The Ritual was recorded throughout 1991 and early 1992 at
One on One Recording in Los Angeles under producer
Tony Platt, with six to seven months spent writing, followed by six weeks of recording; it was the longest time Testament had taken to make an album by this point, compared to most of their previous albums taking less than a month or two to be recorded. Given their time off from touring, after having completed the promotional tour for
Souls of Black as early as the spring of 1991, this was Testament's first studio album not to be released a year after their previous one, as guitarist
Eric Peterson noted, "By the end of the [
Souls of Black] tour, we were exhausted. We had been doing so much touring and we needed to write a new record. So we went back home and started working on
The Ritual." In a 1992 interview with the
Deseret News, drummer
Louie Clemente noted that, with Platt's involvement in the production, the band had more time to work on the album compared to their limited previous experience in recording studios: "We took the longest time to produce
The Ritual. It was a much-needed change. It got to a time when we were pumping out a record every year", and added that the band "needed to slow down" and "needed to chill", following the hurried production of
Souls of Black. In support of
The Ritual, Testament toured for over a year with bands like
Black Sabbath,
Iron Maiden,
Megadeth,
White Zombie,
Corrosion of Conformity,
Pro-Pain,
D.R.I.,
Green Jellÿ,
Body Count and
Gwar. By the end of 1992, during the middle of the tour, guitarist
Alex Skolnick had decided to leave the band, with Clemente following suit. Several lineup changes took place before guitarist
James Murphy and drummer
John Tempesta were hired for the band's next album
Low. ==Musical style==