick back into their aggressive, primal upbringings, it becomes apparent that the bond between Max on guitar and vocals, and Iggor on drums has only been strengthened immensely since their first recordings, a connection so thunderous that only those two could be creating it.
Metal legends Cavalera released the re-recorded version of Sepultura's first EP "Bestial Devastation" along with an unreleased track, "Sexta Feira 13".
Nearly four decades into their illustrious careers, the Cavalera brothers have re-recorded the cataclysmic debut releases that started it all for them, "Morbid Visions" & "Bestial Devastation". As the thrashers from Brazil kick back into their aggressive, primal upbringings, it becomes apparent that the bond between Max on guitar and vocals, and Iggor on drums has only been strengthened immensely since their first recordings, a connection so thunderous that only those two could be creating it.
Brazilian technical metal monsters Sepultura grew slowly from a devotion to the legends of their genre, eventually becoming the most successful metal band in Brazil's history as well as a worldwide influence. Founding member Max Cavalera sang and played guitar in the band until a deeply personal dispute over management led him to unceremoniously leave the band in 1996…
With Sepultura, Brazilian brothers Max and Iggor Cavalera defined South American thrash in the '80s and early '90s. Their fourth album under the Cavalera Conspiracy banner sees them recapturing the creative energy and intensity of those early offerings with neck-snapping riffs and maniacal solos on “Insane” and “Terror Tactics,” while “Impalement Execution” and “Spectral War” offer a modern, industrialized take on extremity. “Hellfire” features a guest vocal appearance from Godflesh’s Justin Broadrick, who expertly enhances the track’s heavily mechanized aggression.