Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Sonic Violence - Transfixion (1992)
Sonic Violence made a near-perfect industrial metal classic in their 1990 album Jagd. Then their second, and so far final, album Transfixion, released two years later, was a drop to electro-industrial. I'm sure many industrial metal fans were thinking, "What the f***ing h*ll just happened!?"
There are still a few good points to note about Transfixion. While there isn't any metal or guitars, they can maintain the heavy bleakness of Jagd with their other instruments. Here we have more of the monolithic drumming, massive bass, melodic synths, and mechanical vocals. Of all these, I think I like the vocals the most, as well as some of the lyrics. They sound simple yet professionally written...
We start off with the mesmerizing "Asphyxia", which starts off strong at first, but as those 10 minutes go by, it gradually becomes weak and monotonous. The samples and synths are just too off-putting. Attempts at experimentation like some brief trumpet to start "Mind Field" end up killing the momentum. One track I really like is "Factory" with some of the best lyrics, "On your knees, you must pray, confess your sins, confess your lies". Those robotic vocals appear after the intro filled with windy synths, bass riffing, and a background movie sample. The sludgy crushing groove I can tolerate. This goes on before ending with different synths and samples.
I can't stand the sample that kicks off "Torment", though the punky riffing it leads to is d*mn fascinating. I also don't get why the robotic vocals had to sound so goofy. See, this is one of those tracks that's half-enjoyable half-atrocious. And while the synths still don't sound appealing, at least we still have the mechanical beats. A more confusing track is "J.F.R.O.", this one having a cool beat yet instead of metal guitars that would make this sound like Godflesh, more of those f***ing techno synths ruin it all. One track that works well is "Drill" with synths and choirs flowing well in synergy. The synths may get repetitive towards the end, but the rest is as good as it gets. "Malice" is just hard to take seriously, right from the intro. "Catalepsy (remix)" has some industrial experimentation not too far off from Voivod's Phobos, but it's not that great either.
I don't know how to sum up Transfixion further. This blend of mechanical bass and unwanted synths only has some strength in a couple tracks. I would love this more if there were actual metal guitars throughout, less emphasis on synths, and none of those sh*tty samples. I would recommend this to electro-industrial fans and no one else.....
Favorites (only two songs I like): "Factory", "Drill"