Release date 1988 | Label SNC Records | |
![]() | ||
Released 1988 (original)1991 (re-recording) Recorded Summer 1988, Ostankino TV Studio (original)July-September 1991, Stas Namin Centre (re-recording) Length 41:50 (1988 original)36:16 (1991 re-recording)49:22 (2008 remaster) Producer Sergei Troitsky, Stas Namin (1998 (produced original tape), 1991 (helped with re-recording)) Similar Russian Vodka, 1966, Чёрная метка, Talk of the Devil, Legends of Russian Rock |
Orden Satany (Russian: Орден Сатаны, [ɐrˈdʲɛn sataˈnɨ], The Order of Satan) is the debut album by Korrozia Metalla. Originally released in 1988 as a self-published cassette, produced by Stas Namin. After that the album was professionally re-recorded with the assistance of Stas Namin and reissued in late 1991.
Contents
History
Korrozia Metalla formed in 1984. The following year, they released a six-song cassingle titled "Vlast zla", which included a song called "Lucifer" as its lead-off track. "Lucifer" became a fixture in the group's setlists and would eventually be re-recorded for Orden Satany.
The original version of the album was recorded at a recording studio in Ostankino in the summer of 1988 over three nights. Melodiya, the Soviet state label, wouldn't release the album due to the Satanic themes in the lyrics, so bandleader Sergei Troitsky decided to release it on his own, selling it on cassette at concerts. These tapes would also be traded among fans.
In 1991, the group signed a record deal with SNC Records, who offered to release Orden Satany, however the master tapes were lost, so between July and September, they re-recorded the album at Stas Namin's studio. The band, however, still list 1988 as the release date for the album in all their discographies, even though it was given its first official release in 1991. On the 1991 version of the album, the track "Motorocker", recorded both in Russian and English, was included in its English form, "Wheels of Fire".
In 1994, Korrozia Metalla signed to Moroz Records, who reissued the album on CD the following year. "Motorocker" was included in its Russian version and an instrumental, "Sedmye vorota ada", recorded in November 1994 with a keyboard-based industrial trio called Block Four (which also made Nicht Kapituliren), was included at the end of the album.
In 2008, the album was remastered and reissued by the band's label KTR. Bonus tracks included an instrumental, "Marsh Drakuly", an outtake from the 1991 sessions, the original version of "Lucifer" from the 1988 release as recorded at Ostankino, and four live videos.