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God Hates Us All
God Hates Us All cover
Studio album by Slayer
Released September 11, 2001
Recorded Vancouver, Canada
Genre Thrash metal
Length 42:21
49:39 (Collector's Edition)
Label American Recordings
Producer(s) Matt Hyde
Professional reviews
Slayer chronology
Diabolus in Musica
(1998)
God Hates Us All
(2001)
Eternal Pyre
(2006)


God Hates Us All is the eighth studio album by American thrash metal band Slayer. The album was recorded in Vancouver at The Warehouse Studio. After three delays due to artwork and remixing concerns, it was finally released through American Recordings on September 11, 2001.

Contents

[edit] Recording

The album was set to be recorded in a Hollywood studio, but decided to record in Vancouver, Canada. The reasons were; it was cheaper than a Hollywood recording studio and producer Matt Hyde had previously worked in the Vancouver studio and had his equipment setup. Guitarist Jeff Hanneman stated "It will be cheaper, there'll be no distractions.", but was the opposite of what he expected.[1]

The band picked Hyde for the job after they gave him somewhat of a trial and the tracks "Bloodline" and "Warzone". If the two tracks were good the band would hire him.[2]

The band used seven-string guitars on the tracks "Warzone" and "Here Comes The Pain", the first time they had done so.

King asserts the album does not sound like Show No Mercy or Reign in Blood but a mix between the two.[2]

[edit] Reception and criticism

The album debuted at number 28 on the Billboard 200,[3] selling 51,000 copies in its first week.[4] As of August 16, 2006 GHUA has hold 304,000 copies worldwide.[4]

The single "Disciple" received a Grammy nomination for "Best Metal Performance" at the 44th Grammy Awards, the band's first nomination. King asserts the members neither cared about the nomination, nor the award ceremony, but though it was cool to be nominated, not expecting to win.[5] for the track "Disciple". The Grammy awards took place on January 8, 2002 with Tool winning the award for "Schism".[6]

Nu-metal tendencies King - The crowd love it.

[edit] Lyrical themes

The songs "Deviance" and "God Send Death", written by Hanneman are about the idea of killing people for fun.[citation needed] "I've read a bunch of books, and I put a lot of thought into it, and I figured out I'm really not a serial killer. I could kill somebody if they pissed me off, but I couldn't kill someone I didn't know, just for the power of it. I was really trying to get into that person's mind. Why do they get off on it? Without being angry, just killing for the sake of killing and getting off on it. I just wanted to get into that mindset." states Hanneman.[citation needed] Vocalist Tom Araya had no contribution to the lyrics of the record.[1]

King wrote roughly 80% of the lyrics and asserts the album's lyrical themes are people can relate to, rather then "Satan this", "Satan that".[2] The song "Exile" is about what a person would do is someone gets under their skin, a topic King states anyone can relate to.[2]

The album Slipknot by Slipknot was an influence to King when writing lyrics.[2]King asserts it's angry, aggressive, and vocalist Corey Taylor sounds pissed off throughout the whole album.[2] King hoped Pantera's album Reinventing The Steel would be an influence but asserts, "It's ok. When that came out I was looking to get inspired big-time, but I didn't. It just sounds like they're going through the motions."[2]

[edit] Controversy

The censored album cover for
The censored album cover for

The original album cover depicted a Bible covered in blood, with nails pushed in specific places to form a pentagram star, and with "Slayer" burnt into the front cover. A slip insert was created to be placed in front of the real cover in stores. This sleeve depicts the name of the band, four orthogonal Latin crosses in the form of a cross crosslet, and the name of the album in gold on a white background.

Despite its title and the original cover, the band was at pains to point out that the album was not a return to the horror-influenced "Satanic" lyrics of the past(despite the fact that much of the lyrics present on the album are very anti-religious, and much of the merchandise on the subsequent tours contained Satanic artwork). Kerry King has stated that the title "God Hates Us All" is a reference to having a bad day, one where you feel like God hates you. As the album's release coincided with the September 11, 2001 attacks, promotional posters were taken down immediately.

[edit] Appearances in media

Bloodline Dracula 2000 Warzone WWF theme Here comes the Pain Wrestling

[edit] Track listing

Audio samples:
  1. "Darkness of Christ" (Hanneman/King) – 1:30
  2. "Disciple" (Hanneman/King) – 3:35
  3. "God Send Death" (Hanneman/King/Araya) – 3:45
  4. "New Faith" (King) – 3:05
  5. "Cast Down" (King) – 3:26
  6. "Threshold" (Hanneman/King) – 2:29
  7. "Exile" (King) – 3:55
  8. "Seven Faces" (King) – 3:41
  9. "Bloodline" (Hanneman/King/Araya) – 3:36
  10. "Deviance" (Hanneman/Araya) – 3:08
  11. "War Zone" (King) – 2:45
  12. "Here Comes the Pain" (King) – 4:32
  13. "Payback" (King) – 3:05

[edit] Track listing (2002 Collector's Edition)

  1. "Darkness of Christ" (Lyrics: King) (Music: Hanneman) – 1:30
  2. "Disciple" (Lyrics: King) (Music: Hanneman) – 3:35
  3. "God Send Death" (Lyrics: Hanneman/Araya) (Music: Hanneman) – 3:47
  4. "New Faith" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:05
  5. "Cast Down" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:26
  6. "Threshold" (Lyrics: King) (Music: Hanneman) – 2:29
  7. "Exile" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:55
  8. "Seven Faces" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:41
  9. "Bloodline" (Lyrics: Araya/Hanneman) (Music: Hanneman/King) – 3:36
  10. "Deviance" (Lyrics: Hanneman/Araya) (Music: Hanneman) – 3:08
  11. "War Zone" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 2:45
  12. "Scarstruck" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:29
  13. "Here Comes the Pain" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 4:32
  14. "Payback" (Lyrics & Music: King) – 3:05
  15. "Addict" (Lyrics: King) (Music: Hanneman) – 3:41
  • "Darkness of Christ (DVD Intro video)
  • "Bloodline (Video)"
  • "Raining Blood (Live Video)" (2001-12-07 San Fransisco, CA)
  • "Interview/B-Roll Footage"

[edit] Chart positions

Year Chart Position
2001 The Billboard 200 28
2001 Top Canadian Albums 9
2001 Top Internet Albums 18

[edit] Credits

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b Devenish, Colin (2001-9-7). liveDaily Interview: Slayer. livedaily.com. Retrieved on 2007-01-28.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g Kerrang! interview with Kerry King about God Hates Us All album. SLayersaves.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-06.
  3. ^ Slayer's album chart history. Billboard.com. Retrieved on 2006-12-01.
  4. ^ a b SLAYER: 'Christ Illusion' Lands At No. 5 On BILLBOARD Chart!. Blabbermouth.net (2006-08-16). Retrieved on 2007-03-04.
  5. ^ Barker, Samuel (2002-02-09). A Conversation With Kerry King. Rockonthenet.com. Retrieved on 2007-03-03.
  6. ^ 44th Grammy Awards - 2002. Rockonthenet (2002-27-2). Retrieved on 2006-11-29.
Slayer
Tom Araya | Jeff Hanneman | Kerry King | Dave Lombardo

Tony Scaglione | Paul Bostaph | Jon Dette

Discography
Albums and extended plays: Show No Mercy | Haunting the Chapel | Hell Awaits | Reign in Blood | South of Heaven | Seasons in the Abyss | Divine Intervention | Undisputed Attitude | Diabolus in Musica | God Hates Us All | Eternal Pyre | Christ Illusion
Live albums: Live Undead | Decade of Aggression
Compilations: Soundtrack to the Apocalypse
Videos and DVDs
Live Intrusion | War at the Warfield | Still Reigning
Songs
"Angel of Death" | "Raining Blood" | "Eyes of the Insane" | "Jihad"