Legendary grindcore act TERRORIZER has set “Hordes Of Zombies” as the title of its new album, due in North America on February 28, 2012 via the French label Season Of Mist.
TERRORIZER’s 2011 lineup includes Commando (a.k.a. Pete Sandoval) who remains dug into position on drums, blasting out armor-piercing beats and defending his territory as one of the most brutal drummers alive.
Wolf (a.k.a. Anthony Rezhawk), the vocalist on the previous TERRORIZER album release, “Darker Days Ahead”, returns for his second menacing oration of dark politicized prophecies about the apocalyptic near future.
The new TERRORIZER lineup also features David Vincent (MORBID ANGEL) on bass, ready to continue the onslaught he began with TERRORIZER’s debut album masterpiece, “World Downfall”.
On guitar, it is the great honor of Katina Culture (RESISTANT CULTURE) to shred in place of the late Jesse Pintado, who’s still felt to be in the band in heart and spirit. She’s attempted to do justice to Jesse’s frantic-yet-precise tornado of riffing while adding her own style to the mix of sonic wreckage.
TERRORIZER 2011 is:
Wolf (a.k.a. Anthony Rezhawk) – Vocals
Katina Culture – Guitar
David Vincent – Bass
Commando (aka Pete Sandoval – Drums
Pintado, a founding member and guitarist of TERRORIZER, died at Holland’s Erasmus MC hospital on August 27, 2006 due to liver failure, only less than a week after the release of TERRORIZER’s second album “Darker Days Ahead”. His death effectively put TERRORIZER’s future in question.
With an aggression and ferocity until then unheard, TERRORIZER took the scene by storm with the 1989 release of its highly acclaimed and genre-defining debut album, “World Downfall” (Earache Records). The LP established the band as a cult institution, and the musicians went on to concentrate on their future main outfits: Pete Sandoval (drums) with MORBID ANGEL and Jesse Pintado with NAPALM DEATH.
With “World Downfall”, TERRORIZER created the “Reign In Blood” of grindcore, inspiring a generation of bands, their popularity never waning through these intervening years. The massive amount of available bootleg recordings and band merchandise, as well as rumors of a follow-up album, kept the TERRORIZER name alive.
Source: www.blabbermouth.net