British Broadcasting legend David Attenborough has had a long and illustrious career as the gold standard of documentary narration. There isnât anyone else on this planet who can make sophisticated scientific information soothing, compelling, and accessible. As we approach Davidâs 98th birthday, we feel like this legend needs a change of pace. Yeah, animals are cool and all, but you know whatâs begging to be conveyed in a sophisticated, high-class way? Cannibal Corpse lyrics. Truly the peak of artistry, Cannibal Corpse are wordsmiths of the highest degree. Itâs only natural to marry Davidâs talents with one of the most serene and peaceful metal bands. Weâre sure nothing weird will come out of that at all. (Listen to the playlist)
15. âDevoured By Verminâ
Weâre gonna spend a lot of this list essentially comparing humans to animals, and making David Attenborough describe the worst crimes imaginable as natural processes. For this song however, let’s give him a break. He finally gets to talk about an actual animal. Mice. Theyâre still devouring corpses though. But the main reason we want to hear Davidâs scientific mind tackle âDevoured by Verminâ is to watch him try to justify how the subject somehow stays alive through having his eyes rip out, skin chewed to the bone, and shredded internal organs.
14. âRancid Amputationâ
Another one of the âtutorial in slaughtering peopleâ songs in Cannibal Corpseâs discography, âRancid Amputationâ makes it on the list because Attenborroughâs sophistication would enhance lines like âStumps writhing in sludge like an infection.â The first-person narration of the song also makes it even funnier. We want to hear Attenborough try to sound intimidating as he threatens âyour own rectal slime, Iâll force you to drink,â but still somehow making these gruesome lyrics very warm and inviting.
13. âScalding Hailâ
While nature documentaries primarily focus on animal-on-animal interaction, weâd be doing ourselves a disservice to ignore natural disasters. Sure, how tectonic plate movements impact the oceanic ecosystem is interesting, Sure, but you know whatâs way cooler? A volcano destroying an entire city. Ecosystems be damned, let’s talk about âBurning fragments steaming stones tearing through my skin. Lodging near my organs Iâm burning from within.â The large-scale drama of âmultiple people being graphically killedâ versus the usual âone person being graphically killedâ will allow David to ham up the drama here. Taking long, dramatic pauses between every sentence. The only reason this ranks lower is because these lyrics give him too much unironically good material to work with. Itâs great, it just needs more phrases youâd hear screamed in the back of a middle school bus.
12. âThe Wretched Spawnâ
Here we arrive at another staple of nature documentaries, perfectly suited for Attenboroghâs description. This is of course, the birthing process. Typically, Attenborough doesn’t have to do much talking for these scenes. He can just let the cute and tender moment speak for itself. We canât see why he wouldnât do the same here when this cute little guy is described as a âpawn of the darkness,â âblasphemous childâ and âinherently vile.â So, if David chooses to let those adorable characteristics speak for themselves, he can come in and add some context for the bright future of this baby as âPredestined to annihilate, through sinister eugenics.â
11. âPostmortal Ejaculationâ
Another cornerstone of David Attenboroughâs discography is telling miraculous stories of survival, as weaker prey are somehow able to survive situations that should, by all means, kill them. âPostmortal ejaculationâ is Cannibal Corpseâs version of this. Somehow, a manâs horniness wills him to resurrect himself after committing suicide via cumming. Attenborough could enhance this song by telling it as a triumphant overcoming of death and the human desire to commit horrible atrocities. On top of that, we want to hear David say âAdipocere spurts from my erection,â solely because âadipocereâ is the first term we had to google a definition for in this list, and maybe he would make that make more sense.
10. âRaped by the Beastâ
Now itâs time to lean on one of Attenboroughâs best skills; keeping a straight face while he explains the freakiest sex in the animal kingdom. So of course, âRaped by the Beastâ will be a softball. The lyric âResurgence of a gruesome species, with carnal obsession, it lusts copulation,â already feels more like a nature documentary than a song with a longer list of trigger warnings than lyrics. Of course, though, the ever-elegant Cannibal Corpse graces us with pure poetry such as âMacabre fuckfest inside her cunt.â Attenborough really doesnât have to add much of his calm collected delivery to make this super palatable song go down as well as bringing up the weird obsession with sexual violence to any old-school death metal fan. Super super easy.
9. âDisposal of the Bodyâ
Considering thereâs already been so much killing on the list our documentary needs a little switch-up. Whatâs more educational than seeing the lesser-known processes of life? Luckily Cannibal Corpse provides us with âDisposal of the Body,â where we get a thorough, factual, and comprehensive look at hiding a corpse. While Attenborough may not be a âhow toâ guide person, heâs great at craving meaty information into understandable steps (pun intended). This makes Attenborough the perfect man to describe to break down the mutilation process into simple steps like âdissect him in the tub,â âsmash the teeth,â and âwith a crowbar-scrape off all tattoos.â With such clear and logical directions provided by one of the smartest men on TV, you too will know how to hide a body.
8. âForce Fed Broken Glassâ
You know, to switch up the pace, maybe we need to give David a break from describing eating via murder and cannibalism. Nature is diverse and luckily, Cannibal Corpse provides a vegan option, eating broken glass. Attenborough gets to be more relaxed as he describes the very tame process of âoral sex with broken glass.â There are just some choice lyrics that beg for sophisticated analysis, such as âglandular eruptionâ and âblistered skin secretion.â This is totally different than all the other depictions of blood and gore up to this point. At least the process of the graphics team CGI rendering this shredded throat will only be slightly less miserable than whatever shitty Marvel show is next to hit Disney+
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7. âI Cum Bloodâ
This had to be on the list at some point. âI Cum Bloodâ is babyâs first absurd metal title, and while the word âcumâ has won me plenty of Jackbox games, thereâs more to this song that deserves narration. Nature documentary narration helps us understand whatâs happening in animals’ heads as they live in the wild. Well, the next logical step is describing how âa load of my lymph, will quench this dead bodyâs thirstâ and how our subject will achieve that through âbehaviorsâ such as âtonguing her rotted anusâ and when he âpissed in her maggot-filled asshole.â These lyrics read like a story, and if thereâs one man who could lull us to sleep talking about getting an STD from necrophilia, itâs David Attenborough.
6. âCovered with Soresâ
Unfortunately, another part of nature is disease. Part of life is doing whatever it takes to persevere through disease. Getting way too many shots, mildly violated by a strep throat test, and sucking the puss out of corpses. All of these are part of the necessary things we as humans must do to survive. In the most climactic moments of nature documentaries, Attenboroughâs underrated emotional delivery can really sell the desperation of a creature at the edge. This keeps us on the edge of our seats rooting for the monkey to find that one medicinal leaf, or for this man to find a body to smash with a sledgehammer, carve up with a knife, and consume organ by organ. Those two things are definitely the same. To be blunt though, weâd be lying if we said that part of the reason this is so high is because we want to hear David Attenborough dramatize âthrobbing glandsâ and âpus eruption of cysts.â
5. âHammer Smashed Faceâ
A staple of every nature documentary is the hunt where we get treated to the most pathetic-looking creature getting torn apart by whatever apex giga-chad predator is being focused on. âHammer Smashed Faceâ is, in the same way, a hunt, just replace claws with a sledgehammer. David could build up suspense and a complex primal desire of âI feel like killing youâ and pay as we see him âsmash your fucking head in until your brains seep inâ Plus, every time nature documentaries show a hunt, it has to end on a scene where we realize that this is a never-ending cycle and I realize I watched a gazelleâs intestines getting knawed on for nothing. I canât think of a better sentiment to encapsulate that feeling that âViolence is my way of life, the sledge my tool of torture as it plows down on your forehead.â
4. âCompelled to Lacerateâ
âCompelled to Lacerateâ is one of the more âhigh classâ Cannibal Corpse songs. We arenât committing murder, weâre compelled to lacerate. Thereâs a difference. Davidâs voice would add even more sophistication to it. We want to hear David say âRuptured figures sprawl. Slaughtered in a rage now left to be found. A grisly gift of artâ with the same energy as your high school English teacher talked about âFarenheight 451.â This is high society shit goddamn it. Why would you think otherwise?
3. âDismembered and Molestedâ
âDismembered and Molestedâ would work well for Attenborough because itâs one of Cannibal Corpseâs most âmatter-of-fact songs.â Instead of David talking narrating âFirst the whale shark opens its mouth to take small fish and krill in, then it filters the hundreds of tiny organisms into its mouth using its gill rakers as a filter, and pushes the remaining water out of its gillsâ he instead gets to describe a much more serene process. âSever the limbs. Decapitate. Yank out the teeth, then masturbate. Pounding the face, ejaculate.â His trademark delivery would make the song soothing while providing insightful step-by-step insight into the key biological processes that are cutting someone apart while you jerk off.
2. âGuttedâ
Gutted is a wonderful 2-for-1 of nature documentary staples. Of course, we get the classic dissection and eating of Cannibal Corpse songs. Whatâs new is another nature documentary staple. That being, of course, the vicious murder of a cute baby animal. Typically, Attenborough leads you gently into this, being like âOh but thatâs life isnât it.â Well, Cannibal Corpse eases you in about as gently as drunk crowdkillers at an all-ages show. We want to see how he attempts to explain âthe knife invades the childâ as normal ways of an oh-so-hungry creature to obtain key sustenance such as âgutted little torsosâ and âvarious digestive parts and assorted meatsâ. Luckily the song gives David an out with a super logical motivation âKilling to release pure souls to heavens. Justification of his killing,â so like in a nature documentary, Attenborough can use his soothing charm to make the horrifying scene we just saw seem somewhat justified.
1. âMangledâ
Weâve talked about cannibalism, and corpses a lot through this article so far, shocker. Well, one of the most fitting songs for David Attenborroghâs reading is the most thorough description of cannibalism we get. Weâre accustomed to talking about how each organ of a whale carcass is consumed by orcas and can benefit the oceanic ecosystem. So, with all the murder talk, weâd be missing out if we didnât have a step-by-step description, and boy, do we get one. Some highlights include âCrawl into the cadaver head first, eat your way through the guts,â âSpleen of carcass is oozing from your mouth,â âSuck the vomit through intestines,â and the most important step of all âchew on the piss-filled kidneyâ. As the song progresses, however, we learn that not only is our protagonist taking apart his victims, but heâs also re-animating them. Attenborough gets to detail the entire circle of life in one song, taking us on a journey from death to birth. If you ask me, thereâs no better use of his calm voice, sophisticated demeanor, and crystal-clear articulation than describing some acts of brutal murder, and âMangledâ shows all that range and potential in one song.