The same line have been continued on the band's first full-length album by brutal death being in focus, but now with better composed, and more unified song structures. Occasionally pretty wild style switches appearing too, for instance some jazz-like theme keep interrupting the massive brutality in the song "Doubt". This could serve as a quite evident reference to the '00s where their main inspirations could be rooted. Later this direction proved to be the major one, since after a name change to Beneath The Void they continued to play technical brutal death. However, on "Voices of Obliteration" the old school features haven't been gone yet, in restricted form they're still there, and on the top of that, the band also covered a song from Extreme Deformity, which band was one of the earliest Hungarian death metal bands. Though their cultic status, their real influence on the scene is debatable. "Voices of Obliteration" might be a potential favorite for the fans of '00s brutal death.
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