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Agorapocalypse

Agorapocalypse
Agoraphobic Nosebleed - Agorapocalypse.jpeg
Studio album by Agoraphobic Nosebleed
Released April 14, 2009 (2009-04-14)
Recorded Visceral Sound studios, October 2007 – December 2008
Genre Grindcore, thrashcore
Length 28:31
Label Relapse
Producer Matthew F. Jacobson
Agoraphobic Nosebleed chronology
Split with Insect Warfare
(2008)
Agorapocalypse
(2009)
Split with Crom
(2009)
Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
About.com 4/5 stars
Allmusic 3.5/5 stars
Baltimore City Paper favorable
Decibel 8/10 stars
Exclaim! favorable
Eye Weekly favorable
The Maine Campus A−
Pitchfork Media 5/10
PopMatters 8/10
Washington City Paper mixed

Agorapocalypse is the fourth full-length studio album by American grindcore band Agoraphobic Nosebleed (ANb). It was released through Relapse Records on April 14, 2009, in the United States, and April 20 internationally. The album was recorded by ANb's guitarist Scott Hull at his Visceral Sound studios; Hull also wrote the drum parts using Toontrack's Drumkit from Hell in his digital audio workstation. This is also the band's first record to feature new vocalist Katherine Katz.Agorapocalypse's cover artwork was designed by German illustrator Florian Bertmer.

The cover art for Agorapocalypse was drawn by German illustrator Florian Bertmer, who had previously designed the covers for ANb's Bestial Machinery (Discography Volume 1), Agoraphobic Nosebleed / Kill the Client and the inner-sleeve illustration for the group's 1999 split with Converge, The Poacher Diaries. Bertmer, vocalist J. Randall, and guitarist Scott Hull discussed the themes of the album art by phone and agreed to give it an "old-school thrashcore vibe", because of ANb's new musical direction. Agorapocalypse's design was also inspired by the Mad Marc Rude illustration for the Misfits' Earth A.D., which Bertmer defined as "insanely detailed". Bertmer also explained that "[he] tried to incorporate as many iconic characters to give the whole piece a claustrophobic appearance."

Bertmer initially created an outline black-and-white ink drawing measuring 14 inches (36 cm) square; he spent about two weeks sketching and one week drawing, then colored it on a computer. He stylized depictions of "nuclear war, drug use, police brutality, and a greedy businessman—the art is less shocking to the senses by its vivid colors and comic-like appearance." The green head in the middle of Agorapocalypse's cover art is based on a photo of Bertmer himself.


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