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Daniel

I re -read my review and laughed out loud at me describing it as having just "an industrial tinge".  Great record and fine choice for the feature of the month.

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=86a774b837c54761


Tracklisting:


01. Morbid Angel – “Radikult” (from “Illud Divinum Insanus”, 2011)

02. Mechina – “Suffer” (from “Venator”, 2022)

03. Unheilig – “Abwärts” (from “Grosse Freiheit”, 2010)

04. DEAFBRICK – “Hyperkinetic Mass Disorder” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

05. Pitchshifter – “Keep It Clean” (from “Deviant”, 2000)

06. Ministry – “Cannibal Song” (from “The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste”, 1989)

07. Rammstein – “Mutter” (from “Mutter”, 2001)

08. Nine Inch Nails – “Physical (You’re So)” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

09. Scorn – “Thoughts Of Escape” (from “Vae Solis”, 1992)

10. Eisbrecher – “Segne deinen Schmerz” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

11. Apartment 26 – “Keep You” (from “Hallucinating”, 2000)

12. In This Moment – “As Above, So Below” (from “Mother”, 2020)

13. Lard – “Drug Raid At 4 AM” (from “The Last Temptation Of Reid”, 1990)

14. Godflesh – “Blind” (from “Merciless” E.P., 1994) [Submitted by Andi]

15. Ghostemane – “Calamity” (from “ANTI-ICON”, 2020)

16. Killing Joke – “Judas Goat” (from Hosannas From the Basements Of Hell”, 2006) [Submitted by Daniel]

17. Old – “Outlive Again (Ganglehea Mix)” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

18. Author & Punisher – “Incinerator” (from “Krüller”, 2022)

19. Samael – “The Shadow Of The Sword” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

20. Skrew – “Gemini” (from “Burning In Water, Drowning In Flame”, 1992)

21. Static-X – “Hollow” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

22. Red Harvest – “Move Or Be Moved” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

23. Code Orange – “In Fear” (from “Underneath”, 2020)

24. Napalm Death – “Resentment Always Simmers” (from “Resentment Is Always Seismic - A Final Throw of Throes” E.P., 2022)

25. Fear Factory – “Mechanize” (from “Mechanize”, 2010)

0
Daniel

As I said in my introduction piece for this feature release, Godflesh were absolutely huge for me back in the early 90's & this release certainly played it's part in that. On the surface it may seem like an also-ran in the band's discography & can come across as more of a collection of disparate pieces of work rather than a cohesive & intentionally structured album-style tracklisting but when examined in greater detail you might discover that the sum of it's parts amounts to much more than is initially apparent. You see "Merciless" showcases a wonderful cross-section of Godflesh's various different styles & techniques & is universally successful in doing so. The opening track is an anomaly in the band's career with it's crushingly heavy industrial doom metal sound being something you won't find anywhere else. It's one of the best tracks of Godflesh's entire back catalogue with the two main riffs both having a timeless quality that perfectly represents what metal music is all about. Then we see Justin & co. moving away from metal altogether for a couple of tracks in "Blind" & "Unworthy" which both take on more of a traditional industrial sound before the wonderfully trance-inducing post-industrial metal of closer "Flowers" creates an atmosphere that borders on beauty through the use of natural harmonics & a repeated mechanical pulse. It's interesting that Andi has stated that this is "pure industrial metal" & "one of Godflesh's more metallic releases" because I disagree with that. The opener is certainly one their most metal tracks in the traditional sense of the term but the other three tracks aren't particularly metal with the two pieces in the middle of the E.P. having nothing to do with metal whatsoever in my opinion. I can understand why Sonny has trouble with Justin's pitchy vocals but I think their imperfections are kinda the point as they provide a much needed counterpoint for the precisely programmed mechanical soundscape around them. I guess I'm suggesting that their fragility represents the human element in Godflesh's sound which enables the listener to have something they can relate to amidst what is essentially a very foreign & robotic machine world with G.C. Green's dense & weighty bass lines repeatedly punishing the listener.

While the opener & closer are the clear high points of the E.P. for me & it would be fairly easy to see the two colder industrial pieces between them as filler, there's an undeniable quality about everything Godflesh touch here which enables the two senior tracks to carry this E.P. into true classic territory in my opinion & this is why I've selected it as a feature release this month. I'm not suggesting that it's an underrated release because it's generally very highly regarded but it certainly doesn't receive the attention that many of the band's full-lengths or their self-titled debut E.P. do & I think that's a shame as it's easily as strong as the majority of Godflesh's albums. I can't help but think that "Merciless" & "Flowers" should have been kept for a full-length album actually because they're almost wasted in the E.P. format. This should be essential listening for fans of the band & industrial music as a whole.

4.5/5

4
Daniel

I decided to dive into part of the Sphere playlist because of this month's Sphere feature release that I enjoy (Godflesh's Merciless EP) and it felt like a good time to test out my industrial metal interest. So here are my track thoughts:

Code Orange – “(deeperthanbefore)” (from “Underneath”, 2020)

5/5. The perfect way to start the playlist, and a suitable electronic intro for how deep the band is gonna get in diversity.

Samael – “For A Thousand Years” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

4.5/5. Great song from the venomously good song, so heavy and dark! The symphonic-industrial keyboards are what their recent albums apart from the band's earlier black metal era that ended with the Rebellion EP.

Neurotech – “Awaiting Deception” (from “Antagonist”, 2011)

4/5. The ambient guitar adds darkness to this song's chorus. A great song to love for anyone into cyber/industrial metal. It even works well when listening in the rain. However, I might downvote this from perfection.

Unheilig – “Für immer” (from “Grosse Freiheit”, 2010)

3.5/5. For this song, the beat is good along with the vocals, but I can't really understand the German lyrics, that's the problem I have with Neue Deutsche Härte. Actually is it that genre? Sounds closer to the gothic pop rock of HIM that I got bored of.

Kong – “Horse L.” (from “Phlegm”, 1992)

3/5. An early instrumental industrial metal/rock track, but Godflesh this is not. Next!

Eisbrecher – “Die Engel” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

3.5/5. More of this Neue Deutsche Härte! Once again I can't understand the German lyrics, but the instrumentation and vocals sound good.

Pitchshifter – “Wafer Thin” (from “Deviant”, 2000)

4/5. An interesting twist in the playlist's sound so far, shifting to a nu/alt-metal approach while staying industrial. Absolute f***ing intense anger in this tune! This could bring back memories for anyone involved in the alt-metal millennium turn, reminding some of Therapy? at that time. After Pitchshifter's first split, two of the members formed a temporary alt-metalcore side-project This is Menace. I thought this nu/alt-ish industrial metal sound was menacing enough.

Killing Joke – “Invocation” (from “Hosannas From The Basements Of Hell”, 2006)

3.5/5. The music and lyrics sound f***ing supernatural here. I definitely like the beat. This was Paul Raven's last album with the band before his passing the next year, RIP. There's some ominous cello to go along with the strings. It would've been cooler if the beat was more synchronized, but it's still OK.

Author & Punisher – “Misery” (from “Krüller”, 2022)

3/5. A little out of my league, especially after having moved out of the droning doom misery. Moving on...

Ministry – “Never Believe” (from “The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste”, 1989)

3.5/5. Here is another industrial machine, this time Chris Connelly on lead vocals for deranged ambient assembly. Not absolutely the best, but this is still worth headbanging until your head falls off!

Lard – “Pineapple Face” (from “The Last Temptation Of Reid”, 1990)

4/5. Jello Biafra is one of strangest vocalists in metal, giving this song some strong potential.

Crisis Sigil – “Shape.” (from “Small Towns.”, 2020)

4.5/5. Much better shape, but I'm a little concerned about if any of their other songs would be like this which would tire me out fast.

In This Moment – “Fly Like An Eagle” (from “Mother”, 2020)

5/5. Now we're talking! This band took a 70s rock song and covered it to make it dark and beautiful. Maria Brink's vocal power is incredible! If I had started on my metalhead journey in my earlier alt-rock/metal days before DragonForce set my direction, I would've certainly listened to In This Moment more. The intro itself is almost a cover of the Terminator theme. I f***ing love it!

Nine Inch Nails – “Gave Up” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

4.5/5. Well if I were to level up my industrial metal interest via the alt-metal bands, they would have to actually be a metal band. Broken is the most metal EP for this mainly industrial rock band. This is probably the best song I would enjoy from NIN. The last third of the song would really make you go Hulk-smashing or some sh*t. It is quite a gamble to test out a good amount of industrial metal bands and see which one would be right for me. Some would just be f***ing over-the-top nonsense while others sound decently well. I don't know what other feelings I have here. Play it one of the more action-oriented Star Trek movie scenes and see if it makes things sound better.

Apartment 26 – “Slicedbeats” (from “Hallucinating”, 2000)

4/5. This is not the greatest, but still decently f***ing killer industrial alt-metal sh*t.

Static-X – “This Is Not” (from “Machine”, 2001)

4.5/5. THIS IS NOT my type. I don't hate this, but it's better off as a recommendation for my recent Discord friend. RIP Wayne Static...

Godflesh – “Spinebender” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

5/5. This one focuses on creative beats and dissonance that might bring discomfort to anyone including classic metalheads. It's a great song to stop my commenting while the quality is still on top in case it goes downhill, so see you later, Sphere controllers!

1
Daniel

Anyone who is a regular here at the Metal Academy will know that I am not always very positive about most of the content featured in The Sphere clan. Indeed, the very mention of Ministry makes me apoplectic, for example. All too often I find that the music of The Sphere is jumbled and done so just for the hell of it. My main problem with Ministry is that they seem to feel that the expression of their social, political, and cultural dissolution is fine to be exhibited with little care for structure beyond juvenile angst and reckless direction.

Thankfully not all music that dwells here in this industrial wasteland is terrible. Although arguably more than simple industrial in their content here, Killing Joke’s 2006 offering is an example of the rarefied atmosphere of genuinely captivating music within The Sphere. I recognise almost instantly this jumbled arrangement to all the tracks but here it feels more layered in approach as opposed to senseless piling of things on top of each other. The ability to combine many elements within a track (hell, even just a couple of different elements if they are disparate by way of comparison to each other) is not easy. Listening through to Invocation as I type this review just shows me what masters of this skill KJ are. The mechanical machinations of the track are balanced sublimely with those stabs of symphonia to create an imperious air to the proceedings here. That repetition is still there grinding away at the core of the track yet there is just enough variance in those symphonic elements and those tribal beats that roll through parts of the track to make this a real tour de force.

Switch to Walking with Gods just a few tracks later and we have a structure built on more industrial dance foundations that continually chops away at the listener. The invitation to “push yourself beyond the limits of human endurance” is made by a band who clearly practice what they preach with the relentless energy of this track. This does not always make for an easy listen with Hosanna from the Basements of Hell. The tracks are all varied enough in length, but it is the longer ones that really stand out for me, leaving the four- or five-minute ones a bit in their shade. That is not to say that the shorter tracks are bad, I just find I give them less attention overall.

The repetition is prevalent throughout and it serves as a constant tide almost to bring the music and me closer as the album goes along yet at the same time there are off-kilter rhythms (albeit very subtle), jangly alt-rock riffs and Jaz Coleman’s barking vocals that sound like a more accessible Lemmy to me in their style to keep me guessing where we are going next. Add to this odd sound effects that can sound like the squeaking wheels on a pram or deep and monstrous intakes of breath as well as the occasional maniacal laugh and this all adds up for one dizzying yet brilliant experience.

Whilst I get the sense that KJ do not really care if we like this eclectic “tension music” as I have heard the band describe their sound, they have put such clear effort into Hosanna from the Basements of Hell that it is hard for me not to be completely enamoured with it. It is an album that transposes the message of the artist with an ease that borders on being organic. It did not take many spins for me to feel in tune with this album and the ethos of Coleman and co soon bled through. As such it is one of a few records that I feel speaks to me and puts me at ease with its bonkers yet consistent methods of entertainment. In so many ways it is hard to describe yet in others it is so honest in its style it can appear quite basic at the same time. Extraordinary find for me.

4.5/5

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=d6aecc67a9744d1c


Tracklisting:


01. Morbid Angel – “Omni Potens” (from “Illud Divinum Insanus”, 2011)

02. Apartment 26 – “Doing It Anyway” (from “Hallucinating”, 2000)

03. Keygen Church – “D I L E R K E F E T” (from “░█░█░░█░█░█░”, 2021)

04. Unheilig – “Seenot” (from “Grosse Freiheit”, 2010)

05. Nine Inch Nails – “Help Me I Am In Hell” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

06. Godflesh – “Godhead” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

07. Scorn – “Suck & Eat Me” (from “Vae Solis”, 1992)

08. Eisbrecher – “Gothkiller” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

09. Rob Zombie – “Shake Your Ass-Smoke Your Grass” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

10. Ministry – “Good Trouble” (from “Moral Hygiene”, 2021)

11. Skrew – “Cold Angel Press” (from “Burning In Water, Drowning In Flame”, 1992)

12. Rammstein – “Links 2 3 4” (from “Mutter”, 2001)

13. Pitchshifter – “Catharsis” (from “Industrial”, 1991)

14. Old – “Vein Water” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

15. Fear Factory – “Purity” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

16. Static-X – “Permanence” (from “Machine”, 2001)

17. Samael – “Antigod” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

18. Author & Punisher – “Incinerator” (from “Kruller”, 2022) [Submitted by Vinny]

19. Youth Code & King Yosef – “A Mother’s Love” (from “A Skeleton Key In The Doors Of Depression”, 2021)

20. The Amenta – “Cell” (from “Flesh Is Heir”, 2013) [Submitted by Daniel]

21. Red Harvest – “The Itching Scull” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

22. Thorns – “Existence” (from “Thorns”, 2001)

23. Lard – “Time To Melt” (from “The Power Of Lard” E.P., 1988)

0
Daniel

So this release is every bit as unusual as it's descriptors would suggest. On RYM it's tagged as digital hardcore, industrial metal & industrial rock primaries with nu metal & jungle secondaries. Now I don't know much about digital hardcore but the only thing hardcore here (at least in the punk sense) is the aggressive vocal delivery which would fit seamlessly on a metalcore release from our The Revolution clan. There's no punk in the instrumentation whatsoever & I have a real problem with genre-tagging being reliant on just the vocal style. The other tags are very accurate with the exeption of industrial rock which isn't really required here. The guitar work here is heavily distorted with rhythms that often remind me of bands like Ministry or Fear Factory however the beats that surround it are heavily influenced by jungle/drum 'n' bass as well as pounding up-tempo hard techno & gabba. The inclusion of some nu metal style rapping isn't very well received by this metalhead unfortunately but you only see that very occasionally. The Shizit certainly make an almighty racket but ironically the moments that I enjoy most are when they embrace their more atmospheric electronic side with beautiful Moby style synths presenting a tranquil outlook before the savagery returns. There's no doubt that this is an interesting & original work but does it all work? In a word no it doesn't but the failures are easily outweighed by the wins & I left the experience with a largely positive feeling.

3.5/5

1
Daniel
I agree with Xephyr's statements on another thread as this one wasn't even close with "Pantocrator" making a late charge to finish as my favourite metal release of the 2021.
2
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=d1c65c4e4cbf4cee


Tracklisting:


01. Skrew – “Orifice” (from “Burning In Water, Drowning In Flame”, 1992)

02. Samael – “Of War” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

03. Neurotech – “Inject Me Now” (from “Antagonist”, 2011)

04. Rammstein – “Mein Herz brennt” (from “Mutter”, 2001)

05. Rob Zombie – “The Much Talked Of Metamorphosis” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

06. Lard – “Hellfudge” (from “The Power Of Lard” E.P., 1988)

07. Ministry – “Believe Me” (from “Moral Hygiene”, 2021)

08. Keygen Church – “G E B U E R J E I T” (from “░█░█░░█░█░█░”, 2021)

09. Eisbrecher – “Bombe” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

10. Unheilig – “Das Meer” (from “Grosse Freiheit”, 2010)

11. Die Krupps – “Crossfire” (from “II: The Final Option”, 1993)

12. Mechina – “Purity Storm” (from “Siege”, 2021)

13. Apartment 26 – “Backwards” (from “Hallucinating”, 2000)

14. Nine Inch Nails – “Pinion” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

15. Author & Punisher – “Drone Carrying Dread” (from “Krüller”, 2022) [Submitted by Vinny]

16. Godflesh – “Avalanche Master Song” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

17. Pitchshifter – “New Flesh” (from “Industrial”, 1991)

18. Old – “Lo Flux Tube” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

19. Fear Factory – “Recode” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

20. Meathook Seed – “My Infinity” (from “Embedded”, 1993)

21. Scorn – “Spasm” (from “Vae Solis”, 1992)

22. Static-X – “Get To The Gone” (from “Machine”, 2001)

23. Morbid Angel – “Too Extreme!” (from “Illud Divinum Insanus”, 2011)

24. Thorns – “Shifting Channels” (from “Thorns”, 2001)

25. …And Oceans – “White Synthetic Noise” (from “A.M. G.O.D.”, 2001)

26. Youth Code & King Yosef – “Burner” (from “A Skeleton Key In The Doors Of Depression”, 2021)

27. Red Harvest – “Fix, Hammer, Fix” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

28. Kill The Thrill – “Us & Them” (from “Tellurique”, 2005) [Submitted by Daniel]

0
Daniel

Yeah, Fange is the CLEAR winner here in my opinion; it's not even close. Two great songs that pull the mechanical-ness into some seriously sludgy riffs in all the best ways. 

3
Daniel

After giving this album a few revisits over the last couple of days I think my review from back in 2013 still holds up very well. These guys are generally listed as residing in my home city of Sydney but that's not entirely true as they're really more of national collaboration with Malignant Monster vocalist Cain Cresall coming out of Perth (which is over a four hour flight away from Sydney) & legendary Psycroptic, Abramelin & Ruins drummer Dave Haley residing in the island state of Tasmania. Regardless, these guys are like metal royalty here in Sydney & have blown away many a touring act in the live environment too. Dave is widely regarded as one of the best metal drummers in Australia (along with Ne Obliviscaris skinsman Daniel Presland) & is globally renowned while Cain is quite simply one of the most theatrical & psychotic front men you'll ever see & the album cover is a very true representation of what you could expect to see at one of his live shows. He's truly intimidating & creates a seriously imposing atmosphere. Anyway... here's my review:


I've always been a big fan of this band. Their first two albums were outstanding examples of industrial-edged death metal & their live shows are a true spectacle. I class them as my personal favourite from the current crop of Aussie metal bands so I had very high hopes for this release & it certainly hasn't let me down. In fact they've stepped it up to another level altogether. The production is better than ever before & it presents the songs in the best possible light. If you don't like triggered drum sounds then look no further because they don't get much more mechanized & up-front than this. It really does enhance the industrial vibe though & the drumming is a real highlight. This is some of the most extreme metal you will find anywhere. Stylistically they sit somewhere between Damaged, Anaal Nathrakh & Godflesh. It's extremely dark & chaotic with the electronic component adding to the insanity of the atmosphere. The slower sections are outstanding & push this dark atmosphere even further. They've included a couple of high quality industrial tracks evenly distributed amongst the metal tracks to give you a little respite from the non-stop assault on your senses & they fit the purpose well. I honestly can't fault this album. Amazing!

4.5/5

1
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=2ac46b7fce8e4eb0


Tracklisting:


01. Andrew Hulshult – “DUSK” (from “Dusk (Original Game Soundtrack), 2018) [Submitted by Daniel]

02. Mechina – “Blood Feud Erotica” (from “Siege”, 2021)

03. Eisbrecher – “Supermodel” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

04. Motionless In White – “Wasp” (from “Reincarnate”, 2014) [Submitted by Andi]

05. Pitchshifter – “Scene This” (from “Deviant”, 2000)

06. Rob Zombie – “18th Century Cannibals, Excitable Morlocks and a One-Way Ticket on the Ghost Train” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

07. Oomph! – “Suck-Taste-Spit” (from “Sperm”, 1994)

08. Godflesh – “Veins” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

09. Keygen Church – “T I L A S K A R O T” (from “░█░█░░█░█░█░”, 2021)

10. 1000 Homo DJs – “Hey Asshole!” (from “Supernaut” E.P., 1990)

11. Lard – “The Power Of Lard” (from “The Power Of Lard” E.P., 1988)

12. Youth Code & King Yosef – “Looking Down” (from “A Skeleton Key In The Doors Of Depression”, 2021)

13. Nine Inch Nails – “Happiness In Slavery” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

14. Ministry – “Alert Level” (from “Moral Hygiene”, 2021)

15. Old – “Disconnect Self” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

16. Fange – “Les vergers de la désolation” (from “Pantocrator”, 2021)

17. Fear Factory – “Disruptor” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

18. Code Orange – “Swallowing The Whole Rabbit” (from “Underneath”, 2020)

19. Author & Punisher – “Doppler” (from “Drone Machines”, 2010)

20. Red Harvest – “Junk-O-Rama” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

21. Borgne – “To Cut The Flesh & Feel Nothing But Stillness” (from “Temps Mortes”, 2021) [Submitted by Sonny]

22. Kill The Thrill – “Soave” (from “Tellurique”, 2005) [Submitted by Vinny]


0
Daniel

This sounds more like heavy post-punk and industrial rock with some metal influence rather than an out and out metal album. That's certainly not a complaint and it makes for a very interesting listen. The vocals are what initially stood out and are the highlight for me, possessing that kind of grizzled "cigarettes and whiskey" quality that reminded me of The Pogues' Shane McGowan. Aesthetically, it sounds like a melancholy and sometimes bitter love letter to the rundown industrial towns of a world deep in the process of decay. It has an almost cinematic quality, like watching a black and white movie of strangely beautiful, but terribly neglected, small towns the world over. I haven't heard too many releases quite like this and when the mood strikes I can definitely see myself returning to it for a little sombre reflection.

4/5

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=0fdcfd162d9e4bda


Tracklisting:


01. Samael – “Let My People Be” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

02. Keygen Church – “H A R E K L A V I T” (from “░█░█░░█░█░█░”, 2021)

03. Oomph! – “Breathtaker” (from “Sperm”, 1994)

04. Rob Zombie – “Boom-Boom-Boom” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

05. Autarkh – “Impasse” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)

06. Pitchshifter – “Condescension” (from “Deviant”, 2000)

07. 1000 Homo DJs – “Apathy” (from “Supernaut” E.P., 1990)

08. Wayne Static – “Slave” (from “Pighammer”, 2011)

09. Static-X – “Cold” (from “Machine”, 2001)

10. Ghostemane – “Crime Time” (from “Fear Network II” E.P., 2021)

11. Eisbrecher – “Böse Mädchen” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

12. Godflesh – “Wounds” (bonus track from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988) [Submitted by Daniel]

13. Old – “Citient Null” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

14. Ministry – “Sabotage Is Sex” (from “Moral Hygiene”, 2021)

15. Mechina – “The Worst In Us” (from “Siege”, 2021)

16. Author & Punisher – “The Speaker Is Systematically Blown” (from “Beastland”, 2018) [Submitted by Vinny]

17. Youth Code & King Yosef – “The World Stage” (from “A Skeleton Key In The Doors Of Depression”, 2021)

18. Nine Inch Nails – “Last” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

19. Morbid Angel – “Profundis - Mea Culpa” (from “Illud Divinum Insanus”, 2011)

20. Fear Factory – “End Of Line” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

21. Fange – “Tombé pour la France” (from “Pantocrator”, 2021)

22. Thorns – “Shifting Channels” (from “Thorns”, 2001)

23. Red Harvest – “Absolut Dunkel:heit” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

0
Daniel

I've selected a couple of video game soundtrack feature releases for The Sphere in the past & with mixed results it has to be said. Mick Gordon's "DOOM" has gone on to become one of my all-time favourite releases of any subgenre while I found Jamie Christopherson's "Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance Vocal Tracks" effort to be a bit flat & lacking in appeal. When I noticed the similarities between the descriptions & praise being bandied around for Texas-based producer Andrew Hulshult's "DUSK" score though I was buoyed by the suspicion that I might be in for something more akin to the former & jumped at the chance to explore it with the group. What I hadn't noticed however was the enormous girth of this release which clocks in at over 158 minutes in duration &, given my stance on rating & reviewing releases on this site, this committed me to a minimum of eight hours of "DUSK" which initially seemed like an enormous mountain to climb. This feeling was only exacerbated by the fact that the whole thing is instrumental too. Thankfully though, "DUSK" is a high quality & extremely consistent release that ticks a lot of my boxes.

"DUSK" is much closer in tone to "DOOM" than it is to "Metal Gear Rising" although it's by no means a mirror image. There's not the same tension-&-release or the industrial techno influence. It's clearly a combination of industrial metal & various brands of ambient music though, not always dark ambient however. The horror synth reference is quite apt at times as this is clearly a soundtrack. I mean I don't think it would take listeners long to realize that had they not been informed prior to going into their listening experience. In fact, it's a little bit ambitious to categorize "DUSK" as an industrial metal release (or a metal release in general actually) because the metal component isn't as prominent as the ambient one with the simple chugging metal riffs often playing more of an accompanying role in the arrangements than a focal point. The guitar tone isn't wonderful & is probably the only criticism I have of Andrew Hulshult's efforts here.

For a 43 track soundtrack, "DUSK" remarkably only dishes out a few failures & these usually line up with the simpler metal based tracks. I've been frustrated by the way that these soundtracks tend to cut their ideas short before they've had the chance to become fully realized in the past but that never feels to be the case here. In much the same way as Akira Yamaoka's "Silent Hill" soundtracks, I actually think I prefer Andrew's purely ambient pieces over his more instrumentally driven ones overall & the highlights generally come when he decides to emphasize the drama by pumping up the tension through the use of dark & grandiose choirs & ever-building layers of abrasive noise or by stripping things back to a minimal structure with deep & subtle synthesizers & a repetitive underlying pulse that beckons you to continue through the game. He certainly possesses a rare talent for creating emotionally engaging soundscapes but I found that "DUSK" required some initial commitment before opening up, perhaps needing me to overcome my reservations about it's length in order to open myself up to it's charms. This release may not be a match for the unwavering focus & creative genius of Mick Gordon's "DOOM' soundtrack but it's a high quality listen in its own right & one that I would imagine would have served its purpose very well.

For fans of Mick Gordon's "DOOM", Sonic Mayhem's "Quake" & Jamie Chrostopherson's "Metal Gear Rising: Revengeance Vocal Tracks" video game soundtracks.

4/5

1
Chris Van Etten

Chris, I hope you're still around. I just came back to this old thread to ask you something... Are you across this:


4
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=d68decdc443c4e75


Tracklisting:


01. Samael – “In The Deep” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

02. Master Boot Record – “Emm386.exe” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

03. Lindemann – “Allesfresser” (from “F & M”, 2019)

04. Oomph! – “Fieber” (from “Plastik”, 1999)

05. Deathstars – “Blood Stains Blondes” (from “Night Electric Night”, 2009)

06. DéspairsRay – “”Forbidden”” (from “Coll:set”, 2006)

07. The Mad Capsule Markets – “Good Girl (Dedicated to bride 20 years after)” (from “Osc-Dis (Oscillator in Distortion)”, 2001)

08. 3TEETH – “Pumped Up Kicks” (from “Metawar”, 2019)

09. Fear Factory – “Monolith” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

10. Static-X – “Black & White” (from “Machine”, 2000)

11. Eisbrecher – “Volle Kraft voraus” (from “Schock”, 2015)

12. Crossbreed – “Severed” (from “Synthetic Division”, 2001)

13. Rob Zombie – “Get Loose” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

14. Turmion Kätilöt – “Ihmisixsixsix” (from “Perstechnique”, 2011)

15. Godflesh – “Dogbite” (from “Decline & Fall” E.P., 2014)

16. Scorn – “Hit” (from “Vae Solis”, 1992)

17. Ghostemane – “Crash ‘n Learn” (from “Fear Network II” E.P., 2021)

18. Ministry – “Disinformation” (from “Moral Hygiene”, 2021)

19. Lard – “Sylvestre Matuschka” (from “The Last Temptation Of Reid”, 1990) [Submitted by Daniel]

20. Author & Punisher – “Sand, Wind & Carcass” (from “Drone Machines”, 2010)

21. Old – “Z.U.” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

22. Pitchshifter – “Gravid Rage” (from “Industrial”, 1991)

23. Red Harvest – “Omnipotent” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

24. Black Magnet – “Trustfucker” (from “Hallucination Scene”, 2020)

25. Skrew – “Sympathy For The Devil” (from “Burning In Water, Drowning In Flame”, 1992)

26. Meathook Seed – “A Furred Grave” (from “Embedded”, 1993)

27. Autarkh – “Alignment” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)

28. DEAFBRICK – “Mega-ritual” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

29. Iperyt – “No State Of Grace” (from “No State Of Grace”, 2011)

0
Daniel

Daniel's comparison to Ministry definitely made it clearer as to why this didn't resonate with me at all, considering I don't think there's any room for the vocals to grow on me. I didn't care for The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste so coming into a record with similar instrumentals and a subjectively worse vocalist means there wasn't too much for me to enjoy on this one. Maybe I'll give it another shot towards the end of the month just for to give it a fair shot?  

10
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=39f08a9ef43f452a


Tracklisting:


01. Static-X – “Regeneration” (from “Project Regeneration, Vol. 1, 2020)

02. Master Boot Record – “Himem.sys” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

03. Oomph! – “Unsere Rettung” (from “Unrein”, 1998)

04. DEAFBRICK – “O antropoceno” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

05. Crossbreed – “Underlined” (from “Synthetic Division”, 2001)

06. Killing Joke – “Invocation” (from “Hosannas From the Basements of Hell”, 2006)

07. Lord Of The Lost – “Loreley” (from “Thornstar”, 2018) [Submitted by Vinny]

08. Eisbrecher – “Tanz mit mir” (from “Die Hölle muss warten”, 2012)

09. Pain – “Designed To Piss You Off” (from “Coming Home”, 2016)

10. Deathstars – “Tongues” (from “Termination Bliss”, 2006)

11. Lard – “Mate, Spawn & Die” (from “The Last Temptation Of Reid”, 1990)

12. Rob Zombie – “The Satanic Rites Of Blacula” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

13. Godflesh – “I, Me, Mine” (from “Us & Them”, 1999)

14. Ghostemane – “Convoluted” (from “Fear Network II” E.P., 2021)

15. Uniform & The Body – “Contempt” (from “Everything That Dies Someday Comes Back”, 2019)

16. Uniform – “Alone In The Dark” (from “The Long Walk”, 2018)

17. Samael – “Rain” (from “Passage”, 1996) [Submitted by shadowdoom9 (Andi)]

18. 3TƎETH – “Atrophy” (from “shutdown.ɘxe”, 2017)

19. Sybreed – “ReEvolution” (from “Slave Design”, 2004)

20. Ministry – “Unsung” (from “Animositisomina”, 2003)

21. Andrew Hulshult – “Departure To Destruction” (from “Dusk (Original Game Soundtrack), 2018)

22. P.H.O.B.O.S. – “Wisdom” (from “Tectonics”, 2005)

23. Black Magnet – “Anubis” (from “Hallucination Scene”, 2020)

24. Fear Factory – “Cognitive Dissonance” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

25. Mick Gordon - “Rip & Tear” (from “Doom (Original Game Soundtrack)”, 2016) [Submitted by Daniel]

26. Autarkh – “Lost To Sight” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)

27. Dagoba – “The Things Within” (from “What Hell Is About”, 2006)

0
Daniel

Here's my review of this great release, once again written a long time ago...

Samael certainly shocked their fans with Passage. Beginning their existence as an extremely raw and simple black metal band (as can be heard on debut Worship Him and follow-up Blood Ritual), this Swiss band had already evolved into a more intense and hard-hitting blasphemous outfit on 1994’s Ceremony of Opposites. They’d gained a lot of new fans with that release (myself included), all of which were waiting anxiously to see where this evolution would go next. 1995’s stop gap EP Rebellion should have warned us all of what might be coming with its increased use of keyboard atmospherics, not to mention an Alice Cooper cover, but this resulting full length album was still an immensely brave release. The industrial elements that had been hinted at on previous releases had been amplified dramatically, the keyboards given far greater importance, and the whole thing was seemingly designed for a mainstream audience. Surely none of these changes were going to please black metal fans!

Yet somehow, despite this huge shift in tone and sound, Passage is blatantly Samael! The heavy, simple, yet effective riffs are there, the energy the band had found on Ceremony of Opposites is if anything amped up and Vorph’s vocals still contain that accented venom we all know and love. This is most definitely the same Samael engine used to create their early albums, but the chassis it runs in is a completely upgraded, shiny new model. Samael made the correct judgement that their previous Satanic themes wouldn’t sit too well with the shift in approach and took on a more Occult / Cosmological subject matter, which is perfectly synchronized with the striking yet simple artwork that adorns the cover. The symphonic aspect is wonderfully executed, with tracks such as Liquid Soul Dimension and Moonskin driven by gripping, and in the latter’s case, beautiful keyboard work. While the focus was certainly taken away from the guitars, it’s worth noting that the band added a second guitarist for the recording, which gives the album a far bigger sound all up.

Not everything the band attempted on this album turned to gold. The programmed drums are great in general, giving the album an almost mechanical and powerful quality, but they occasionally make things a bit too sterile. The beginning of Angel’s Decay is an example of where they sound too characterless, perhaps even too clean for my liking. But 90% of the time they achieve their goal perfectly, with The Ones Who Came Before’s double bass kicking combination with dance beats displaying possibilities conventional drumming could never accomplish. Passage is an example of a band that was willing to take a risk, breaking down the restrictive boundaries that black metal fans often place on their beloved genre, and coming up with something that not only brought them a new audience, but was good enough to impress their existing fan base. If you’re into black metal, industrial metal or even gothic metal, there’s a lot to enjoy here. Highlight tracks are Rain, My Savior, The Ones Who Came Before and Moonskin.

4.5/5

3
Daniel

Still my most challenging clan to try and find consistent material in, I feel The Sphere and I are on ever destined for a distant relationship.  That having been said I did really enjoy SYL and Corrections House.  I also got on better than expected with Samael.

Standout of the list for me was the superb Author & Punisher with Barge from the exceptional Melk En Honing release.

2
Daniel

This is a really interesting one that I've come back to now after first checking it out early in the month and while I still enjoy it, I didn't find myself bumping it up a grade like I thought I would. Given how adverse I can be towards the monotony of some Industrial Metal Lo Flux Tube is definitely more up my alley in being more progressive and sometimes downright weird, moving much closer to being a full fledged Infinite release rather than the Sphere. I didn't get a chance to get out their supposed Grindcore beginnings, but I can take a guess and say that I'm glad I'm putting it off since I probably enjoy this release infinitely more. Given this was released in 1991 I'm really surprised to hear vocals and an overall avant-garde-ness that reminds me of the more off-the-wall Black Metal releases in the mid-1990's. Really goes to show how interconnected everything can be. 

The drums are just mechanical enough to give it that base industrial sound and while the guitar riffs can be grindy and monotonous on some tracks they definitely lean into the more random and crazy side on the more compelling tracks like "Outlive", "Citient Null", and "Z.U.". The bass is what impressed me the most on Lo Flux Tube though, having a powerful presence that overshadows the guitar in a good way during key moments. Even though the avant-garde industrial guitar whining can be cool, the killer bass lines really help to keep the album grounded and not something that I just zone out to. Even though I like the seemingly Black Metal inspired harsh vocals they get pretty old by the time "Marzuraan" rolls around since there isn't a whole lot of variety to them. I'd say there isn't a whole lot of variety in Lo Flux Tube from an album standpoint either, since even though what they're doing is crazy and unique, it's repeated in a way where I eventually find the grinding guitar noodling to be kind of dull. It's still a very cool album that showed me a side of Industrial Metal that I didn't really know existed, and the fact that this came out in the early 1990's makes it even more impressive and strange. I think I can throw this one on once and a while if I'm feeling it, but I think it lacks some substance in the ideas it tries to explore. 

3.5/5

2
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=fb6655bdd9194514


Tracklisting:


01. Black Magnet – “Hegemon” (from “Hallucination Scene”, 2020)

02. The Kovenant – “Star By Star” (from “S.E.T.I.”, 2003)

03. Lindemann – “Platz eins” (from “F & M”, 2019)

04. DEAFBRICK – “Primeval I” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

05. Godflesh – “Gift From Heaven (Breakbeat)” (from “Love & Hate In Dub” E.P., 1997) [Submitted by Daniel]

06. Emigrate – “Get Down” (from “Silent So Long”, 2014)

07. 1000 Homo DJs – “Supernaut” (from “Supernaut” E.P., 1990) [Submitted by Vinny]

08. Pitchshifter – “W.Y.S.I.W.Y.G.” (from “www.pitchshifter.com”, 1998)

09. Uniform & The Body – “Patron Saint Of Regret” (from “Everything That Dies Someday Comes Back”, 2019)

10. Master Boot Record – “Dblspace.exe” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

11. Samael – “Reign Of Light” (from “Reign Of Light”, 2004)

12. Rob Zombie – “The Ballad Of Sleazy Rider” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

13. Combichrist – “Zombie Fistfight” (from “No Redemption”, 2013)

14. Hanzel und Gretyl – “SS Deathstar Supergalactik” (from “Über Alles”, 2003)

15. Shining – “Last Day” (from “International Blackjazz Society”, 2015)

16. Ministry – “Twilight Zone” (from “AmeriKKKant”, 2018)

17. Treponem Pal – “Excess & Overdrive” (from “Excess & Overdrive”, 1993)

18. Static-X – “Accelerate“” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

19. Pain – “Greed” (from “Pain”, 1997)

20. Oomph! – “Mitten ins Herz” (from “Defekt”, 1995)

21. Skrew – “Mouthful Of Dust” (from “Dusted”, 1994)

22. Dagoba – “The White Guy (& The Black Ceremony)” (from “Dagoba”, 2003)

23. Mnemic – “Liquid” (from “Mechanical Spin Phenomena”, 2003)

24. Fear Factory – “Aggression Continuum” (from “Aggression Continuum”, 2021)

25. HALO – “Body Of Light” (from “Body Of Light”, 2003)

26. Autarkh – “Turbulence” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)

27. Yerûšelem – “Triiiunity” (from “The Sublime”, 2019) [Submitted by Sonny92]

0
Daniel

I'm with Vinny on this one sadly, this one became pretty unlistenable after the 3rd attempt. "Thieves" starts out fine with its opening riff, introducing the Industrial style and metallic sound effects that sets the tone for what the rest of the album will be, but the repetitiveness of the whole thing mercilessly dashes most positive things I can say about this album. Each track has something that I like about it, like the instrumental transition after the chorus of "Burning Inside" or the repetitive bassline that actually works out on "Cannibal Song", but man, some of these songs I just can't get behind at all. "So What" has relentlessly annoying ad-libs and refuses to end while offering nothing of value past the first two minutes, the synth-y "Never Believe" is wholly uninteresting, the premise behind "Test" is interesting at first but falls flat on its face after repeated listens, "Faith Collapsing" feels like a rehash of "Cannibal Song", and "Dream Song" is an admittedly interesting but still totally dull atmospheric ender. I guess this kind of repetitive riffing and use of ideas isn't for me because I can't see myself returning to this one, which is a shame because I seriously enjoy Psalm 69 to this day. I'm starting to think that Ministry are a one album band for me after I didn't really enjoy Houses of the Molé too much either. 

2.5/5

6
Shadowdoom9 (Andi)
Since it's been almost 6 months and no further activity has been made in this thread, I'm gonna end it here and declare the winner of part 2, which is... Godflesh's Streetcleaner, two to zero!! However, I'm not gonna start part 3 just yet because I plan on pairing up another Godflesh album with another industrial metal album, and it might be better to wait until I've expanded my industrial metal interest further. So this tournament is put on hold for now...
11
Daniel


Tracklisting:

01. Static-X – “My Destruction” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)
02. Neurotech – “Nonexistent” (from “Antagonist”, 2010) [Submitted by Vinny]
03. Lindemann – “Ich weiß es nicht” (from “F & M”, 2019)
04. Waltari – “External” (from “Space Avenue”, 1997)
05. DEAFBRICK – “The Menace Of The Dark Polar Night” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)
06. Uniform & The Body – “Penance” (from “Everything That Dies Someday Comes Back”, 2019)
07. Ministry – “Rio Grande Blood (Rio Grande Dubya Mix)” (from “Rio Grande Dub Ya”, 2007)
08. Rammstein – “Ich Will” (from “Mutter”, 2001)
09. …And Oceans – “Voyage: Lost Between Horizons: Eaten by the Distance” (from “Cypher”, 2002)
10. Rob Zombie – “The Eternal Struggles Of The Howling Man” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)
11. Oomph! – “Sex” (from “Sperm”, 1994)
12. KMFDM – “Bombs, Bullets & Bigotry” (from “WWIII”, 2003)
13. Shining – “The One Inside” (from “One One One”, 2013)
14. Pitchshifter – “Down” (from “PSI”, 2002)
15. Semargl – “God Is Not Love” (from “Satanic Pop Metal”, 2012)
16. Skrew – “Picasso Trigger” (from “Dusted”, 1994)
17. Master Boot Record – “Chkdsk.exe” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)
18. Fear Factory – “Self Immolation (Vein Tap Mix)” (from “Fear Is The Mindkiller” E.P., 1993)
19. Godlfesh – “Crush My Soul” (from “Selfless”, 1994)
20. Red Harvest – “The Lone Walk” (from “HyBreed”, 1996)
21. Corrections House – “Dirt Poor & Mentally Ill” (from “Last City Zero”, 2013)
22. Samael – “My Saviour” (from “Passage”, 1996) [Submitted by Daniel]
23. Author & Punisher – “Women & Children” (from “Women & Children”, 2013)
24. Strapping Young Lad – “Relentless” (from “Strapping Young Lad”, 2003)
25. The CNK – “L.K. Nosferat” (from “Ultraviolence Über Alles”, 2002)
26. Autarkh – “Cyclic Terror” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)
27. Black Magnet – “Divination Equipment” (from “Hallucination Scene”, 2020)

0
Daniel

This is some mean, aggressive as hell stuff right here. I'll be spending some more time with this in the coming weeks since I feel like I'll warm up to it even more than I already have after 2 or so listens today. Most of the album is a sludgy onslaught of riffs and basslines that can get a bit monotonous here and there but the album isn't stretched out to a length where it matters too much. The more industrial and scratchy electronic elements are used sparsely which I think works out considering Red Harvest's approach seems to boil down to being as Metal as possible, as Daniel alluded to. I didn't necessarily care for the sludge inspired vocals at first, but I'm starting to appreciate them more as I give the album more spins, it adds a nice new dimension to the industrial-style riffing. To me Red Harvest are more grounded in Death Metal than other Sphere albums I've heard so far, and I have to say that I dig it, kind of to my surprise. I'm normally put off from a lot of Sphere releases just due to the abrasiveness, but Red Harvest might have found my preferred middle ground between grindy, metallic riffs and slightly more clear and downtuned Death Metal riffs. Very cool album, will return to it and it has a fair chance of getting bumped up to a 4. 

3.5/5

2
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=a85a07785df34f61


Tracklisting:


01. Ministry – “Animosity” (from “Animositisomina”, 2003)

02. Master Boot Record – “Defrag.exe” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

03. Oomph! – “Kleinstadtboy” (from “Des Wahnsinns fette Beute”, 2012)

04. Pain – “It’s Only Them” (from “Nothing Remains The Same”, 2002)

05. Rammstein – “Engel” (from “Sehnsucht”, 1997)

06. White Zombie – “More Human Than Human (Meet Bambi in the King's Harem Mix)” (from “Supersexy Swingin’ Sounds”, 1996)

07. Deathstars – “New Dead Nation” (from “Synthetic Generation”, 2002)

08. Samael – “I Love The Dead” (from “Rebellion” E.P., 1995)

09. JK Flesh – “Earthmover” (from “Posthuman”, 2012)

10. DEAFBRICK – “Free Speech For The Dumb” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

11. Godflesh – “Cold World” (from “Cold World” E.P., 1991)

12. Sybreed – “Challenger” (from “God Is An Automaton”, 2012)

13. Rob Zombie – “Crow Killer Blues” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

14. Static-X – “Dead Souls” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

15. The Mad Capsule Markets – “Gaga Life.” (from “010”, 2001)

16. Author & Punisher – “Lonely” (from “Ursus Americanus”, 2012)

17. Fear Factory – “Pisschrist” (from “Demanufacture”, 1995) [Submitted by Sonny92]

18. Circle Of Dust – “Contagion” (from “Machines Of Our Disgrace”, 2016) [Submitted by Vinny]

19. Uniform – “This Won't End Well” (from “Shame”, 2020)

20. Red Harvest – “Godtech” (from “Sick Transit Gloria Mundi”, 2002)

21. …And Oceans – “Intelligence Is Sexy” (from “A.M. G.O.D.”, 2001)

22. Strapping Young Lad – “Spirituality” (from “City”, 1997) [Submitted by Daniel]

23. Blacklodge – “NeutroN ShivA [Sun, Walk With Me!]” (from “MachinationN”, 2012)

24. Autarkh – “Clouded Aura” (from “Form In Motion”, 2021)

0
Daniel

Just given this a couple of blasts and posted a short review.

I really enjoyed firing this up again - as I said in my review, it really does feel like a call from an old friend you haven't heard from in ages and didn't realise you missed as much as you evidently do. Some great memorable tracks here - Dog Day Sunrise, Body Hammer and Hunter-Killer to name but three. Love the play-off between the harsh and clean vocals on this album and Dino's riffing is really powerful and the machine-like rhythms are bang on the money. A great album of genuinely dystopian atmosphere where the remnants of humanity pitch against the machines' pitiless hive mind.

"Crown of black thorns, Human skin, ripped and torn, Where is your saviour now?" still gets me every time!

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/45Xj4PCyW3LavsE8NMtncN?si=c1c86da4197d46d1


Tracklisting:


01. Nailbomb – “Wasting Away” (from “Point Blank”, 1994)

02. Master Boot Record – “Fdisk.exe” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

03. Eisbrecher – “Zwischen uns” (from “Schock”, 2015)

04. Author & Punisher – “Pressure Lover” (from “Pressure Mine” E.P., 2017) [Submitted by MacabreEternal]

05. Die Krupps – “To The Hilt” (from “II: The Final Option”, 1993)

06. Oomph! – “Augen Auf!” (from “Wahrheit oder Pflicht”, 2004)

07. Turmion Kätilöt – “Grand Ball” (from “Perstechnique”, 2011)

08. The Kovenant – “The Human Abstract” (from “Animatronic”, 1999)

09. Deathstars – “Semi-Automatic” (from “Synthetic Generation”, 2002)

10. Pain – “Zombie Slam” (from “Psalms Of Extinction”, 2006)

11. Hanzel und Gretyl – “Fukken Über Death Party” (from “2012: Zwanzig Zwolf”, 2008)

12. Static-X – “Bring You Down” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

13. Rammstein – “Wollt ihr das Bett in Flammen sehen” (from “Herzeleid”, 1995)

14. Circle Of Dust – “Regressor (Aggressive Mix)” (from “Brainchild”, 1994)

15. The Mad Capsule Markets – “Tribe” (from “Osc-Dis (Oscillator in Distortion)”, 2001)

16. Misery Loves Co. – “Kiss Your Boots” (from “Misery Loves Co.”, 1995)

17. Uniform – “All We’ve Ever Wanted” (from “Shame”, 2020)

18. Godflesh – “Slavestate” (from “Slavestate E.P., 1991)

19. Pitchshifter – “Brutal Cancroid” (from “Industrial”, 1991)

20. DEAFBRICK – “Sweat-Drenched Wreck” (from “Deafbrick”, 2020)

21. Rob Zombie – “The Triumph Of King Freak (A Crypt Of Preservation & Superstition)” (from “The Lunar Injection Kool Aid Eclipse Conspiracy”, 2021)

22. Strapping Young Lad – “In The Rainy Season” (from “Heavy As A Really Heavy Thing”, 1995)

23. Samael – “The Truth Is Marching On” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

24. Fear Factory – “540,000° Fahrenheit” (from “Transgression”, 2005)

25. Wayne Static – “Chrome Nation” (from “Pighammer”, 2011)

26. Ministry – “Punch In The Face” (from “From Beer To Eternity”, 2013)

27. Killing Joke – “Asteroid” (from “Killing Joke”, 2003) [Submitted by Daniel]

28. Iperyt – “The Antithesis” (from “No State Of Grace”, 2011)


0
Daniel

Godflesh with saxophone? Okay, obviously it's way more complicated then that, but that's kind of the first impression you get. I don't really know much about GOD, other than it's not just a side project of Justin Broadrick. I'm also not sure what I can add that Daniel hasn't mentioned already, I think his description is pretty spot on. This is not verse/chorus/verse music. This also a lot more organic sounding than Godflesh, not only with real drums... but if I'm not hearing things... bongos? While I agree there aren't really any weak moments, I don't really find it all that memorable either. I DID listen to it a few times (I agree that once isn't enough), but very little of it has really sunk in. Maybe I need to listen to it more? Or maybe this needs to be listened to at a loud volume in a room without any distractions.  One thing I will add is this reminds me a lot of early SCORN (which yes, is also JK related) wherein the sound is great, but the songs don't really grab me. I like this better than SCORN though. There's a lot going on, but I'd have a hard time explaining what I just heard. That might be part of the point though. If this isn't  easy music, can I really fault it for not being catchy? This is more about mood than riffs. I think I probably will return to this at some point.  3/5

2
Daniel

I did my review, here's its summary:

Deep in the underground beneath New York City lies a band in UNIFORM. Since forming in 2013, before this album, Uniform released 3 studio albums, 3 collaborations with The Body (who had too much drone for me to stand), and one EP. This album, Shame continues the band's brave evolution. To answer their question "What if the antihero in your favorite film or book had no chance to repent, reconcile, or redeem himself?" A bleak yet captivating 34-minute industrial metal story, that's what! Shame marks the second album with a real drummer instead of drum programming. The drummer for this album is Mike Sharp. With live drums, there's more heaviness in the oppressive industrial sound of the group. The consistent elements bring together various styles to find here, not just their trademark industrial noise-metal, but also the atmospheric black metal of early 2000s Solstafir, the thrashy hardcore of 80s Neurosis, the doomy riffs of early 2000s Grand Magus, and a bit of melodic post-punk. Those influences are scattered around different songs, each of which using one of those outer styles, before mixing them in the 8-minute epic "I am the Cancer". One minor thing to criticize is the lack of dynamic variation, but that's OK because of the album's short runtime. The range of influences and genres keep Shame interesting and never sh*tty. Listeners will be rewarded even after just first listen. Uniform have made an impressive part of their catalog to bring excitement from the underground!

5/5

Review for their other metal album, The Long Walk, to be made soon...

4
Daniel

My thoughts on some tracks (including my one suggestion):

Godflesh – “Pulp” (from “The Earache Peel Sessions” E.P., 2014)

5/5. The original version in Streetcleaner is one of my industrial metal favorites that can pulverize you into a pulp with the bass and drum machine rolling under the burning guitar slashing through vocals in a hopeless crescendo yelling "PULP" repeatedly until the last breath.

Strapping Young Lad – “The New Black” (from “The New Black”, 2006)

5/5. There's no better way to end my song-commenting journey through this month's playlists with a killer ending to the final album by progressive industrial metal band Strapping Young Lad! The intro riff at over the 30-second mark and the chorus nearly two minutes later are worth repeating. I f***ing love the lyrics and bad-a** vocal range. What's also satisfying is the drumming. It's a wonder this album that's metal as f*** isn't hitting the charts. Long live the music of one of the best bands of all time, Strapping Young Lad! Now that the band is over, the heavy world was bleak...until the heavier part of the Devin Townsend Project.

1
Daniel

Absolutely not my thing, I found this album to be more annoying than anything, enough for me to not really want to return for another listen. There are some killer riffs in here, and the overall sound obviously appeals to someone (see posts above), but this really grated on me in a rough way. 

2.5/5

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5E8GX6qEX3zzcPHQCpv78Z?si=EMBWFRLmQACpzT3oy11sIw


Tracklisting:


01. Code Orange – “You & You Alone” (from “Underneath”, 2020)

02. Oomph! – “Labyrinth” (from “Monster”, 2008)

03. Master Boot Record – “RAMDRIVE.SYS” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

04. Pain – “Shut Your Mouth” (from “Nothing Remains The Same”, 2002)

05. Killing Joke – “Pandemonium” (from “Pandemonium”, 1994)

06. Deathstars – “Cyanide” (from “Termination Bliss”, 2006)

07. White Zombie – “Electric Head Pt. 2 (Sexational After Dark Mix)” (from “Supersexy Swingin’ Sounds”, 1996)

08. Samael – “On Earth” (from “Reign Of Light”, 2004)

09. Rob Zombie – “Dragula (Si Non Oscillas, Noli Tintinnare Mix)” (from “American Made Music To Strip To”, 1999)

10. Rammstein – “Puppe” (from “Rammstein”, 2019)

11. Fear Factory – “Scumgrief (Deep Dub Trauma Mix)” (from “Fear Is The Mindkiller” E.P., 1993)

12. Turmion Kätilöt – “Hades” (from “USCH!”, 2008)

13. Ghostemane – “Anti-Social Masochistic Rage (ASMR)” (from “ANTI-ICON”, 2020)

14. Godflesh – “Ice Nerveshatter” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

15. Uniform – “Shame” (from “Shame”, 2020)

16. Pitchshifter – “Eight Days” (from “PSI”, 2002)

17. Mnemic – “Overdose In The Hall Of Fame” (from “The Audio Injected Soul”, 2004)

18. 2wo – “I Am A Pig” (from “Voyeurs”, 1998)

19. The CNK – “Dinner Is Ready” (from “L'hymne à la joie”, 2007)

20. Static-X – “Terminator Oscillator” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

21. …And Oceans – “Fragile: Pictures of Silence: Melting the Skies” (from “Cypher”, 2002)

22. Ministry – “Bad Blood” (from “Dark Side Of The Spoon”, 1999)

23. KMFDM – “WWIII” (from “WWIII”, 2003)

24. Mechina – “Siege” (from “Siege”, 2021)

25. Dagoba – “The Man You’re Not” (from “What Hell Is About”, 2006)

26. The Amenta – “Vermin” (from “n0n”, 2008)

0
Daniel

So the first Godflesh record... definitely a good one, but considering the heights the would reach a few years later,  not one of their best. At this point Broadrick and Green were clearly onto something innovative, but they were still finding their sound. I don’t think they had quite figured out how to work within the confines and limitations of using a drum machine. Also , the production isn’t quite as heavy as on subsequent records (which I’m sure had to do with time/financial constraints and inexperience). The result is interesting though: it may not be super heavy (relatively speaking), but it’s still pretty brutal and abrasive, along the lines of Big Black, or maybe even Unsane (especially on “Veins”). I would love to hear how “Godhead” would have sounded if it was recorded during the Streetcleaner sessions. The classic Godflesh bass and guitar tones are already present, but the vocals aren’t there yet. While I agree with Daniel that the vocals were never the focal point, one thing I love about the later releases is how well Broadrick works within his vocal  limitations  (same as with the drum programming). On the other hand, I don’t think he ever sang a song the way he does on “Ice Nerveshatter” again. I can’t put my finger on it, but his vocal approach on this song is more loose and human than I’m used to hearing from him. I personally think Godflesh really hit their stride with Slavestate and the rest of their 90’s output (Us and Them maybe being a slight step down). Regardless, this is still essential for any GF fan, and the songs are all at least cool, if not great (not sure if I care as much for the bonus tracks, but I’m kind of a purist/snob so I’m mainly talking about the core six). To end on a high note, the main riff to “Spinebender” is fucking sick. Weird, emotive and with tons of personality. I can definitely get lost in that one. 3.5/5

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/2gyP3iijTYn6V13nrwKo3D?si=rjHr1S95RxGZLg22vxZD2g


Tracklisting:


01. Strapping Young Lad – “S.Y.L.” (from “Heavy As A Really Heavy Thing”, 1995)

02. Rammstein – “Rosenrot” (from “Rosenrot”, 2005)

03. Mechina – “Zoticus” (from “Xenon”, 2014)

04. Celldweller – “The End” (from “Soundtrack for the Voices in My Head Vol. 2”, 2012)

05. Oomph! – “Supernova” (from “Ego”, 2001)

06. Eisbrecher – “Amok” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

07. Killing Joke – “Hosannas From the Basements of Hell” (from “Hosannas From the Basements of Hell”, 2006)

08. Godflesh – “Mothra” (from “Pure”, 1992)

09. Combichrist – “Can’t Control” (from “We Love You”, 2014)

10. Semargl – “Tak, Kurwa” (from “Satanic Pop Metal”, 2012)

11. Gravity Kills – “Enough” (from “Gravity Kills”, 1996)

12. Static-X – “Push It” (from “Wisconsin Death Trip”, 1999)

13. Pain – “End of The Line” (from “Rebirth”, 1999)

14. Turmion Kätilöt – “Tirehtööri” (from “Pirun nyrkki”, 2006)

15. Mnemic – “Blood Stained” (from “Mechanical Spin Phenomena”, 2003)

16. Rob Zombie – “In the Age Of The Consecrated Vampire We All get High” (from “The Electric Warlock Acid Witch Satanic Orgy Celebration Dispenser”, 2016)

17. Master Boot Record – “DMA 0 DRAM REFRESH” (from “Direct Memory Access”, 2018)

18. Red Harvest – “Hole In Me” (from “A Greater Darkness”, 2007)

19. Uniform – “I Am The Cancer” (from “Shame”, 2020)

20. Ghostemane – “Hydrochloride” (from “ANTI-ICON”, 2020)

21. Nine Inch Nails – “Wish (Remixed by J. G. Thirlwell) (from “Fixed” E.P., 1992)

22. Pitchshifter – “Genius” (from “www.pitchshifter.com”, 1998)

23. Samael – “Rebellion” (from “Rebellion” E.P., 1995)

24. Hanzel und Gretyl – “Third Reich From The Sun” (from “Über Alles”, 2003)

25. Fear Factory – “Recharger” (from “The Industrialist”, 2012)

26. The CNK – “Get A Gun – Shoot At Random” (from “Ultraviolence Über Alles”, 2002)

27. Ministry – “No W” (from “Houses of the Molé”, 2004)

0
Daniel

I did my review, here's its summary:

Until just recently, I never really had the appeal for industrial metal. I thought it was an overrated mainstream metal genre like alt-metal, with the invasion of bands like Ministry and Rammstein. Now I can see where its heavier background lies, when I was pulled into listening to Strapping Young Lad during my run through Devin Townsend's discography. This band has started my quest to dig into industrial metal's heavier background for bands like Fear Factory and the genre's true pioneers, Godflesh! But for now, Strapping Young Lad's Alien is the follow-up to their self-titled comeback album and, unlike other bands' fourth albums, is of higher quality instead of lower. Their extreme industrial metal is punishing throughout 9 of its 11 tracks. The humans within this decimating machine include drummer Gene Hoglan, guitarist Jed Simon, bassist Byron Stroud, and Devin Townsend who also plays guitars while screaming with a bit of clean vocals. They level up the music with pulverizing drumming and searing riffing while fantastic lyrics fuel the fire and fury. Already I think this is the best album of their tenure! It has heavy anger and emotional power. Alien is probably my new best of 2005. No matter the craziness, you must hear this!

5/5

5
Daniel

Hi everyone.

I thought I'd make it easy on everyone by listing the major candidates for The Sphere's "2020 Release Of The Year" & "2020 Cover Art Of The Year" awards in case any of you are interested in doing some late exploration:



Aussie Mick Gordon's epic four hour industrial metal soundtrack for the "Doom Eternal" video game.

https://metal.academy/releases/19204




The fourth album from New York industrial metal duo Uniform entitled "Shame" (which also happens to be our January 2021 The Sphere Feature Release).

https://metal.academy/releases/23461


The latest full-length from Italian cyber metal maestro Master Boot Record entitled "Floppy Disk Overdrive".

https://metal.academy/releases/18351


"Underneath", the industrial-infused fourth album from Pittsburgh metalcore outfit Code Orange.

https://metal.academy/releases/17904


 "Project: Regeneration Vol. 1", the long-awaited comeback album from Los Angeles industrial metallers Static-X after an 11 year hiatus.

https://metal.academy/releases/22172


"ANTI-ICON", the unusual new effort from trap metal artist Ghostemane which combines a particularly abrasive brand of hip hop with industrial metal.

https://metal.academy/releases/24388

0
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/5OhYLUQ9yMnhAJkEyXwl6z?si=qTEDfDPRT0yfLxEN9pxlxA


Tracklisting:


01. Static-X – “Otsego Placebo” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

02. Oomph! – “Gott ist ein Popstar” (from “GlaubeLiebeTod”, 2006)

03. Master Boot Record – “Diskcopy.com” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

04. 16volt – “Moutheater” (from “SuperCoolNothing”, 1998)

05. Shining – “The Last Stand” (from “International Blackjazz Society”, 2015)

06. Rammstein – “Ich tu dir weh” (from “Liebe ist für alle da”, 2009)

07. Celldweller – “End Of An Empire” (from “End Of An Empire”, 2015)

08. Lindemann – “Praise Abort” (from “Skills In Pills”, 2015)

09. KMFDM – “Free Your Hate” (from “Hau Ruck”, 2005)

10. Godflesh – “Messiah” (from “Messiah” E.P., 2000)

11. Ghostemane – “Lazaretto” (from “ANTI-ICON”, 2020)

12. Samael – “From Malkuth To Kether” (from “Exodus” E.P., 1998)

13. Pain – “Call Me” (from “Coming Home”, 2016)

14. Waltari – “Far Away” (from “Space Avenue”, 1997)

15. Skrew – “Indestructible” (from “Burning In Water, Drowning In Flame”, 1992)

16. Pitchshifter – “Landfill” (from “Industrial”, 1991)

17. Wayne Static – “Assassins Of Youth” (from “Pighammer”, 2011)

18. HALO – “Meat” (from “Body Of Light”, 2003)

19. Combichrist – “No Redemption” (from “No Redemption”, 2013)

20. Ministry – “Let’s Go” (from “The Last Sucker”, 2007)

21. Misery Loves Co. – “My Mind Still Speaks” (from “Misery Loves Co.”, 1995)

22. Strapping Young Lad – “Aftermath” (from “Strapping Young Lad”, 2003)

23. Mnemic – “Diesel Uterus” (from “Sons Of The System”, 2010)

24. Fear Factory – “Edgecrusher” (from “Obsolete”, 1998)

25. P.H.O.B.O.S. – “Gregarious” (from “Tectonics”, 2005)

26. Uniform – “Life In Remission” (from “Shame”, 2020)

27. Red Harvest – “AEP” (from “Sick Transit Gloria Mundi”, 2002)

0
Daniel

I didn't realize that MA even had the DOOM soundtrack on here, so I finally pulled my old review over. I have some interesting takes on this one, since it's no doubt one of the best videogame OST's in the modern era, or ever for that matter, but it's kind of a slog on its own. The extremely high rating has to do with how I choose to rate OST's, which is thinking of them while you're actually in the game and playing, but I keep going back and forth on whether that's the "correct" way to go about it. I gave the Hades soundtrack from this year a 4.5/5 as well because the music for that game is phenomenal and holds up on its own extremely well, much like DOOM, but the 4.5 is still because of that rush you get when you hear the guitar kick in as you walk into a room or into a boss fight. Maybe I'll make a thread to talk about how others go about rating videogame music, because I'm always so torn. If I had to rate this album completely on its own without the DOOM demon massacring experience, it would probably be a 3.5 or even a 3.

It's a shame that the DOOM Eternal soundtrack had production issues with Gordon versus Bethesda, so he didn't even master most of the tracks for the OST release. I think people overstate how "bad" it is, but you can definitely tell. Eternal's OST is also extremely bloated compared to DOOM 2016's, clocking in at 4 and a half hours instead of 2 hours. I already thought that 2 hours was a bit too much DOOM, so Eternal was really too much in that regard. 

Review:

https://metal.academy/reviews/19542/1682

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4lSqHW884YRrErqDcpN3vn?si=p_34ey72QBSqEjAoqdUPDg


Tracklisting:


01. Blacklodge – “TridenT” (from “MachinationN”, 2012)

02. Rammstein – “Deutschland” (from “Rammstein”, 2019)

03. Master Boot Record – “Ansi.sys” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

04. Scorn – “On Ice” (from “Vae Solis”, 1992)

05. Eisbrecher – “Willkommen im nichts” (from “Eisbrecher”, 2004)

06. Oomph! – “Das weisse Licht” (from “Plastik”, 1999)

07. Die Krupps – “Fatherlanddodheims” (from “II: The Final Option”, 1993)

08. The Mad Capsule Markets – “(Pulse)” (from “Osc-Dis (Oscillator in Distortion)”, 2001)

09. KMFDM – “Juke Joint Jezebel” (from “Nihil”, 1995)

10. Sybreed – “Isolate” (from “Antares”, 2007)

11. Marilyn Manson – “The Beautiful People” (from “Antichrist Superstar”, 1996)

12. Rob Zombie – “Dead City Radio and the New Gods of Supertown” (from “Venomous Rat Regeneration Vendor”, 2013)

13. Ghostemane – “Vagabond” (from “ANTI-ICON”, 2020)

14. Static-X – “All These Years” (from “Project: Regeneration Vol. 1”, 2020)

15. DéspairsRay – “Garnet” (from “Coll:set”, 2006)

16. Shining – “I Won’t Forget” (from “One One One”, 2013)

17. Old – “Outlive” (from “Lo Flux Tube”, 1991)

18. 3TEETH – “President X” (from “Metawar”, 2019)

19. Turmion Kätilöt – “Teurastaja” (from “Hoitovirhe”, 2004)

20. Strapping Young Lad – “Far Beyond Metal” (from “The New Black”, 2006)

21. Fear Factory – “Archetype” (from “Archetype”, 2004)

22. Godflesh – “Weak Flesh” (from “Godflesh” E.P., 1988)

23. Uniform – “Delco” (from “Shame”, 2020)

24. Red Harvest – “The Harder They Fall” (from “HyBreed”, 1996)

25. Napalm Death – “White Kross” (from “Logic Ravaged by Brute Force” E.P., 2020)

26. JK Flesh – “Fear Of Fear” (from “Worship Is the Cleansing of the Imagination”, 2012)

27. Samael – “Luxferre” (from “Lux Mundi”, 2011)

28. Ministry – “Rio Grande Blood” (from “Rio Grande Blood”, 2006)

0
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1I15hhDvTQLKONioV7w3Ub?si=vuBiW15uSgKV-0wNJN_ZHg


Tracklisting:


01. Strapping Young Lad – “All Hail The New Flesh” (from “City”, 1997)

02. Fear Factory – “Regenerate” (from “Genexus”, 2015)

03. Samael – “Murder Or Suicide” (from “Hegemony”, 2017)

04. Godflesh – “Circle Of Shit” (from “Songs Of Love & Hate”, 1996) [Submitted by Chris Van Etten]

05. The Mad Capsule Markets – “Jam!” (from “010”, 2001)

06. Yerûšelem – “Babel” (from “The Sublime”, 2019)

07. Rammstein – “Du riechst so gut” (from “Herzeleid”, 1995)

08. Kill The Thrill – “Breath” (from “203 Barriers”, 2001)

09. Eisbrecher – “This Is Deutsch” (from “Sünde”, 2008)

10. 1000 Homo DJs – “Better Ways” (from “Supernaut” E.P., 1990) [Submitted by Chris Van Etten]

11. Author & Punisher – “Disparate” (from “Melk en Honing”, 2015)

12. Oomph! – “Tausend Mann und ein Befehl” (from “Ritual”, 2019)

13. Ministry – “Filth Pig” (from “Filth Pig”, 1996)

14. Uniform – “The Walk” (from “The Long Walk”, 2018)

15. Rob Zombie – “Dragula” (from “Hellbilly Deluxe”, 1998)

16. Circle Of Dust – “Deviate” (from “Brainchild”, 1994)

17. Flesh Field – “Voice Of Dissent” (from “Strain”, 2004)

18. Turmion Kätilöt – “Suolainen kapteeni” (from “Perstechnique”, 2011)

19. Master Boot Record – “FTP” (from “Internet Protocol”, 2019)

20. Lard – “I Wanna Be A Drug-Sniffing Dog” (from “Pure Chewing Satisfaction”, 1997)

21. Dødheimsgard – “The Snuff Dreams Are Made of” (from “Supervillian Outcast”, 2007)

22. Neurotech – “Fear The Fear” (from “Stigma”, 2015)

23. Red Harvest – “Last Call” (from “Cold Dark Matter”, 2000)

24. Sybreed – “A.E.O.N.” (from “The Pulse Of Awakening”, 2009)

25. Havoc Unit – “Klan Korps [Volkssturm & Erregung]” (from “h.IV+”, 2008) [Submitted by Chris Van Etten]

0
Daniel

So...I do not listen to very much industrial metal. Much of my brief dabbling's in the genre have been met with a resounding "meh". I don't think any of it is inherently bad, but there are so many acts just refusing to push boundaries. When you hear one industrial album, you've heard them all I guess.

However, when I saw Nine Inch Nails' Broken EP featured, I had to talk about it because Nine Inch Nails is one of my most important artists of all time. As a alternative rock group, they were one of a kind incorporating electronic percussion and manipulating other parts. As an electronic act, they have been constantly evolving their sound and style into something that is polished and clean.

Broken is certainly not polished and clean. The heavier guitars and Trent Reznor's howls are matched wonderfully with the abrasive percussion and thumping bass. I really enjoyed how this EP uses both live and electronic percussion together, giving it at least somewhat of a sense that it is really there. I can't say the same about the changing timbre of the guitars though.

I will be unapologetic when I say that Nine Inch Nails are a much better electronic band than as an industrial rock one, to the contrary of many music critics. But Reznor created a truly special industrial rock/metal side venture with Broken. While the band did experiment further with this sound on The Downward Spiral, it was inevitable that it would not last. But we can all still enjoy this fractured trip.

8/10

3
Daniel

I shit you not, this is the best Metal Academy playlist to date. I'm not actually part of The Sphere, but this playlist makes me wish I as. It has a slightly rocky start for me, but once I reached Rammstein at track 6, the remaining hour and a half were consistently excellent.

So many classics that I already know and love (Samael, Ministry, Fear Factory, Strapping Young Lad, Godflesh, Red Harvest) while also introducing me to heaps of great new tracks I've never heard before (Killing Joke, JK Flesh, Neurotech, Corrections House, Napalm Death).

Excellent work Daniel!

1
Daniel

This is an interesting one because I don't really think that this OST is a very good standalone product outside of the game. They definitely chose vocalists to appeal to the modern Alt-Metal crowd which doesn't exactly go along with the rest of the cyber/industrial stuff, but it's not that terrible in the end. If this released as a normal album I'd have to say it's pretty weak even though it has a lot of energy. Like Daniel said the guitars are pushed behind the drums and synth so much that it takes some careful listening to glean anything out of this except the front and center drum beat. There's some great moments here and there, like the strings in "Collective Conciousness" and the guitar solos in "The Stains Of Time", but it all comes and goes so fast that I almost wish that some of these tracks were 4 or so minutes instead of 2 and a half. I think this still does a great job of being an energetic and futuristic inspired take on a game OST and I can definitely see the appeal, but it's pretty surface level all things considered. 

I did a pretty in-depth review of the DOOM 2016 OST (shamless plug to RYM if you're interested) so I've gone down this Industrial Metal inspired video game OST road before, and let me tell you, DOOM definitely spoils you when it comes to stuff like this. DOOM's soundtrack is made to rise and fall with what's happening in the game, so you'd think that it wouldn't make a great standalone OST, but that isn't the case. It's just so hefty, so layered, and has more to it than something like this even though it's almost purely instrumental. That being said, I think this OST is the perfect example of something working within the game and not necessarily outside of it. All of these vocal remixes sound pretty hammed up at times to go alongside pretty generic cyber-industrial ideas, but when you're in the game zipping around destroying robots and "RULES OF NATURE" screams out from behind the rest of the game's sound effects, it hits a bit different. I haven't played Revengeance but I've seen gameplay and this soundtrack absolutely fits perfectly, which is probably why it's so highly regarded since people normally rate OST's in respect to them being in the game rather than standalone products. I don't necessarily agree with that idea, which is why I gave the DOOM 2016 OST a 4/5 instead of the 5/5 it probably deserved since "Rip and Tear" blasting into your ears as you're removing a demon's jaw from its face gives the music just a bit more punch.

2.5/5

3
Daniel

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/4D0ZjunRBwUv3ZmeGo8hm0?si=5_-DURfyRgKrQA9AQ0kw8A


01. Godflesh – “Merciless” (from “Merciless” E.P., 1994)

02. Kill The Thrill – “A Little Salt For A Better Feeling” (from “Tellurique”, 2005)

03. ASP – “Ich Will Brennen” (from “Weltunter”, 2003)

04. Eisbrecher – “Eiszeit” (from “Eiszeit”, 2010)

05. Oomph! – “Gekreuzigt” (from “Unrein”, 1998)

06. Rammstein – “Du Hast” (from “Sehnsucht”, 1997)

07. The Kovenant – “Mirror's Paradise” (from “Animatronic”, 1999)

08. Ministry – “Thieves” (from “The Mind Is A Terrible Thing To Taste”, 1989)

09. Nine Inch Nails – “Wish” (from “Broken” E.P., 1992)

10. Lard – “Forkboy” (from “The Last Temptation Of Reid”, 1990)

11. Old – “Two Of Me (Parts One & Two)” (from “The Musical Dimensions Of Sleastak”, 1993)

12. Fear Factory – “Final Exit” (from “Mechanize”, 2010)

13. Strapping Young Lad – “Far Beyond Metal” (from “The New Black”, 2006)

14. Sybreed – “Bioactive” (from “Slave Design”, 2004)

15. Uniform & The Body – “Vacancy” (from “Everything That Dies Someday Comes Back”, 2019)

16. Author & Punisher – “Terrorbird” (from “Ursus Americanus”, 2012)

17. Corrections House – “Serve Or Survive” (from “Last City Zero”, 2013)

18. Master Boot Record – “Skynet” (from “Virus.DOS”, 2018)

19. Samael – “Rain” (from “Passage”, 1996)

20. Scarve – “Mirthless Perspectives” (from “Irradiant”, 2004)

21. Dodheimsgard – “Sonar Bliss” (from “666 International”, 1999)

22. Red Harvest – “Anatomy Of The Unknown” (from “Internal Punishment Programs”, 2004)

23. Mick Gordon “BFG Division” (from “Doom (Original Game Soundtrack)”, 2016)

0
Daniel

So we're going to be testing the waters with another new offering this week which is one that I'll be looking for your feedback on. The idea is to release regular two hour Spotify playlists for each clan with the tracklistings taking the listener through the full gamut of sounds each clan encompasses, both old & new, classic & underground. In putting together the initial lists I've attempted to push my personal tastes to one side by including something for everyone with all eras & subgenres receiving representation. I certainly haven't gone with your more obvious releases all the time & you will find the odd novelty track included just for a bit of fun. These will certainly give people that are finding it hard to choose their clans a good point of reference to see if a particular clan is for them too. Check 'em out & tell us what you think. If everyone enjoys these then we may look to make them a more permanent part of the site.

https://open.spotify.com/playlist/1KTkejlZP9J6PRZwO1Fx0Y?si=jywoPmKQTuanrhpqG1AVLw


Tracklisting:


01. Turmion Katilot – “Pirun nyrkki” (from “Pirun nyrkki”, 2006)

02. Oomph! – “Willst Du Hoffnung?” (from “Defekt”, 1995)

03. Master Boot Record – “Edit.com” (from “Floppy Disk Overdrive”, 2020)

04. Unheilig – “Grosse Freiheit” (from “Grosse Freiheit”, 2010) 

05. Deathstars – “Death Dies Hard” (from “Night Electric Night”, 2009)

06. Farmer Boys – “Stay Like This Forever” (from “The Other Side”, 2004)

07. ASP – “Ich bin ein wahrer Satan” (from “Requiembryo”, 2007)

08. Pain – “Same Old Song” (from “Dancing With The Dead”, 2005)

09. Lindemann – “Steh auf” (from “F & M”, 2019)

10. Emigrate – “Rainbow” (from “Silent So Long”, 2014)

11. The Kovenant – “Hollow Earth” (from “S.E.T.I.”, 2003)

12. Megaherz – “Herzblut” (from “Herzwerk II”, 2002)

13. Eisbrecher – “Leider” (from “Antikorper”, 2006)

14. …And Oceans – “Tears Have No Name” (from “A.M. G.O.D.”, 2001)

15. Godflesh – “Jesu” (from “Hymns”, 2001)

16. Sybreed – “Emma-0” (from “Antares”, 2007)

17. Static-X – “Hollow (Project Regeneration)” (from “Project Regeneration, Vol. 1, 2020)

18. Rammstein – “Mein Teil” (from “Reise, Reise”, 2004)

19. Meathook Seed – “Famine Sector” (from “Embedded”, 1993)

20. Author & Punisher – “Skies O’er” (from “Drone Machines”, 2010)

21. Neurotech – “Antagonist” (from “Antagonist”, 2011)

22. Aborym – “Dirty” (from “Dirty”, 2013)

23. Mechina – “Progenitor” (from “Progenitor”, 2016)

24. Iperyt – “Antihuman Hate Generator” (from “No State Of Grace”, 2011)

0
Daniel

I don’t know much about the Neue Duetsche Harte subgenre, so I don’t have anything to say about how this record relates to that, but “Reise, Reise” is my favorite of the first four Rammstein albums. I honestly don’t like “Herzeleid“ very much, “Sehnsucht” is good but I wish it was heavier, and “Mutter” has some great moments but some cringe points as well. “Reise, Reise” is much more consistent and heavier than any of those. I can see how some might consider this record kind of monotonous, but I feel like they simply got their sound down and locked with it. I also like the keyboard sounds on this one across the board, whereas the wrong sound can kill an otherwise good song (and this definitely happens on their previous records). I pretty much get everything I want out of Rammstein here. I even like the acoustic guitars on “Los” and “Ohne Dich.” “Mein Teil” is the best though, that song is pure fucking POWER. I also really dig the female vox on “Moskau.” I don’t think I’ve seen anyone mention “Amerika” yet, which I guess is conceptually kind of cheesy but is undeniably catchy. On first listen I was leaning on giving this a 3/5 (good but not exceptional) but the more I listen to it, the more I like it so I think it deserves at least a 4/5 . 

5
Daniel

City is Devin Townsend at his most unhinged, and its so absurdly aggressive and heavy that it's hard not to like at least some parts of this album. The strange but somehow endearing lyrics on "AAA", the pure insanity of "Oh My Fucking God", and the distortion drenched "Spirituality" all come together in this strange package that somehow works out in the end. I feel like on paper this album has no chance of working, with its flurry of random chug riffs alongside Devin's unsystematic vocals and corny sound effects, but it creates such a unique package that shows that extreme metal can take on many different forms, even if that different form is a strangely sung ballad-type thing with piano and pounding industrial drums on "Room 429". Devin's eccentricity is one of this things that always draws me back to him, and while I agree with Daniel and Chris in that I'm unsure about the "classic" status of this album, it certainly represents something sincerely different and something that only Devin could feasibly pull off. It certainly has its weak points and has a ton of issues in terms of structure and just overall strangeness, especially when it's trying so hard to be heavy and angry, but I still think that City is a must for Devin Townsend fans and an interesting excursion for anyone looking for something different in their extreme and angry Metal. 

4/5

3

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