Formed in 1987 under the name Amon by guitarist Brian Hoffman, bassist/vocalist Glenn Benton, guitarist Eric Hoffman, and drummer Steve Asheim, the quartet released their first demo, Feasting the Beast, in 1987 followed by second demo, Sacrificial, in 1989. Shortly after the release of the latter, the band inked a deal with Roadrunner Records and changed their name to Deicide at the label's request. Their eponymous full-length debut dropped a year later, and featured re-recorded versions of the songs from Sacrificial, as well as two new cuts. Pugilistic in its ferocity, Deicide would go on to become one of the more revered death metal LPs of the decade. 1992's Legion saw the band upping their technical game, delivering a brutal barrage of complex riffs and intricate song structures that helped make it one of the group's most respected and profitable outings.
Subsequent Roadrunner efforts like Once Upon the Cross (1995), Serpents of the Light (1997), Insineratehymn (2000), and In Torment, In Hell (2001) followed suit, but the band's relentless pace, both in the studio and on the road, eventually took its toll. By the time Deicide released Scars of the Crucifix via Earache in 2004, the band's inner turmoil had grown to match their combustive aural attack, resulting in the departures of both Hoffman brothers -- the siblings who would later re-form Amon. After cycling through potential players, the band settled on ex-Cannibal Corpse guitarist Jack Owen and six-stringer Ralph Santolla, formerly of Death and Iced Earth, both of whom made their studio debuts on the group's eighth long player, 2006's The Stench of Redemption. The LP proved to be Deicide's most successful outing to date, peaking at number 11 on the Heatseekers chart. 2008's Til Death Do Us Part saw the band experimenting with elements of doom metal, as did 2011's To Hell with God, the latter of which saw the group move from Earache to Century Media. Santolla left the fold in 2012, and was replaced by Kevin Quirion, who made his first studio appearance on 2013's In the Minds of Evil, which marked a return to the inexorable, old-school death metal attack of past outings. It would be the last Deicide album for Owen, who left in 2016. The band tapped Monstrosity guitarist Mark English for album number 12, 2018's reliably unrelenting Overtures of Blasphemy. ~ James Christopher Monger, Rovi