I hate the term “meat and potatoes death metal”. I’m not sure who originally coined it (keep an eye out for this person, as they need to be tarred and feathered, stat) , but I hereby move to have this ridiculous piece of jargon forever expurgated from the metal reviewers’ lexicon. Not only does it exemplify lazy journalism and a lack of capacity for real critical thought, it states the blatantly obvious. All death metal should have meat on its bones (I’m not sure where the potatoes come in). It should be raw and bloody and hanging from stainless steel hooks and chains. It is the music of carnivores and cannibals.
Poland’s Vader are one of the bands that gets wrongfully saddled with this obnoxious term on a regular basis. One would think that being genre pioneers and nearly thirty year veterans of the scene would garner a bit more respect, especially when they’re still capable of unleashing some of the most potent death metal around. Indeed, the quartet’s ninth studio album, Welcome to the Morbid Reich, is a prime cut of death metal beef. There isn’t an ounce of fat or gristle to be found anywhere amidst its thirty-seven minute running time, and the music is appetizingly rare and juicy. It’s one of the most satisfying slabs of DM to show up on the chopping block in 2011, the type of album you can really sink your teeth into.
Alright, I’ll dispense with the silly meat analogies, as I’m sure you’ve all gotten the point by now. What’s really interesting about Vader is their consistency and unwavering dedication to death metal, traits which are abundantly apparent on Welcome to the Morbid Reich. According to Metal Archives, the band formed in 1983, and even though guitarist/vocalist Piotr Wiwczarek is the only remaining original member, the fact that the band has stuck to their guns and has released stellar material on a regular basis across nearly three decades in spite of ever-changing musical climates, about a million lineup changes and personal hardships (not to mention the fact that Poland was a part of the Eastern Bloc during their formative years) is beyond impressive. In this respect, Welcome to the Morbid Reich (whose title references one of the band’s early demos) can be seen as celebration of everything that makes Vader great.
What makes Vader so great, you ask? First and foremost has to be intensity. By surrounding himself with a lineup of younger musicians, Wiwczarek has kept Vader lean and hungry, which undoubtedly plays a key role in maintaining the relentless assault of Welcome to the Morbid Reich. Of course, it could also have something to do with the fact that Wiwczarek clearly hasn’t lost any of his own personal intensity and youthful exuberance for death metal; listening to the album makes it seem quite possible that he had no choice but to hire youthful musicians, as it’s hard to imagine his fellow forty-somethings being able to keep up with him on tracks like “Only Hell Knows” and “Don’t Rip the Beast’s Heart Out”.
Intensity is nothing without craftsmanship. I’ve espoused the virtues of craftsmanship many times in previous reviews, but it is particularly important to address in the case of Vader. I think we can all agree that Vader’s approach to death metal has evolved little over the years, and while some might equate this with stagnation, I beg to differ. The fact of the matter is, Vader perfected their sound roughly a decade ago (see 2000′s mighty Litany) and everything they’ve done since has arguably been an attempt to hone and maintain that high level of craftsmanship. Welcome to the Morbid Reich doesn’t push any boundaries because it doesn’t have to; there’s no need to evolve when you’re already an apex predator. Vader have wisely chosen to continue to follow their hearts and write great songs in the process, from the smoldering skull-crush of “Black Velvet and Skulls of Steel” to the blistering high-speed bloodbath of “Decapitated Saints”. Indeed, the band’s knack for penning sharp, concise and headbangable death metal is truly unparalleled.
Welcome of the Morbid Reich is also quite stellar from a production and playing perspective. The album sounds dark, dense and crunchy as hell without falling victim to the over compression and poor mastering jobs that plague modern metal. New guitarist Spider brings some serious shred to the table and Paweł Jaroszewicz’s drums have never sounded so full and organic. Piotr’s rhythm guitar-work is as tight as ever and his vocals are still the heavily accented hell-furnace bellow that Vader fans have come to know and love, if anything it’s gotten even more gnarly with age. The recording bristles with a calculated precision, yet retains a high degree of warmth and emotion that’s sorely lacking in much of today’s cold ‘n’ clinical death metal.
At this point it’s safe to say that Vader are more than just a band, they’re a death metal institution. Defiant longevity, quality songwriting and an unwillingness to bend or break in the face of multitudes of obstacles and naysayers has secured them a throne amongst the unhallowed halls of the death metal elite, sitting atop the broken bones and shredded carcasses of a zillion lesser bands. Welcome to the Morbid Reich is yet another jewel in their collective crown, proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that their sound is anything but mere “meat and potatoes”.

Fucking right on. Piotr Wiwczarek is a true death metal lifer; we can only aspire to a fraction of his metal fortitude in old our age. This album is shockingly satisfying.
Guilty as charged! I like the phrase, and have unashamedly used it on occasion! Call me an idiot, but I would never use it to describe Vader. Jungle Rot, yeah.
Good album , too. These guys are just consistently solid.
I couldn’t really get into this one but the review made me go back and listen to the first two LPs.
Good album.Its always nice to bang head with Vader.J always have in mind their strong live performance.Watch them couple of times here in Serbia.They will come together with Gorgoroth in december again.Really proffesional and honest band,and have my support.
Love the review. Will I check it out? Maybe.
What first strikes me about the album is all the imagery of Hitler-era Germany. Sure, that’s all over in metal, but coming from a Polish band it’s all the more interesting. How controversial do you think that is in the place that was first to be crushed by the Nazi war machine?
@Full Metal Attorney – Naturally, the cover is purposefully evocative in that sense. The only information I’ve found about it comes from the artist:
“Here are a few words from the cover’s author, Zbigniew Bielak (artworks for Watain or Destroyer 666 to name just a few):
‘To follow closely on Lars von Trier’s spectacular nazi gaffe in Cannes, I’d say that the new Vader cover artwork gives a subtle hint of what would happen if the good old Cthulhu would be contracted to erect a pyramid for Thule… Well, who knows what they were really doing in subterranean galleries of Harz? One thing is certain – propelled by the spirit of most Ancient Ones, Vader indeed stand tall as death metal’s Wunderwaffe, and I hope the cover fits well in their armory of morbid imagination!’”
I found this on Vader’s news page on their site. Make of it what you will. I’ll consider it an evocative, artistic appropriation in the service of Cthulhu, and nothing more, for the moment.
A couple of things about the cover. Wiwczarek’s interest in militaria and World War II in particular is well documented in interviews and the lyrics of Vader songs such as “Cold Demons”, In fact, when I saw Vader a few years back he was wearing some kind of military flight/jumpsuit on stage which I couldn’t quite place. So, I think we’re safe in assuming that the artwork and use of the term “reich” in the album title are just an extension of that and nothing more. The cover does evoke images of the Nuremberg rally and and by extension Riefenstahl’s Triumph of the Will film with it’s structure and color scheme, however, it is also in a long tradition of twisted landscapes gracing the covers of death metal albums, such as those found on works by Suffocation, Morbid Angel, Dismember etc.
With that said, there is something of an NSBM scene in Poland that includes Kataxu, Sunwheel, Gontyna Kry, Veles, etc though I’m not sure how big it is. Rob Darken of Graveland, in spite of his political leanings, claims that NS is a failed ideology and disassociates himself from that scene, in spite of being probably the second biggest inspiration for NSBM behind Varg Vikernes.
There was a verbally fight in Poland 96/97 between ns bm and Vader/Behemoth.OLd story.Spitting and other things.Huh,who is true and who is not.Some gay from Vader buy ww2 clothing,helmets and other things from some man that Rob know.Than Rob change his statements .It was around 2003.Stupid things.Nothing special.Just colecting things from ww2.Growing up in forties .Rob need darkness again.