Progarchives, the progressive rock ultimate discography

EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE

Disharmonic Orchestra

Tech/Extreme Prog Metal


From Progarchives.com, the ultimate progressive rock music website

Disharmonic Orchestra Expositionsprophylaxe album cover
2.70 | 8 ratings | 2 reviews | 38% 5 stars

Write a review

Buy DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Music
from Progarchives.com partners
Studio Album, released in 1990

Songs / Tracks Listing

1. Introphylaxe (1:31)
2. Inexorable Logic (3:17)
3. Life Disintergrating (2:22)
4. Sick Dishonourableness (4:51)
5. Successive Substitution (3:41)
6. Accelerated Evolution (2:40)
7. Psychoanalysis (2:31)
8. Quintessentially Unecessary Institution (3:29)
9. Hypophysis (4:03)
10. Disappeared with Hermaphrodite Choirs (2:25)
11. Disharmonisation (5:07)
12. The Unequalled Visual Response Mechanism (2:01)
13. Onset of Serious Problems (2:16)
14. Dehumanoid (3:04)
15. Interposition (1:57)
16. Shredded Illusion (2:22)

Total Time 47:37

Line-up / Musicians

- Patrick Klopf / guitars, vocals
- Martin Messner / drums
- Herwig Zamernik / bass

Releases information

Released through Nuclear Blast in 1990.
Recorded & mixed at Dust Productions in Chenbach, Germany.
Lyrics by Patrick Klopf.
VINYL LP on "Black-VINYL + 1000 copys on "SPLATTER-VINYL"
Re-released in bare bones digipak form in 2000 with the Pungent Stench split
tracks a bonus.

Thanks to UMUR for the addition
Edit this entry

Buy DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Expositionsprophylaxe Music



DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Expositionsprophylaxe ratings distribution


2.70
(8 ratings)
Essential: a masterpiece of progressive rock music (38%)
38%
Excellent addition to any prog rock music collection (0%)
0%
Good, but non-essential (50%)
50%
Collectors/fans only (12%)
12%
Poor. Only for completionists (0%)
0%

DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA Expositionsprophylaxe reviews


Showing all collaborators reviews and last reviews preview | Show all reviews/ratings

Collaborators/Experts Reviews

Review by UMUR
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR Honorary Collaborator
2 stars "Expositionsprophylaxe" is the debut full-length studio album by Austrian death metal/ grindcore act Disharmonic Orchestra. Much like the two preceeding releases by the band, "Expositionsprophylaxe" features a pretty simple and at times noisy take on the genre. The avant garde tag that Disharmonic Orchestra earned with their 2nd full-length studio album "Not to be Undimensional Conscious (1992)", canīt be used to explain how "Expositionsprophylaxe" sounds. There are experimental parts on the album but the basic style is simple death metal/ grindcore. An example of the more experimental nature of the music can be heard in a track like "Disharmonisation". The music is overall a bit too primitive and generic and the weak production doesnīt help much either. The drums are way too high in the mix and have a funny sound while the guitar totally drowns.

I listened to "Expositionsprophylaxe" back in the early nineties. A friend of mine had the album on LP and he got me a cassette copy which I listened to on occasion. It never did much for me though and listening to "Expositionsprophylaxe" again after all these years doesnīt help much on my initial impression. A 2 star rating is warranted.

Review by siLLy puPPy
SPECIAL COLLABORATOR PSIKE, JRF/Canterbury, P Metal, Eclectic
3 stars One of the early oddities in the world of nascent death metal, the members of Austria's DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA couldn't make up their minds if they wanted to form a death metal band or a grindcore one so in the true spirit of intrepid exploration, the original trio of guitarist / vocalist Patrick Kopf, drummer Martin Messer and guitarist Herald Bezdek did both and thus crafted a bizarre hybrid that featured the technical chops of death metal focused through a grindcore lens. With this lineup the band released a couple demos, two more EPs and then hit the road with Austria's other early death metal noisemakers Pungeant Stench where they got noticed by Nuclear Blast Records. A record deal was scored.

By the time the band got around to its 1990 debut EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE, Bezdek had been replaced by bassist Herwig Zamerik and the band had haunted their homeland with some of the most caustic expressions of grindcore meets death metal rawness that the world had seen up to that point. Also cited as an early example of technical death metal, EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE featured 16 wildly unhinged tracks that was part Morbid Angel and part Napalm Death with guttural growls, guitar squeals and blastbeat frenzies pointing towards the former while pungent short blasts of skanky punk infused riffing kept the core elements in the forefront.

Adventurous theatrical embellishments such as the opening orchestral freakery "Introphylaxe" and the acoustic / synth touches that opened "Accelerated Evolution" showcase a trenchant avant-garde tendency, one that would permeate the band's following releases. Strange bleed-ins of unrelated musical processions and other surprises pop up even on this more streamlined debut that is somewhat of an anomaly in the band's original run from 1987-95. With weirdness at bay at least in the extremities found with the jazzier more Atheist inspired albums that followed, EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE delivers a caustic no nonsense noise-fest that showcases a rhythmic raucousness that also offers a rather amusing propensity for surrealism and silliness as evidenced on track titles such as "Disappeared With Hermaphrodite Choirs" and "The Unequalled Visual Response Mechanism."

As one of the pioneering forces of mutant metal DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA found few receptive ears who were only getting used to the world of extreme metal while these pioneering trailblazers were already taking things to the next level and beyond. While the band would find a more receptive audience with its following albums once the metal universe had inculcated a veritable pool of avant-garde excesses, this debut tends to get overlooked in favor of those more outlandish examples of experimental freakery. While not the band's peak effort, EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE delivers satisfying energetic death metal meets grindcore performances that offer a consistent flow of deathened distortion with a touch of atonality with technically infused chops along with the random decor of experimentalism.

Overall i find this to be in an interesting debut although perhaps not to the death metal standards that 1990 had to offer but then again this isn't a purist's death metal album at all but rather an experimental hybridization of two of metal's most extreme art forms of the era. What makes this release unique are the uses of subtle syncopation and other time signature deviations from the more established death metal acts of the time. Just enough small weird quirks to suggest this band was all about tackling the strange and wildly unknown that it would fully embrace on its next two albums before disbanding. Although this could be rightfully tagged as deathcore, that style evolved in a completely different direction than what DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA presented on its debut EXPOSITIONSPROPHYLAXE. From what i've experienced, this one remains fairly unique and for that it holds a special charm.

3.5 rounded down

Latest members reviews

No review or rating for the moment | Submit a review

Post a review of DISHARMONIC ORCHESTRA "Expositionsprophylaxe"

You must be a forum member to post a review, please register here if you are not.

MEMBERS LOGIN ZONE

As a registered member (register here if not), you can post rating/reviews (& edit later), comments reviews and submit new albums.

You are not logged, please complete authentication before continuing (use forum credentials).

Forum user
Forum password

Copyright Prog Archives, All rights reserved. | Legal Notice | Privacy Policy | Advertise | RSS + syndications

Other sites in the MAC network: JazzMusicArchives.com — jazz music reviews and archives | MetalMusicArchives.com — metal music reviews and archives

Donate monthly and keep PA fast-loading and ad-free forever.