Review by Shadowdoom9 (Andi) for Killing Joke - Killing Joke (2003)
It has only been during the past couple years when I started hearing of Killing Joke. I'm not too surprised since I've only been into industrial metal for a few years now and only a few of their albums are metal. But once I began my dive into some of their albums, I encountered some songs I wish I wasn't missing out on, and Killing Joke's self-titled 2003 comeback album (their second self-titled album after their 1980 debut) has a lot of them.
You can expect the usual industrial rock/metal action from the lineup of vocalist Jaz Coleman, guitarist Kevin "Geordie" Walker, and bassists Martin "Youth" Glover and Paul Raven (RIP Geordie and Raven). But who's the drummer for this album? Dave Grohl from Nirvana and Foo Fighters! I'm guessing the incident of Nirvana copying the riff from Killing Joke's song "Eighties" for their own "Come as You Are" has gone past both bands. Grohl thunders through with his drumming intensity, enhanced by producer Andy Gill (also RIP). Coleman and Walker have their typical vocal/guitar alternation.
"The Death & Resurrection Show" is the perfect album opener. Coleman encourages you to "put on your masks, and animal skins" before the powerful instrumentation rolls in. I heard this song is featured in the soundtrack for Need For Speed Underground 2. People following this band since their late 70s formation would have their minds blown. Then "Total Invasion" has some more lyrics poured out from the voice of Coleman, alongside Walker's guitar mayhem. This also occurs in the destructive highlight "Asteroid".
"Implant" is where the vocals seem to be more voice-threatening than metalcore screamers, especially with Coleman continues to scream even at times when the music has come to a halt. "Blood on Your Hands" is one of two groovy back-to-back highlights. The next one being "Loose Cannon", sounding both inspired and inspiring.
Up next, "You'll Never Get to Me" tackles different angles in newfound melody. We begin "Seeing Red" with some politically themed lyrics leftover from Democracy, "They're dropping bombs again, and they’re doing it in your name." Then "Dark Forces" has darker symphonics, though everything else sounds a bit forced. The finale "The House That Pain Built" is a cathartic standout within the mid-90s Metallica-like riffing and the chorus, "And when you need catharsis, because that’s how you’re made, you know."
After two pretty good industrial rock/metal albums and a long hiatus, Killing Joke strike back with a slight improvement in their furious self-titled comeback. Maybe one day I can check out their 2006 follow-up Hosannas from the Basements of Hell, but for now, let's savor the beauty and chaos of their return....
Favorites: "The Death & Resurrection Show", "Asteroid", "Blood on Your Hands", "Loose Cannon", "The House That Pain Built"