Reviews list for Fear Factory - Demanufacture (1995)
If you're at industrial bands with big names, Fear Factory is one of the first to be mentioned in many conversations. They're a group that if you look at their discography really has a solid sense of what they are about and have followed that path. With the industrial sound really kind of brushing at the heels of pop culture at the time, Zero Signal getting to appear in the Mortal Kombat movie back then in the 90's was really an excellent oppurtunity for Fear Factory and honestly whats more fun than throwing on album like this an then crushing some noobs to a few rounds of MK? but I digress. The concept of this album, fighting back against the oppressive machines in control, really coming through with Herrara's POUNDING drums. The speed and precision of his beats absolutely annihilate you as the listener. The band was in fact accused of using a drum machine becuase of Herrara's precision, which is a back handed compliment if I ever heard one. The guitar is fine but honestly is second fiddle to the rhythm section ( which is fine by me, its what I want in industial music, excellent rhythm and drumming). The Synth on this album adds to the athmosphere instead of becoming the centerpiece, or detracting from the brutality which is appreciated as a fan of heavy music. The vocals of Burton Bell are raw emotion fueled to drive thier message home, and the effects they have in the background only add the ambience. While I personally don't think this is their #1 album if I was ranking them( their follow up album Obselete is probably the favorite here) , its definately up there and worth the praise. Without the sucess of this album there would not be an Obselete, so there is that as well. If you don't have time for a full album listen to the tracks H-K (Hunter Killer), Body Hammer, and Pisschrist those I think were my top 3.
It takes some real determination to make an essential album that would revolutionize metal history. Setting aside the downfall of the more classic heavy metal genres like thrash, the 90s has made some astonishing masterpieces in other subgenres, a small few of which can be considered fantastic groundbreaking sh*t. An album that stunned the world is Fear Factory's second album Demanufacture! This is from a time when metal was expanding into a different variety of styles, and Fear Factory is one band that perfectly contributed to this diverse growth. Their debut album Soul of a New Machine displayed a never-before-heard mix of death growls and clean vocals, and extreme metal with electro-industrial. Those vocals, guitars, bass, drums, and electronics all create a newfound atmosphere to shock listeners worldwide!
Demanufacture shows the band evolving from their initial style with a perfect blend of their earlier brutality with a more melodic sound and futuristic keyboards. They often base their sound on their lyrical themes, in which humanity is being lost to technology. If Earth Crisis' debut from that year is about destroying machines, Demanufacture warns you about the dangers of destructive machinery. This legendary concept and sound covers the entire album throughout, and if mixing extreme, industrial, and melodic isn't considered revolutionary, I wouldn't know what is.
Already proving the album to be a classic, the title opener starts with synth atmosphere before a killer riff joins in, followed by bass and drums, all proving the band to be industrial metal legends! The crushing riffs and thundering drums perfectly stand alongside the amazing vocal charisma in the growls and cleans. Already showing how unbreakable the band is, "Self Bias Resistor" rises in heaviness, leading up to a killer ending for the track. "Zero Signal" is amazing with futuristic atmosphere before ending peacefully with a piano outro. Perhaps the most famous song by the band is "Replica". It's not my ultimate favorite song from the band, but its straight pace and killer chorus make that single a perfect one. It was later covered by symphonic metal band Epica. If you're not sure about that cover, don't be an Epica "Replica" replica skeptica! lol
There's a little more of the electro-industrial effects in "New Breed", while the mechanical heavy intensity reigns throughout. "Dog Day Sunrise" is an OK song, covering a track by one of Godflesh founder Justin Broadrick's former bands Head of David. The percussion is pretty easy to headbang to. Then "Body Hammer" is one of the more average tracks here, but it doesn't reduce the album's perfection at all. I can almost say the same thing about "Flashpoint". However, that's not to say any of the more average songs are bad. They're still great and make the album keep its 5-star rating. Though the percentage rating would probably be slightly over 95%.
The more furious "H-K (Hunter-Killer)" has fast adrenaline. Despite the name, "P*sschrist" is a total industrial mind-smasher. It starts dark and heavy before rising into epic drama. Alongside industrial samples and drumming, it then leads to more of the furious growls and apocalyptic cleans by Burton C. Bell, the latter especially the ending of atmospheric majesty. "Where is your savior now?" Finally, "A Therapy for Pain" is a dark nearly 10-minute epic showing how influential Fear Factory can be.
All in all, Demanufacture is a quite a masterpiece landmark in all of industrial metal. Not only has it pleased the 90s generation of metal, it can sure bring headbanging joy to future generations to come. For the modern metalheads out there, this is a must!
Favorites: "Demanufacture", "Replica", "New Breed", "H-K (Hunter-Killer)", "P*sschrist", "A Therapy for Pain"
Rhythmically, very energetic and engaging. The album culminates extreme metal drumming and frequent double bass with almost danceable rhythms in between. The patterns are djent style focusing on polyrhythmic patterns and pure aggression. Almost every song has a clean-sung chorus that gives it some identity beyond the constant pummeling. The choruses aren’t catchy, but more atmospheric, using the clean vocals as a sustained melody rather than a hook.
Worst part of this album is the monotonous guitar. Again, very djent in nature, hitting a lot of rhythmic 0’s and featuring no memorable riffs. However, the energy and fantastic drumming help to cover this weakness.
The album is dark and mechanic, but in a fun way, and is quite consistent all the way through, unfortunately ending on the most boring track; the near 10 minute “A Therapy for Pain.”
In terms of industrial metal there’s probably only Ministry and Fear Factory that I have any level of familiarity with albeit a very limited scope of ambition to explore the genre that much as a whole regardless. For the record I love most of what Dino does with his riffs being the very embodiment of metal I usually find but by contrast I don’t have a lot of time for Burton’s vocals and this imbalance tends to undo much of the enjoyment I do manage to glean from Fear Factory releases.
The fact is that Demanufacture is a tale of two halves (not equal, neat halves either). For most of the record there’s banging industrial tunes full of powerful and gritty riffs and when he’s not trying to rap his way through his lyric sheet, Burton is more than manageable. Conversely though there is a lot of filler on this record. There’s two short tracks that literally sound like demo recordings given a coat of glitter on the mixing desk that still can’t make the turds beneath as glamorous as they try to make them. Then we have Burton shouting his lyrics, exposing the lack of power in his voice, therefore trying to sound edgy comes off as being meek and ineffective in the end.
Crazy though it may sound for a review of an industrial metal album I just can’t cope with the start-stop rhythm of tracks that kill any sense of flow. Yes, I get that is sort of the point but still some flow is permissible guys. I just get the sense that without Dixon’s riffs to elevate the tracks there’s not a lot of anything else to hold my interest here, hence we have a short and rather grumpy review.
I first encountered popular Los Angeles-based industrial metal outfit Fear Factory in late 1992 following the release of their debut studio album “Soul Of A New Machine” which was gaining high rotation on my local underground metal radio programs at the time. The band’s sound wasn’t exactly my usual cup of tea as I was firmly entrenched in the more brutal end of the extreme metal scale by that stage however I hadn’t heard anything quite like Fear Factory before with their foundations seemingly sitting somewhere between the death metal I was so enamoured with & a futuristic industrial metal sound so I found myself intrigued. This quickly led to me handing over my hard-earned cash at the local record store & “Soul Of A New Machine” fast became a staple in the household diet of not only myself but also my younger brother Ben. I was much more wary of 1993’s remix E.P. “Fear Is The Mindkiller” given that electronic music was still universally regarded as a dirty word with metalheads but the idea of a follow-up album was definitely something that tweaked my interest.
Fear Factory’s sophomore album “Demanufacture” would finally see the light of day almost three years after their debut which was a very long time between drinks by the standards of the day. By that stage my tastes had sunken even further into the dark caverns of brutal death metal & blasting black metal so it wouldn’t see me racing to the shops to secure my copy on this occasion. Ben wouldn’t waste too much time in securing a copy though & I’d become exposed to “Demanufacture” on a daily basis from that point on, an exercise that became increasingly enjoyable over the first month or so as the hooks & concepts became more familiar. This certainly wasn’t the same Fear Factory that had made a significant dent on the metal scene a few years earlier. It was a more mature & refined Fear Factory that had cast aside most of its death metal roots & was now pushing a more accessible & melodic yet no less potent approach that would see them breaking down any remaining barriers that might have previously prevented them from becoming a household name in the world of every teenage metalhead. The machine-gun rhythms & precise execution that had made “Soul Of A New Machine” sound so fresh a few years earlier were all still there only this time there was a much stronger focus on song-writing with a combination of clean & more aggressive vocals being employed by front man Burton C. Bell which added an entirely new element to the mix. Bell’s gruntier efforts were a little less deathly than they had been previously but seemed to fit Fear Factory’s sound a little better while the clean chorus hooks gave Fear Factory an all-new accessibility as they maintained & expanded on the edginess that had made the debut so popular without ever losing artistic credibility.
Dino Cazares’ straightforward & predominantly rhythmic approach the writing riffs wasn’t anything new by this stage with the likes of Pantera having already popularized this technique over the previous five or six years & it was all fairly simple when you looked at it closely. However, Dino’s execution & timing was impeccable & this would see him taking some relatively simple riffs that were based on only a few notes & making them into something much more substantial than they would at first appear. A major component in his success in this regard was his incredibly tight relationship with his rhythm section & bassist Christian Olde Wolbers & drummer Raymond Herrera deserve a lot of credit here. All three musicians were focused on a single, incredibly well-defined outcome & we see them throwing their entire focuses into providing the listener with a physical reaction that sees their body tying in with the tight machine-gun rhythms. Herrera deserves some special credit here because this outcome could only be achieved through an exceptionally precise performance behind the kit. In fact, his use of kick drum is just as much as much of a protagonist in these riffs as Dino’s guitars are & this would become even more noticeable in a live environment (as I would find out on the accompanying tour). The intelligent integration of Reynor Diego's synthesizers & samples at key moments is also impressive as it provides additional layers of colour & contrast.
Interestingly, time has seen my affiliation with the album’s more highly celebrated tracks fading a little to the point that these days I actually regard the opening title cut as the weakest inclusion in the tracklisting. It’s a touch more accessible & obvious than the rest of the material with the other major anthem “Replica” sitting in a similar space. I’m not saying these tracks are poor though by any stretch of the imagination though, only that they offer me less appeal than the rest of the album & in truth this is probably more of a compliment for the overall consistency of the tracklisting than anything else. I mean there’s not a dud to found amongst this lot & I actually think the deeper cuts in the back end of the album are its real strength. In fact, these days I’m the most closely tied to the closing two numbers “Pisschrist” & “A Therapy For Pain” & these are the only cuts that I regard as genuine classics, particularly the epic goth rock-inspired final number which sees Fear Factory taking their most melodic leap of faith &, in doing so, achieving a triumphant & quite majestic outcome. Almost all of the other tracks sit at a very high standard however Fear Factory’s style was never closely aligned enough to my own tastes for me to become as excited as some of the fanboys out there. Sometimes this was to do with the clean choruses not quite cutting the mustard after some seriously great introductions & verse sections & when listening to the album with fresh ears I’d have to suggest that Bell’s clean delivery is both the strength & weakness of “Demanufacture” as his contributions at key junctures in each composition would either make or break the song’s chances of hitting the top tier. At other times it was to do with the strong groove metal component which is not really my forte if I’m being truthful. Pantera & Machine Head had clearly made a very strong impact on the band on the evidence of some of the more straightforward riffs on “Demanufacture” & this gave Fear Factory a real crossover opportunity given just how popular those bands were at the time.
At the end of the day though, it’s very hard to be critical of “Demanufacture”. It’s a high quality metal record in every respect & if my tastes were slanted a little more towards the more accessible end of metal then I feel that I’d probably rate it a little higher than I do. There’s very little doubt that it represents the high point of the band’s career & they’d struggle to recreate its incisive vitality & hook-driven memorability for the rest of their days. I’m very glad that I had the opportunity to experience the band while they were still very much in their prime as my subsequent experiences with a live Fear Factory have been generally underwhelming, mostly due to the Bell’s complete loss of any singing ability. “Demanufacture” should be essential listening for all fans of the industrial metal genre.
For fans of Strapping Young Lad, Nailbomb & Ministry.
In my admittedly very limited experience, I find that industrial metal's need to emulate the dehumanising nature of technology often results in quite stilted-sounding music (bands like Static-X for example). It's as if the need to replicate the machine-like rhythms ends up becoming victim to that very dehumanising trait that the music seems to be railing against. For me the success of Demanufacture is that it is still quite an engaging listen, allowing a glimpse of the unquenchable essence of humanity despite the towering banks of computers and machinery threatening to overwhelm it, being led particularly by Burton C. Bell's vocals, the human centre of the album. On the Skynet/Matrix side, Dino Cazares' crisp and hefty guitar riffing is the very epitome of the technological domination of the battle space of each of the album's eleven tracks, the machine-like rhythms seeking to subsume the last core of humanity into the machines' hive mind and the synths just add to the isolation of the atmosphere, like a wind blowing through a landscape of huge automated factories - as far as the eye can see it's all straight lines and right angles with no natural curves or irregularities
So what the fuck am I talking about? Basically there are some killer catchy, almost anthemic, metal tunes on display here - Self Bias Resistor, Dog Day Sunrise and Body Hammer especially come to mind and the final minute and a half of Pisschrist still sets the hairs on the back of my neck on end - "Crown of black thorns, Human skin, ripped and torn, Where is your saviour now?" It has been a very long time since I last played this record, or any even remotely like it I guess, but despite all the water that's passed under that particular bridge, Demanufacture is still a pretty good listen and playing it now it feels a bit like a call from an old friend you've not seen for ages and didn't realise you missed as much as you evidently do.