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Monday, January 16, 2023

L.V.I. - Mentally Embalmed

Delving deep into the Arizona underground thrash scene of the late 1980's might reveal a little known entity known as Loud Verbal Insanity or L.V.I. Thrashback Records owner Eric Hoffman has already done that effort for you and, using source material directly from the band, re-pressed this obscure outfit's 1991 demo, Mentally Embalmed. Thrashback Records always does a good job with the layout, this time honoring the original release with an updated take on the original C.C. Delk artwork by Sidjimbe Art. The interior twelve page liner notes include a basic interview conducted by legendary NJ based Metal-Core Zine executor Chris Forbes. My only complaint is that there are not lyrics provided. 

The four song demo's thrashing tracks remind me of a mixture of Slayer, early Pestilence, and Megadeth with Teutonic intensity and grit. The mix indicates a wide-ranging input of styles and background interests. "Blind Ambitions" is a solid opener with a central riff that hearkens back to classics like "Wake Up Dead." Followed by "Voices", my personal favorite on the album with memorable headbanging riffs and pit-inducing energy. The clean guitar intro resets the ears to take in the twisting Grunted thrash vocals from Denny Martinez bark in the background. "Let Us Prey" is the shortest of the tracks at four minutes long matching the opening tracks with big rhythmic thrashing motifs. Final track "Menacing Prophecy" is the most Pestilence-esque in tone and production aligning with Malleus Maleficarum. 

The release is limited to 300 copies, evidence of the purely scholarly interest in L.V.I. and Mentally Embalmed. With members engaged in no noteworthy, notable, or even un-notable projects, there's no reason anyone would stumble on L.V.I. unless engaged in studious endeavors related to this specific area's thrash and death metal scene. The small quantity of audio material present here may be a turn off to those who desire something substantial in a physical release. I think the included interview and photos in the booklet are a commendable attempt to overcome the limited audio. Some rehearsal tracks or material that would have appeared on the mentioned first demo that was scrapped would have made this more stand out for me from an archival stand point. Still, this is a neat little release with solid thrash from the tail end of the genre's peak. 

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