While The Scott Burns Sessions is not, in and of itself, a history of death metal, it sits nicely as a companion piece to Choosing Death: The Improbable History of Death Metal and Turned Inside Out (the latter also by David Gehlke). Turned Inside Out, which is the story of Obituary, focuses more on the Tampa, FL, death metal scene, which of course is where a lot of Burns’ work was centered. He engineered and produced some of the classic death metal albums that came out of Morrisound Studios in Tampa, including several Obituary albums.
This book is an oral history of the 10 years Burns spent behind the boards at Morrisound. In that time we see the death metal scene rise, peak, then become oversaturated. Burns get burned out on the work and we see where some bands even get tired of the “Scott Burns sound.”
Telling that story is where the historical aspect comes in. Burns is there as Cannibal Corpse parts ways with Chris Barnes and enlists George “Corpsegrinder” Fisher. Burns also recounts his close friendship and seeming falling out with Death’s legendary frontman Chuck Schuldiner.
One interesting side story is the supposed ill feelings from Mayhem’s founder, Euronymous, toward Burns. Burns took it in stride, even agreeing that, at the time, a lot of he was doing was “cookie cutter” while the black metal bands were trying to buck trends.
There are a few technical sound engineering details in the book but nothing off-putting. As someone who knows nothing about music other than what I like, those parts of the book were still interesting despite not having a clue what they were talking about.
As a fan of death metal, the book was very interesting to me. To be honest though, unlike some music histories, I don’t know how appealing it would be to someone with no interest in the genre.