Slayer Paris -
During “Raining Blood,” the venue did something unexpected. They dropped red and blue lasers that formed the outline of a guillotine on the back wall. The crowd lost its collective mind. When the "slayer" chant finally died down at 1 AM, strangers were hugging—sweaty, bloody, but euphoric.
If you thought Slayer’s final world tour was truly the end, you underestimated the band’s pull—or the French fans' ability to riot for an encore. wasn't just a concert; it was a violent, beautiful love letter to thrash metal, staged at the iconic Le Zénith last Saturday. slayer paris
Tombe du ciel, souffre de l’enfer. (Rain from heaven, hell below.) When the "slayer" chant finally died down at
The band (pulling from their Reign in Blood and Seasons in the Abyss eras) was merciless. Opening with “Repentless” set the tone, but it was “Angel of Death” that cracked the venue’s foundation. The surprise? A haunting, eerie cover of “Paris by Night” by French metal band Gojira as an intro to “Dead Skin Mask.” Pure genius. Tombe du ciel, souffre de l’enfer
The sound mixing at Le Zénith can be fickle. For the first two songs, Tom Araya’s bass was too muddy, lost under Kerry King’s shredding. It took until “Mandatory Suicide” for the engineers to get it right.
Is “Slayer Paris” an annual event? A one-off album? A club night? Whatever it is, it works. It proves that Paris can be just as nasty, fast, and loud as Los Angeles or London. If you have a chance to experience this again, do not walk— run . Just don’t wear your best leather jacket.
