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Mental Vortex sees Coroner continuing the experimental formula from its predecessor No More Color (1989), showcasing a mixture of thrash metal with progressive, jazz fusion and avant-garde influences, [3] while "unbridled speed and aggression were replaced by highly technical and unconventional songwriting".
Coroner released four more studio albums within next decade: Punishment for Decadence (1988), No More Color (1989), Mental Vortex (1991) and Grin (1993), as well as the compilation album Coroner (1995), which also included some new and unreleased material; [7] each release was acclaimed by critics and the public alike.
Several albums, some of which had come to be known as technical thrash metal, were released in 1991, including Overkill's Horrorscope, Heathen's Victims of Deception, Dark Angel's Time Does Not Heal, Sepultura's Arise, Coroner's Mental Vortex, Prong's Prove You Wrong and Forced Entry's As Above, So Below.
All information is taken from the CD liner notes of the 1988 release. [5] Coroner. Ron Broder (as Ron Royce) – vocals, bass; Tommy Vetterli (as Tommy T. Baron) – guitars; Marky Edelmann (Marquis Marky) – drums; Additional musicians. Gary Marlowe – synthesizer, effects; Dexter – backing vocals, assistant engineer; Production
Cold subsides when the vortex restabilizes and drives the arctic air back north. January’s freeze-out comes after December started cold, but finished out unusually warm across most of the country.
It should only contain pages that are Coroner (band) albums or lists of Coroner (band) albums, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Coroner (band) albums in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Editor's Note for Sat. Jan. 18: A polar vortex is set to impact much of the US. Click here for the latest update.. A polar vortex is forecasted to blanket most of the continental United States in ...
No More Color was the album where Coroner started to truly "progress", as the songs are still similar to their older, speedy, European thrash metal but start to feature elements of the avant-garde progressive thrash of their later albums, akin to the band's then-labelmates Watchtower.