Review: The Album That Helped Make Florida the Epicenter of Death Metal
Death's 1990 Spiritual Healing paints a right-wing culture warrior’s nightmare vision of America.

Florida might be most famous for family-friendly theme parks and fun in the sun—but in 1989, in a cheap Tampa-area motel room, the band Death was hard at work on one of the state's darker contributions to American culture. It was there the four-member band and its manager stayed while recording the seminal 1990 album Spiritual Healing.
Death's third studio album evolved its sound beyond its thrash metal roots into something slower, heavier, more melodic, more distinctly "death metal," with lyrics that focused less on bloody gore and more on the darker corners of society and the human soul. Alongside contemporary offerings from the bands Morbid Angel, Obituary, and Deicide, it helped solidify the then-nascent Tampa Bay scene as the capital of American death metal.
Death metal is hardly a conservative art form. Yet the lyrics on Spiritual Healing paint a right-wing culture warrior's nightmare vision of America at the time—a society overcome by violence, abortion, crime, drug addiction, crack babies, and commercialized, cynical religion.
Improbable as it might seem today, this message and musical style received something close to mainstream appeal. Songs from Death and its fellow Tampa Bay death metallers would receive generous airplay on MTV and even show up in a few Beavis and Butt-Head episodes.
While Death might not be the first thing people associate with the Sunshine State anymore, there's no separating Death from the state that birthed it. A 2012 rerelease of Spiritual Healing includes a few "joke and jam" tracks of the band, recording in a warehouse without air conditioning, trying to play while suffering the early stages of heat exhaustion.
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Let me get this straight. Heavy metal fans are listening to the lyrics pf heavy metal albums and offing themselves. Where’s the problem?
Heavy metal fans are listening to the lyrics pf heavy metal albums and offing themselves.
Where was that said?
Dennis Leary I think. Maybe he stole it from Bill Hicks.
I am sooo glad I didn't move to Flardy. Faith-Heeling snake jugglers there appear eager to challenge Alabama to a books-and-records-burning contest--a celebration the zombie slavocracy's lingering worship of Comstocksm.
All well and good on the subject matter, but this isn't much of a review. This is something that belongs on a dust jacket or a liner.
>>even show up in a few Beavis and Butt-Head episodes.
absolutely remember this.
One of my absolute favorite B&B videos was Morbid Angel. God of Emptiness or something like that.
Maybe I'm just becoming an old fart wanting to relive his young adulthood. But everything was better in the 90s. I'm starting to think it might have been the peak of human civilization. Good cars, good rock music, good drugs, no fucking social media, you actually had to go out and find people to hang out.
Good drugs? You mean you could get them at Walgreens OTC with advertised pricing in doses and strengths that kill pain and not people and every drug deal with the cashier is a drug deal gone good?
Really dull review. Pity, as Leprosy and Spiritual Healing are arguably Death's strongest records in terms of coherent songwriting. They arguably created Death Metal with their demoes and their debut album, Scream Bloody Gore, but then spent the rest of their existence running far and fast from the genre. Lyrically and musically, they actually moved closer to Thrash Metal on Spiritual Healing, and that was a tendency they would pretty much follow for the rest of their career.
Can't believe article didn't mention Death's drummer, Richard Christy 's rebirth as staff writer for Howard Stern.
Speaking of Florida, If Texas's quarterback gets hurt in practice and can't play, can Florida State then get their rightful spot in the playoffs?