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  2. In 2017, Rolling Stone magazine placed the album as the 70th greatest metal album of all time. Human is a highly influential extreme metal album, according to Jeff Wagner in his 2010 text on progressive metal, Mean Deviation. It is Death's best-selling album, having sold 100,000 copies in the United States by 1995.

    • 1991
    • October 22, 1991
  3. Death's "Human" is one of the several albums that all death metal is measured against. It is a genre milestone, a glimpse into the future of death metal. It is the perfect blend of all that was death metal at the time - groove, brutality, and the imminent infusion of jazz elements with the genre's past thrash roots.

  4. Oct 22, 1991 · Human is the fourth full-length record from death metal pioneers Death, the first record to exemplify their technical prowess, featuring complex time signatures and progressive song...

  5. Human is the fourth album by death metal band Death, released in 1991. The album marked the beginning of a major stylistic change for Death and the playing on the album is more technically complex and progressive than Death's previous efforts.

    • Technical death metal, progressive metal
    • Morrisound Studios, Tampa, Florida.
    • 33:53
    • 2 min
  6. Oct 22, 2021 · Human was death metal redefined 30 years ago, and today, it’s death metal inspired. Happy 30th Birthday, Human ! We’ve been fortunate to be on the receiving end of its innovative light for the last 30 years, and we’ll continue to revere Human as it ages into the foreseeable future.

  7. Oct 22, 1991 · Death - Human - Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives. Death > Human. eBay more... >> No Remorse. Human. Death. Type: Full-length. Release date: October 22nd, 1991. Catalog ID: 88561-2036-2. Version desc.: US. Label: Relativity Records. Format: CD. Reviews: 32 reviews (avg. 91%) Songs. Lineup. Other versions. Reviews. Additional notes.

  8. Human is the fourth studio album by American Death metal band Death, released on October 22, 1991, by Relativity Records. The album marked the beginning of a major stylistic change for Death, being more technically complex and progressive than the band's previous efforts.

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