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Cannibal Corpse

Cannibal Corpse is an American death metal band from Buffalo, New York.
Formed in 1988, the band has released twelve studio albums, two box sets, four video albums and one live album.
The band has had little radio or television exposure throughout its career, although a cult following began to build behind the release of their 1991 album Butchered at Birth, and 1992 album Tomb of the Mutilated.
Both albums achieved worldwide sales of one million copies by 2003, including 558,929 in the United States, making them the all-time top-selling death metal band in the country.The members of Cannibal Corpse were originally inspired by thrash metal bands like Slayer and Kreator, as well as other death metal bands such as Morbid Angel, Autopsy and Death.
The band's album art (most often by Vincent Locke) and lyrics, drawing heavily on horror fiction and horror films, are highly controversial.
At different times, several countries have banned Cannibal Corpse from performing within their borders, or have banned the sale and display of original Cannibal Corpse album covers.United StatesIn May 1995, then-US Senator Bob Dole accused Cannibal Corpse—along with hip hop acts including the Geto Boys and 2 Live Crew—of undermining the national character of the United States.
A year later, the band came under fire again, this time as part of a campaign by conservative activist William Bennett, Senator Joe Lieberman, then-Senator Sam Nunn, and National Congress of Black Women chair C.
Delores Tucker to get major record labels—including Time Warner, Sony, Thorn-EMI, PolyGram and Bertelsmann—to "dump 20 recording groups...responsible for the most offensive lyrics."Cannibal Corpse also had a brief cameo in the 1994 Jim Carrey film Ace Ventura: Pet Detective, performing an abridged version of their song "Hammer Smashed Face".
In the credits, they are mistakenly listed as Cannibal Corpses.AustraliaAs of October 23, 1996, the sale of any Cannibal Corpse audio recording then available was banned in Australia and all copies of such had been removed from music shops.
At the time, the Australian Recording Industry Association and the Australian Music Retailers Association were implementing a system for identifying potentially offensive records, known as the "labelling code of practice".All ten of Cannibal Corpse's albums, as well as the live album Live Cannibalism, the boxed set 15 Year Killing Spree, the EP Worm Infested, and the single "Hammer Smashed Face", were re-released in Australia between 2006 and 2007, or finally classified by ARIA and allowed for sale in Australia.
However, they are all "Restricted", and only sold to those over 18 years of age.
Some are sold in "censored" and "uncensored" editions, which denotes the change of cover art.
Despite this, when displayed in some stores, even the "uncensored" editions are censored manually.After discussion of banning them from touring, Australian comedy act The Chaser did a lounge music version of their song "Rancid Amputation" on their show The Chaser's War on Everything, claiming that the music, and not the lyrics are the problem, by performing a lounge music version.GermanyAll Cannibal Corpse albums up to (and including) Tomb of the Mutilated were banned upon release from being sold or displayed in Germany due to their graphic cover art and disturbing lyrics; the band was also forbidden to play any songs from those albums while touring in Germany.
This prohibition was not lifted until June 2006.
In a 2004 interview, George Fisher attempted to recall what originally provoked the ban:A woman saw someone wearing one of our shirts, I think she is a schoolteacher, and she just caused this big stink about it.
So [now\] we can't play anything from the first three records.
And it really sucks because kids come up and they want us to play all the old songs — and we would — but they know the deal.
We can't play 'Born in a Casket' but can play 'Dismembered and Molested.'—Responses to criticsCannibal Corpse prides itself on overtly violent-themed songs and album artwork, which it sees as nothing more than an extreme form of over-the-top entertainment.
In the film Metal: A Headbanger's Journey, George Fisher said death metal is best viewed "as art", and claimed that far more violent art can be found at the Vatican, saying that such depictions actually happened.
Some of Cannibal Corpse's most controversial song titles include "Meat Hook Sodomy", "Entrails Ripped from a Virgin's Cunt", "Necropedophile", "Stripped, Raped, and Strangled," and "Fucked with a Knife".Of their music, George Fisher once said in an interview: "We don't sing about politics.
We don't sing about religion...All our songs are short stories that, if anyone would so choose they could convert it into a horror movie.
Really, that's all it is.
We like gruesome, scary movies, and we want the lyrics to be like that.
Yeah, it's about killing people, but it's not promoting it at all.
Basically these are fictional stories, and that's it.
And anyone who gets upset about it is ridiculous."In response to accusations that his band's lyrics desensitize people to violence, Alex Webster argued death metal fans enjoy the music only because they know the violence depicted in its lyrics is not real:"I think people probably aren't that desensitized to it, you know including myself, like you know, we sing about all this stuff and you watch a movie where you know it's not real and it's no big deal, but if you really saw someone get their brains bashed in right in front of you, I think it would have a pretty dramatic impact on any human being you know what I mean? Or some terrible, gross act of violence or whatever done right in front of you, I mean you'd react to it, no matter how many movies you've watched or how much gore metal you've listened to or whatever, I'm sure it's a completely different thing when it's right in front of you.
Even though we've got crazy entertainment now, our social realities are actually a bit more civilized than they were back then, I mean we're not hanging people or whipping them in the street and I think that's positive improvement for any society in my opinion."—He also believes the violent lyrics can have positive values: "It's good to have anger music as a release."George Fisher said of their songs "There's nothing ever serious.
We're not thinking of anybody in particular that we're trying to kill, or harm or anything."

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