Jump to content

Get What You Deserve

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Get What You Deserve
Studio album by
Released10 January 1994
Recorded1993
StudioT&T Studio, Gelsenkirchen, Germany
Genre
Length44:15
LabelSteamhammer/SPV
Sodom chronology
Aber bitte mit Sahne
(1993)
Get What You Deserve
(1994)
Marooned Live
(1994)
Reissue cover
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

Get What You Deserve is the sixth studio album by German thrash metal band Sodom, released on 10 January 1994 via Steamhammer/SPV.[2] This was the band's last album to feature guitarist Andy Brings, and their first release with drummer Guido "Atomic Steif" Richter as the replacement of founding member Christian "Witchhunter" Dudek. Get What You Deserve finds Sodom continuing their experimentation, although it bypasses the death metal sound of its predecessor Tapping the Vein in favor of a more crossover influenced approach,[3] while still retaining their thrash metal sound.

Track listing

[edit]
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Get What You Deserve"Tom Angelripper3:44
2."Jabba the Hut"Angelripper2:29
3."Jesus Screamer"Andy Brings1:42
4."Delight in Slaying"Angelripper2:40
5."Die Stumme Ursel"Angelripper3:47
6."Freaks of Nature"Angelripper2:07
7."Eat Me"Brings3:22
8."Unbury the Hatchet"Angelripper2:28
9."Into Perdition"Angelripper2:45
10."Sodomized"Angelripper2:43
11."Fellows in Misery"Angelripper2:18
12."Tribute to Moby Dick" (Instrumental)Angelripper, Atomic Steif, Brings4:21
13."Silence Is Consent"Angelripper2:30
14."Erwachet"Brings2:17
15."Gomorrah"Angelripper2:19
16."Angel Dust" (Venom cover)Conrad Lant, Jeffrey Dunn, Tony Bray2:39
Total length:44:15

Personnel

[edit]
  • Tom Angelripper - vocals, bass
  • Andy Brings - guitars
  • Atomic Steif - drums

Charts

[edit]
Chart (1994) Peak position
German Album Charts 45[citation needed]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Sodom - Get What You Deserve - AllMusic Review by Eduardo Rivadavia". AllMusic. Retrieved 12 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Sodom - Get What You Deserve". Discogs.com. 14 August 1994. Retrieved 24 December 2021.
  3. ^ "12 More Albums That Kept Thrash Alive In The 90's!". Worshipmetal.com. 10 October 2017. Retrieved 2 June 2021.