By the early nineties, most of the thrash metal bands that had been around for a decade were altering their sound to varying degrees. In many cases, this change meant slowing down significantly  or dumbing down the music. Sacrifice, however, managed to refine its sound considerably while avoiding the pitfalls that usually come with such progress. After two enjoyable, but somewhat monotonous thrash metal records in the eighties, ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ adds more depth to the Canadians’ sound. It isn’t exactly progressive thrash metal, but paying more attention to dynamic possibilities within the boundaries of their sound meant a strong improvement.

Essentially, ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ is characterized by the same elements as Sacrifice’s earlier work. The guitar riffs of Joe Rico and Rob Urbinati are razor sharp, the latter’s venom-spitting vocal delivery – think Tom Angelripper with hints of Darren Travis – helps set the band apart from the pack and Gus Pynn is one of the most unjustly overlooked drummers in thrash metal. The tweaks Sacrifice made to their sound may seem minor at first, but they turn out to be very relevant. Most importantly: the tempo changes. Sacrifice songs used to speed by viciously, but the impact of separate sections has been increased here by shifting tempos strategically.

That doesn’t mean that Sacrifice has been watered down to a mid-tempo groove metal band, however. ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ is far from a ‘Black Album’-ish snoozefest. In fact, the most prominent midtempo track (‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ itself) makes brilliant use of subtle shifts in tempo and time feel. It may be remembered for its massive doomy intro, but the brooding feel of the first faster riff is equally impressive. ‘Lost Through Time’ is another track that proves an evil atmosphere can be reached even at mid-tempo. The song makes excellent use of space.

Sacrifice still proves to be excellent at uptempo thrash here. ‘In Defiance’ was destined to become a live classic, as the riffs are highly memorable and the song is a shot of energy. ‘A Storm In The Silence’ excels at violent thrash polkas after a relatively atmospheric intro, while opener ‘As The World Burns’ perfectly bridges the full-speed rabid menace of the past with a somewhat more refined approach. Closer ‘Truth (After The Rain)’ is the band’s most ambitious track to date. They took some progressive hints from Rush (the influence of ‘Xanadu’ on the intro is fairly obvious) and ran with that in what is ultimately a dark thrasher with lots of cool, vaguely Arabic-sounding riffs.

If ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’ is proof of anything, it would be that maturing is not something to automatically run away from if you are in a thrash metal band. Sure, lots of bands ruined their sound with it, but Sacrifice is one of those cases where a little more refinement has truly enhanced their sound without sounding alien to anyone who liked their sound before. In addition, the guitar solos and overall songwriting have become significantly more memorable in the process. It is truly a pity that the band was done for by the mid-nineties, but they reformed recently and are still playing live. They have yet to release something as brilliant as ‘Soldiers Of Misfortune’, but never say never.

Recommended tracks: ‘As The World Burns’, ‘Truth (After The Rain)’, ‘In Defiance’