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Exhumed in Slow Motion: Morbidity - Regurgitating Remnants (Track Review) 1/1/26

 


“Regurgitating Remnants” captures Morbidity’s devotion to slow‑rotting, atmosphere‑first death metal, the kind that feels excavated rather than written. Emerging from the Chicago metal underground, the band channels the city’s long tradition of grimy, unvarnished heaviness into something that feels both primitive and intentional. Chicago has always had a knack for producing bands that thrive in the shadows rather than the spotlight, and Morbidity fits that lineage perfectly. Their sound is rooted in the aesthetics of decay, riffs that sag under their own weight, drums that strike like shovels hitting damp earth, and vocals that bubble up from somewhere far below the surface.

The lineup, consisting of Hector Santos, Jack Newton, Esteban Tevenal, Jacob Atut, and Matt Aguilar, operates with a unified sense of rot, each member contributing to the track’s oppressive density. The guitars grind in thick, collapsing patterns, never rushing, always dragging the listener deeper into the mire. There’s a deliberate murkiness to the tone, as if the strings themselves are coated in soil. The bass doesn’t just support the guitars; it seeps through every crevice, giving the song a swampy undertow that makes each transition feel heavier than the last. Drums move with ritualistic patience, favoring weight over speed, allowing every section to linger just long enough to become uncomfortable before shifting into the next stage of decomposition. Vocally, the track leans into pure texture. The gutturals are less about articulation and more about presence, a subterranean growl that feels like it’s echoing through a burial chamber. Rather than dominating the mix, the vocals blend into the instrumentation, becoming another layer of grime that thickens the atmosphere. It’s a choice that reinforces the band’s commitment to mood over clarity, rot over precision.

What makes “Regurgitating Remnants” so effective is its pacing. Morbidity understands that true heaviness isn’t about speed; it’s about pressure. By leaning into mid‑tempo filth, they allow grooves to fester rather than explode. Riffs repeat with a hypnotic inevitability, creating a sense of slow suffocation. The song doesn’t aim for catharsis; it aims for immersion, pulling the listener into its decayed world and refusing to let go. Every moment feels intentional, from the lurching transitions to the lingering dissonance that hangs in the air like the stench of something long dead. "Regurgitating Remnants” stands as a testament to Morbidity’s commitment to death metal in its most decomposed form. It’s not flashy, not technical, and not interested in modern polish, and that’s exactly why it works. The band embraces the aesthetics of rot with total conviction, crafting a track that feels unearthed rather than produced. For listeners who crave death metal that suffocates rather than dazzles, Morbidity delivers a slow, crushing descent into the grave. It’s a reminder that heaviness isn’t always about speed or complexity; sometimes it’s about atmosphere, patience, and the willingness to let the rot spread.

                    

                                                        Go check out Regurgitating Remnants: 


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