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Erik Hinds : Reign In Blood
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Solo acoustic devil cello performing Slayer's classic Reign In Blood.ecstatic, impressionistic, serene, cathartic.
Genre: Avant Garde: Avant-Americana
Release Date: 2005
Reign In Blood
Erik Hinds
Record Label: Solponticello
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Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Angel Of Death 4:09 Album Only
Piece By Piece 2:00 Album Only
Necrophobic 1:49 Album Only
Altar Of Sacrifice 2:37 Album Only
Jesus Saves 2:53 Album Only
Criminally Insane 2:06 Album Only
Reborn 1:56 Album Only
Epidemic 2:14 Album Only
Postmortem 3:10 Album Only
Raining Blood 5:57 Album Only
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Album Notes

update: Erik Hinds is now known as Killick! He features in D.X. Ferris' new 33 1/3 series book on Reign In Blood.

Reign In Blood:

This project began a while back as a wink-wink challenge by a good friend: there's an upcoming new music "folk" series in Athens and you should do something cool, like maybe cover Slayer? Yeah, I said, I just might. But yes, I knew immediately, I will. It's no exaggeration to say Slayer helped sustain me through middle and high school. I nearly wore out the grooves of my Hell Awaits LP, stared at Live Undead until the corpses moved, and freaked the fuck out upon hearing Reign In Blood, one of the strongest artistic statements ever. It became a perpetual soundtrack to late night underage beer runs and failed attempts at suburban witchcraft. Those were the days. Twenty years ahead, the album has lost none of its integrity- still a powerful indictment of the evil that men do in a soundscape bordering on complete and transcendent anarchy. Translating this to a solo acoustic instrument, the H'arpeggione, without the benefit of lyrics, meant the music would have to take on its own character. I replayed the album again and again in my mind for clues on how to approach the material, relishing the compositional underpinning and the incredibly realized sense of pacing. What resulted draws from my background as a free improviser, and an attempt to highlight the contours of the original without imposing anything not suggested by Slayer themselves. I take liberty with tempo, dynamics, color, key, and other attributes only to honor the initial spark that gave life to their brilliant collection of controlled entropy. Besides, of course, Araya, Hanneman, King, and Lombardo, I am indebted to the late Peter Kowald, who showed me what is possible through focus, and to Evan Parker for the inspiration throughout Altar of Sacrifice. Peace.

bio:

Killick of Athens, Georgia is active as a composer, performer, and promoter of a wide range of music. He plays the H'arpeggione, an upright acoustic instrument with sympathetic strings. Killick focuses on the raw sound of his strings in all their microtonal glory; his style blends primitive folk, heavy metal, and sacred musics from around the world into a distinct voice. Killick has played with countless improvisers and performs regularly around the country, to the delight of millions. Killick runs Solponticello Records, looks good in black (the new salmon), and is obsessed with old-school arcade games.

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REVIEWS

SQ is Very Good
author: Fritz Gerlich
With this project being based on an aggressive testosterone metal album, I feared that Killick would have mastered it like a metal album. You know, kill the dynamic range & brickwall the waves. As far as I can tell, there is none of the loudness war crap here. The sound is clear and powerful and full of detail. Fantastic. I'll leave it to the other reviews to review the actual music. Suffice it to say I have no regrets in buying this bad boy.
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While listening to this stuff, everyone should be careful not to fall into the a
author: Mikolaj 'Nicolo' Furmankiewicz
Mr. Hinds a.k.a. Iam Killick of Athens (Georgia in the USA) is an unusual personality indeed. His music is inspired by folk, heavy metal, sacred music, and all these genres pour together into a creation called Appalachian Trance Metal as Erik describes his own style. This American has cooperated with the likes of Klaus Janek Caspar, Kyle Dawkins, Julie Powell, The Georgia Guitar Quartet, Jeremiah Cymerman and others. He is famous for his eccentric instruments like a quartertone electric guitar and the H'arpeggione that is an upright guitar with 12 sympathetic strings or devil cello as its player calls a spade a spade. Obviously, he commited many crimes with this devilish instrument, but the police can't catch him to the present, since all of them were musical offences like solo attempted murders - "Cerebus" (2002) or "Khonsay" (2003), haha! Since they were too boring for Mr. Hinds, he turned to suicide bids. Its first attempt turned out to be an acoutic version of Slayer's "Reign In Blood" (1986). All of ten suicidal tracks were performed on aforementioned H'arpeggione. Can you imagine it yourself? If Slayer's original album is too extreme for some of you, there is an alternative prepared by Erik. Yeah, I venture to write that Mr. Hinds recorded a light version of that release. His interpretation of "Reign In Blood" is experimental, avantgarde, twisted, unconventional, anti-radio, uncommercial, folk-inspired, a bit psychedelic and chaotic at some excerpts. While listening to this stuff, everyone should be careful not to fall into the abyss. Thanks to H'arpeggione sound, you can have an impression that Hinds' music is dark, sinister, bleak and disturbing. Having a voice over all these tunes, I am pretty sure that fans of Apocalyptica's "Plays Metallica By Four Cellos" and "Inquisition Symphony" should be pleased with Erik's musical concept, since he managed to gain a similar effect. Of course, it can seem to be strange and freaky a little bit, but it was an American's intention for sure. For ignorant people, H'arpeggione's sound will be a simple "sandpaper", however for open-minded ones - a memorable experience. It is a kind of music that requires an intellectual engagement from the listener.
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all the speed, aggression, and precision, delivered on an acoustic instrument
author: Peter Thelen
One the first few plays through, I didn't even realize what I was listening to, but I was certainly enjoying it at its face value. Here Hinds plays solo H'arpeggione, an acoustic stringed instrument with a range comparable to a cello, with 12 sympathetic strings, which is plucked, strummed, fingerpicked, bowed and whacked as a percussion instrument; the sound is positively unique, and Hinds plays this thing masterfully. What I didn't realize until somewhere around the fifth spin (and a quick glance at the promo sheet) is that he's actually covering- albeit instrumentally- Reign In Blood, the Slayer album! You don't get the mobidly violent lyrics, or the thrashing chugging guitars and screaming demented solos, but you get all the speed, aggression, and precision, delivered on an acoustic instrument. Hinds' performance takes some liberties in arranging the material to be suitable for his instrument (mostly in tempo and dynamics), but the net result is positively brilliant and respectful of the original. Every piece here- "Altar of Sacrifice," "Epidemic," "Angel of Death," and all the rest are exceptionally well defined performances that fully interpret the underlying compositional structures and highlights of the originals.
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author: Jeremiah Cymerman
Amazing, simply amazing. One of the best things that I have heard in years.
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