Death Metal Fans könnten sich schonmal den 24. März vormerken, denn dann erscheint der neue DISCREATION Longplayer unter dem Namen “Iron Times“. Neu bei der Band ist der ehemalige Morgoth Shouter Marc Grewe, der noch ein wenig mehr Old School Appeal und Härte mitgebracht hat.
Gitarrist Sebastian Schilling erzählt über den Song:
„`God Of War` is the personification of the ever-present potential for conflicts to turn into violence and war, even if no one actually wanted it to. In „Nothing New in the West,“ the protagonist Paul Bäumer puts it this way: „I think it’s more a kind of fever. Nobody actually wants it, and all of a sudden it’s there. The song creeps forward like the first tanks in the Battle of the Somme, before the inevitable blast thunderstorm occurs.“
Videostream:
Lyrics:
The flexing of a muscle
The primitive show of strength
The looming burst of temper
The urge to pull the trigger
I’m the craving of the masses
Their yearning for revenge
I’m the arrogance of power
The logic that leads to war
God of war
I’ve heard your call
Among mere mortals
I walk the earth
To bring the ancient spark
That ignites the fire
Unleash the craving for blood
You can’t deny
At the dawn of ruination
The nerves are all on edge
Waiting for the signal
The command to unleash hell
I’m the promise of glory and valour
Of honour and of strength
I am here since the dawn of time
And will be eternally
Bloodstained the earth
Dead bodies all around
Grenades and shells
Tear human flesh apart
Confusion and chaos
Orders go unheard
In this raging madness
You have to stand your ground
Fires of war, forever to flare
Ages of blood, eternal strife
Brute force, no mercy
An unrelenting beat
Run, take cover
The enemy is close
The sun all blurred
By gun smoke and gas
Hours in twilight
The fighting never stops
Fires of war, forever to flare
Ages of blood, eternal strife
God of war
I’ve heard your call
Among mere mortals
I walk the earth
To bring the ancient spark
That ignites the fire
Unleash the craving for blood
You can’t deny
Titelfoto: Peter Kunz & Kerstin Marth