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MENTAL VORTEX

Coroner

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


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Coroner Mental Vortex album cover
3.77 | 14 ratings | 2 reviews | 57% 5 stars

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Studio Album, released in 1991

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Divine Step (Conspectu Mortis) (7:05)
2. Son of Lilith (6:54)
3. Semtex Revolution (5:30)
4. Sirens (4:56)
5. Metamorphosis (5:34)
6. Pale Sister (4:55)
7. About Life (5:18)
8. I Want You (She's So Heavy) (The Beatles cover) (7:14)

Total Time 47:26

Line-up / Musicians

- Ron Royce / bass, vocals
- Tommy T. Baron / guitars
- Marquis Marky / drums

With:
- Kent Smith / keyboards
- Janelle Sadler & Steve Gruden / backing vocals

Releases information

Label: Noise Records
Recorded at Sky Trak Studio, Berlin (April and June 1991).
Mixed at Morrisound, Tampa (Florida).

Thanks to Cristi for the addition
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CORONER Mental Vortex ratings distribution


3.77
(14 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music(57%)
57%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection(36%)
36%
Good, but non-essential (7%)
7%
Collectors/fans only (0%)
0%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

CORONER Mental Vortex reviews


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Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
4 stars "Mental Vortex" is the 4th full-length studio album by Swiss thrash metal act Coroner. The album was released through Noise Records in August 1991. Itīs the successor to "No More Color" from 1989. The three-piece lineup who recorded all three predecessors is intact: Tommy T. Baron (Tommy Vetterli) on guitar, Ron Royce (Ron Broder) on bass and vocals, and Marquis Marky (Markus Edelmann) on drums.

Stylistically "Mental Vortex" is quite different from "No More Color (1989)". The material on the 8 track, 47:30 minutes long album is still technical thrash metal, but the pace has generally been lowered and the tracks on "Mental Vortex" are predominantly mid-paced and heavy, and features fewer fast-paced sections than the case was on the predecessor. Itīs audible that Coroner at this point in their career felt they needed to experiment and develop their style a bit more drastically than they had done between the first three releases (not that there wasnīt great development of sound between those releases too) and paired with the general change on the thrash metal scene in those years, "Mental Vortex" is very much an album of itīs time. Coroner have not "softened" their sound or have begun to incorporate alternative metal elements like some of their contemporaries did in those days, so itīs more a matter of songwriting approach and a refusal to be labelled "just" a thrash metal act. Their brilliant cover of "I Want You (She's So Heavy)" by The Beatles is an example of that. Thereīs an occasional dark, almost dreamy psychadelic touch to some of the tracks, which is a new element too, but Coroner donīt go overboard with those ideas.

"Mental Vortex" features a detailed and powerful, but also pretty sterile, sound production, which has robbed Coronerīs music of the organic touch it possessed on the previous releases (Iīm not surprised that the album is produced by Tom Morris). Itīs still a professional and well sounding production job, but itīs just very different from the sound on the predecessors. The playing is as always on a very high level. Especially guitarist Tommy Vetterli delivers one killer riff after another, and his solo work is extraordinaire (and often neo-classical influenced). Sometimes the technical shifts in rhythm sound a bit forced and awkward, disrupting the flow of the tracks, but other times those sections work pretty well.

In addition to the above mentioned cover of "I Want You (She's So Heavy)", highlights include "Son of Lilith" and "Semtex Revolution", but "Mental Vortex" is pretty consistent in both quality and style. So upon conclusion itīs another high quality release by Coroner. It doesnīt exactly reach the heights of "No More Color (1989)", which was always going to be a difficult task, but itīs still an interesting release in its own right. It shows development and reeks boldness, which are parameters I value greatly, so while this is not what I would call Coronerīs best release, I still think a 3.5 - 4 star (75%) rating is fully deserved.

(Originally posted on Metal Music Archives)

Review by Warthur
PROG REVIEWER
3 stars Coming down off their masterpiece (No More Color), Coroner's Mental Vortex feels to me like a bit of a step down. The band's chops are still tight, but there's points where their technical thrash metal style seems tired and worn out. In particular, the closing cover of the Beatles' I Want You (She's So Heavy) is drab and unimaginative, in stark contrast to previous covers of 1960s psychedelic classics by the band. Still, it's a competent enough album which offers an entertaining listen, but it isn't the world-changing experience No More Color was and suggests that the band's time was running short at this point.

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