The IVth Crusade

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The IVth Crusade
The IVth Crusade (Bolt Thrower album cover).jpg
Studio album by
Bolt Thrower
ReleasedOctober 1992 (UK)
26 January 1993 (US)
RecordedSawmills Studio, August 1992
Genre
Length53:28
LanguageEnglish
LabelRelativity/Earache
ProducerColin Richardson and Bolt Thrower
Bolt Thrower chronology
War Master
(1991)
The IVth Crusade
(1992)
Spearhead
(1992)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic3/5 stars[1]

The IVth Crusade is the fourth studio album by British death metal band Bolt Thrower. It was recorded at in August 1992 and produced by Bolt Thrower and Colin Richardson. The album was engineered by John Cornfield and mixed at . It was also engineered by and . It was released through Earache Records as Mosh 70 in 1992. The album title comes from the Fourth Crusade and the capturing of Constantinople. The cover artwork is a painting from Eugène Delacroix, showing "The Entry of the Crusaders in Constantinople".

For this album Bolt Thrower slowed down considerably compared to War Master, focussing more on playing heavy riffs and a thick sound. The album features a more death/doom metal-driven style, and which was influenced by doom metal bands including Candlemass and Pentagram. Particularly, this style is apparent in songs like "This Time It's War," or "As the World Burns."

"Embers" opens and ends as "Cenotaph" did on the previous album War Master, and leads into "Powder Burns" on Mercenary.

Track listing[]

  • All songs written by Bolt Thrower
No.TitleLength
1."The IVth Crusade"4:59
2."Icon"4:10
3."Embers"5:18
4."Where Next to Conquer"3:50
5."As the World Burns"5:25
6."This Time It's War"5:51
7."Ritual"4:29
8."Spearhead"6:47
9."Celestial Sanctuary"4:37
10."Dying Creed"4:17
11."Through the Ages (Outro)"3:45
Total length:53:28

Personnel[]

Bolt Thrower
Production

References[]

  1. ^ The IVth Crusade review allmusic.com. Retrieved on 2011-10-17.



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