Abominations of Desolation ( September 2nd, 1991 Catalog ID: MOSH 48CD Label: Earache Records Format: CD
1. The Invocation / Chapel of Ghouls 07:11 Show lyrics 2. Unholy Blasphemies 04:00 Show lyrics 3. Angel of Disease 05:36 Show lyrics 4. Azagthoth 05:49 Show lyrics 5. The Gate / Lord of All Fevers 05:55 Show lyrics 6. Hell Spawn 02:32 Show lyrics 7. Abominations 04:19 Show lyrics 8. Demon Seed 02:12 Show lyrics 9. Welcome to Hell 04:57 Show lyrics
Band members Trey Azagthoth Guitars, Keyboards Richard Brunelle Guitars Mike Browning Drums, Vocals John Ortega Bass Miscellaneous staff David Vincent Producer Mark Craven Artwork Bill Metoyer Producer J. Barry Layout (CD)
Recorded in 1986 as their first album, with David Vincent producing, but never put out. They finally released it through Earache after a series of bootlegs were produced. One of them being a release on Japanese label Satanic Records on glow in the dark vinyl, red vinyl, splatter vinyl, and black vinyl that's limited to 1000 copies.
It is specified, on the cover, that it was intended to be their first full-length album, yet unreleased, making Altars of Madness their proper debut. However, Trey Azagthoth has said in interviews that Abominations of Desolation is not really an album and should be considered a demo. The demo-tape version is pictured below, the title is misspelled(?) as Abomination of Desolation.
Most of the songs were reworked and appeared on later Morbid Angel albums. "Chapel of Ghouls", "Lord of All Fevers and Plague", and "Welcome to Hell" (renamed "Evil Spells") can be heard on Altars of Madness. "Unholy Blasphemies", "Abominations" and "Azagthoth" (renamed "The Ancient Ones") are on Blessed Are the Sick. "Angel of Disease" was recorded for Covenant, and lastly, "Hell Spawn" finally appeared on Formulas Fatal to the Flesh as "Hellspawn: The Rebirth". To date "Demon Seed" is the only song from these sessions that has not been re-recorded for a full-length album.
Recording information:
"The Abomination of Desolation" is a prose-poem written in 1929 by horror/sci-fi/fantasy author Clark Ashton Smith and most likely the inspiratiion source for the release title.