| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||||
The Hype Machine follows music blog discussions.
Every day, thousands of people around the world write about music they love — and it all ends up here. Learn more »
| Computers | Cameras | Electronics | Movies | More.. | Merchant Ratings | Your Account | |||||
|
|
|
Concrete (CD - 2002)( UPC: 00016861843922)
As low as $17.24 from CD Universe Artist: Fear Factory Label: Roadrunner Records (USA) Genre: Heavy Metal - Death Metal Album Description: Fear Factory: Burton C. Bell (vocals); Dino Cazares (guitar, bass); Andy Romero (bass); Raymond Herrera (drums).Additional personnel: Dave "Hateface" Gibney (spoken vocals). Recorded at... Read More |
User Reviews Not RatedWrite a Review |
| Album Description | |
| Fear Factory: Burton C. Bell (vocals); Dino Cazares (guitar, bass); Andy Romero (bass); Raymond Herrera (drums). Additional personnel: Dave "Hateface" Gibney (spoken vocals). Recorded at Blackie Lawless's Fort Apache Studio, Hollywood, California. Includes liner notes by Dan Kaye. Personnel: Burton C. Bell (vocals); Dino Cazares (guitar); Raymond Herrera (drums). Audio Mixers: Mikey Davis; Ross Robinson. Liner Note Author: Monte Conner. Recording information: Blackie Lawless's Fort Apache Studio, Hollywood, CA (1991). Soul of a New Machine, Fear Factory's first nationally released album, introduced them to the metal world as a brutally heavy death metal act with a few post-hardcore touches. Produced by Colin Richardson (Carcass, Napalm Death), that album was the necessary tool that would set the pace for the remainder of their career. But the first album they ever recorded was actually Concrete, a much different beast than the record that they became known for. Produced by a young Ross Robinson, this is an important record for both artists. In what would be the very first album he ever helmed, Robinson's approach takes some of the sludge out of the mix and brings up the elements that keep it vital and interesting. The discordant guitars, clear vocals, movie samples, and monstrously distorted bass are the primary elements of the disc, taking away Richardson's insistence on chunky guitars and strong percussion. This works in the band's favor much more than against it, although the drums are buried too far into the mix to be appreciated. And singer Burton C. Bell sounds amazing here, jumping from the beautifully mournful moans on "Echoes of Innocence" to a horrifying yelp on "Self Immolation" that doesn't even sound human at times. But this is the better album, coming off like a woefully lost Helmet/Morbid Angel jam session more than a debut album from an unknown L.A. metal band. Why amazing songs like "Echoes of Innocence" and "Dragged Down by the Weight of Existence" were left off the initial release is a mystery. They still sound just as powerful and unique as they did in 1991. And anyone looking for the seeds of the late-'90s rap metal movement need look no further than "Sufferage" to see where Robinson first captured this unique tension three years before he would apply it to Korn. When most bands of this era were still insistent on the traditional death metal sound, Fear Factory proves on this lost gem that they were looking way ahead of the pack. ~ Bradley Torreano Fear Factory were among the pioneers of a metal subgenre that became the blueprint for nu-metal as we know it today, their sound typified by down-tuned, syncopated guitar riffing with vocals switching on a dime between death-metal growling and a clean singing style. As the band closed the book on their 12-year career, a fitting tribute came in the release of CONCRETE. While most fans think of SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE as the band's first release, CONCRETE is the lost album that was meant to be Fear Factory's debut. Recorded in 1991, the sessions (under the direction of producer Ross Robinson) have until now been a buried treasure of sorts, as the product was shelved after completion (due in part to a legal dispute with Robinson). Once signed to Roadrunner, the band re-recorded several songs for SOUL OF A NEW MACHINE (including "Big God/Raped Souls," "Self Immolation," "Crisis," "Desecrate," and "Escape Confusion"). What CONCRETE lacks in production values, it more than makes up for in the sheer ferocity of the performances. Here was a band searching for it's own musical voice, reaching beyond their death-metal and industrial-influenced roots. |
|
| Track Listing | |
| 1. | Big God/Raped Souls |
| 2. | Arise Above Oppression |
| 3. | Concrete |
| 4. | Crisis |
| 5. | Escape Confusion |
| 6. | Sangre de NiƱos |
| 7. | Soulwomb |
| 8. | Echoes of Innocence |
| 9. | Dragged Down by the Weight of Existence |
| 10. | Deception |
| 11. | Desecrate |
| 12. | Suffer Age |
| 13. | Anxiety |
| 14. | Self Immolation |
| 15. | Piss Christ |
| 16. | Ulceration |
| Album Information | |
UPC: |
00016861843922 |
| Release Date: | Jul 30, 2002 |
| Type: | Performer |
| Genre: | Heavy Metal - Death Metal |
| Label: | Roadrunner Records (USA) |
| Distributor: | Universal Di |
| Producer: | Ross Robinson |
| Engineer: | Mikey Davis; Ross Robinson |
| Country of Origin: | USA |
| Original Release Year: | 2002 |
| # of Discs: | 1 |
| Studio / Live: | Studio |
| Mono / Stereo: | Stereo |
| Read the PriceGrabber.com Disclaimer and Privacy Policy Contact PriceGrabber at PriceGrabber Support |
||
| Certain supplemental information provided by |
| © 1981-2009 Muze, Inc. All rights reserved. For personal use only. |