At first I was dumbstruck: 'What the shit was this? How did it sound like all the creepy things in my head? Was I allowed to say any of these words?' Bit by bit, my shock gave way to excitement. This was, in my 13-year-old mind, what heavy music was supposed to be: raw, offensive, confusing, revealing, and upsetting. It was supposed to give you a jolt of naked human fear that’s all the more interesting and nuanced because no one's prepared you for it. Before I knew anything about this band, about Ross Robinson or seven-string guitars or crystal meth, all I knew was how it made me feel.
This principle guided me as a fan of music. Sure, I still liked those kickass songs that made me pump my fist into the air, but now I also liked the stuff that I found strange, disturbing and startling. When I saw or heard something that made me go, 'Whoa!' I immediately wanted to know more about it. Over time, this gut reaction led me to many types of music – the vengeful speed of Slayer, the baroque violence of Cannibal Corpse, the arch-evil of Emperor, the monster mash of White Zombie, the backwoods sorrow of Rwake – but it all spawned from my snap reaction to this record.