Vinyl Record

Slayer - Divine Intervention

Slayer - Divine Intervention album cover

Slayer - Divine Intervention on LP vinyl. A 1994 Metal record available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel, Ireland.

LP · Metal · 1994

Available from Kilmorna Collection in Listowel.

Buyer notes: 1994 LP, currently available from the Kilmorna Collection Metal shelf. Pay for pickup in Listowel or ship within Ireland for EUR 5.50.

Divine Intervention is Slayer in 1994, trying to remain extreme after the classic thrash era had already been disrupted by death metal, alternative rock and changing major-label expectations. It was the band's sixth studio album and the first without Dave Lombardo, with Paul Bostaph stepping into one of metal's most scrutinized drum positions after his work in Forbidden. That change is central to the record's identity. The songs do not soften the band for the decade; Killing Fields, Sex. Murder. Art., Fictional Reality, Dittohead, Divine Intervention, Circle Of Beliefs and 213 push toward speed, violence, bleak psychology and a colder production surface. Coming four years after Seasons In The Abyss, the album had to answer an uncomfortable question: what could Slayer be after their imperial 1980s run and after thrash had lost its commercial centre? Divine Intervention answers with stubborn severity. It is less universally loved than Reign In Blood or South Of Heaven, but it is a crucial survival document, showing a veteran band refusing the easy retreat into nostalgia.

Divine Intervention matters because it marks Slayer's first post-Lombardo studio chapter and a hard 1990s test of the band's identity. In a changed metal landscape, the album chose speed, hostility and discipline instead of compromise, making it a key bridge after Seasons In The Abyss.

For collectors, Divine Intervention is the 1994 transition album that explains Slayer's next phase. Its value lies in the Paul Bostaph debut, the American Recordings-era context and the band's attempt to keep thrash dangerous when the genre's original moment had passed.

Mid-1990s Slayer with rapid-fire riffing, Bostaph's precise drum attack, cold production, shouted venom, violent lyrical imagery, abrupt tempo shifts and a harsher survivalist edge after the classic thrash peak.

Recommended for: Collectors following Slayer beyond the 1980s classics; Listeners interested in thrash metal's 1990s survival period; Fans of Dittohead, Killing Fields and the Paul Bostaph era.

When was Divine Intervention released? Divine Intervention was released in 1994 as Slayer's sixth studio album. Why is Paul Bostaph important to Divine Intervention? It was Slayer's first studio album with Bostaph on drums after Dave Lombardo left the band. How does Divine Intervention fit Slayer's catalogue? It follows Seasons In The Abyss and opens the band's 1990s studio phase with a colder, severe continuation of their thrash identity.