Song of the Crippled Bull is the debut EP from American based progressive death metal band Black Crown Initiate. It was released independently on July 17, 2013 and quickly became a featured EP on various underground publications. The album was recorded by Carson Slovak at Atrium Audio in Lancaster, Pennsylvania. Slovak is also credited for having designed the artwork.
| Song of the Crippled Bull | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| EP by Black Crown Initiate | ||||
| Released | July 17, 2013 | |||
| Recorded | Atrium Audio | |||
| Genre | Progressive death metal | |||
| Length | 21:34 | |||
| Label | Self-released | |||
| Producer | Carson Slovak | |||
| Black Crown Initiate chronology | ||||
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In an interview with Terrorizer, guitarist Andy Thomas goes in depth about the concept of the EP and some of the themes that surround the music: "Basically, there are a couple of themes running through the album. Microcosmic and macrocosmic, in their nature. The overarching apparent theme is based on Hindu texts. A four stage cycle in the universe that goes from the creation to destruction, and then recreation. And the last phase is called Caliuga. It’s a phase of complete depravity, everything is almost ruined. If I look around that’s what I see. It’s symbolized by iron, an extension of the Iron Age, and also by a one-legged bull. The first phase is known as the Golden Age, which you read about in all this different cultures, but that’s symbolized by a bull with all his legs. We’re now living in the age of the one-legged bull, which is what The Song Of The Crippled Bull is all about."[1]
| No. | Title | Length |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Stench of The Iron Age" | 7:14 |
| 2. | "Ghost She Sends" | 6:27 |
| 3. | "The Mountain Top" | 3:17 |
| 4. | "Song of The Crippled Bull" | 4:36 |
| Total length: | 21:34 | |
"The band’s debut EP, Song of the Crippled Bull, is an epic four-part suite of progressive death metal sanctity that shouldn’t be ignored. The utter brutality matched with a sense of grandeur and melodic reprieve is immensely impressive." - No Clean Singing[2]
"A very good start for an up and coming metal band, and a promising release that shows what they are capable of becoming." - Sputnik Music[3]
"'Song of The Crippled Bull' is fantastic on almost every level, and the major complaint is that it’s a giant tease for their debut LP." - Metal Underground[4]
"Another new exemplar of the fast-growing modern prog-death scene – think mechanized hyperspeed technicality and shimmering chord flurries." - Metalsucks[5]
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