Soul/Club/Rap
CDアルバム
Various Artists

Erotic Terrorism

0.0

販売価格

¥
2,409
税込
還元ポイント

廃盤

在庫状況 について

フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 1998年02月23日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルMantra
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 NATCD1080
SKU 5018560008027

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 01:03:03
By the time Fun-Da-Mental reappeared with a second album proper, things were surprisingly different for Nawaz and company. Instead of Public Enemy, the touchstones were the Chemical Brothers and the Prodigy, aiming for a largely instrumental industrial/metal/hip-hop/techno sound that's not always as distinct or unique as the Seize the Time melange. Perhaps the goal was to aim at a different audience, but it's not quite the result perhaps was intended. That said, everyone's still righteously pissed off, though music rather than the often-distorted vocals really is Erotic Terrorism's focus, and when the beats get really frenetic or creative, as on the blunt charge of "Demonised Soul" or the echoed rage and rave of "Furious," it's a treat. Nawaz seems to be a one-man band throughout, with only a bassist and banjo player otherwise credited, though he again works with Graeme Pickering as engineer. Various samples of Indian music again appear with regularity throughout Erotic Terrorism, but equally prominent are huge slabs of feedback and massive drumming and percussion loops. Where chanting and tablas have more of the focus, as on the soaring, inspirational stomp of "Ja Sha Taan," there's still a rough, low electronic undercurrent. Given Nawaz's own rock drumming background via groups like the Southern Death Cult, it's not too surprising to hear in context, just a bit of a jarring leap. Nawaz and Pickering actually do show a greater sense of drama and dynamics than before -- sudden cuts between loud and soft passages create some effective moments throughout, while the grunts and children's cries on "Blood in Transit" are disturbing. Above all else, there's the overriding message of the fight against bigotry and oppression -- as the horribly tasteless and racist old song that's sampled to start things off makes all too clear. ~ Ned Raggett

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Oh Lord! (Devil Would Like a Word)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    2. 2.
      Demonised Soul (My Head Bus on a Hard Surface But I Could Never ...)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    3. 3.
      Godevil (All Tainted by Wickedness)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    4. 4.
      Ja Sha Taan (Joo Ley Lal Mustt Qalander)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    5. 5.
      Blood in Transit (After Dinner Mints)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    6. 6.
      Repent (Not Repented Yet)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    7. 7.
      Deathening Silence (Thru Bloodless Birth My Being a Clone)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    8. 8.
      Furious (Cruatacean of the Sea, Organism of Dust)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    9. 9.
      See I a (Dust on Ants Feet)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    10. 10.
      The Distorted C (All We Want)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    11. 11.
      One Ness (Dhann a Dhann)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    12. 12.
      Sliced Lead (Fill It With Lead)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

    13. 13.
      Tongue Gone Cold (Grown to a Medical Specimen Paranoid Mad ...)

      アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Fun-Da-Mental

商品の紹介

Entertainment Weekly - "...Fun'Da'Mental explode their palette here with screaming metal guitar, monster break beats, rave electronics, Hindi film samples, and new-wave qawwali vocals..." - Rating: A- NME - 7 (out of 10) - "...Fun-Da-Mental have the musical politics to back up...pictures borrowed from Amnesty International. Frantic breakbeats and ethnic exotica are invariably the backdrop, but it's the samples and fierce raps that get...into your skull..."
Rovi

By the time Fun-Da-Mental reappeared with a second album proper, things were surprisingly different for Nawaz and company. Instead of Public Enemy, the touchstones were the Chemical Brothers and the Prodigy, aiming for a largely instrumental industrial/metal/hip-hop/techno sound that's not always as distinct or unique as the Seize the Time melange. Perhaps the goal was to aim at a different audience, but it's not quite the result perhaps was intended. That said, everyone's still righteously pissed off, though music rather than the often-distorted vocals really is Erotic Terrorism's focus, and when the beats get really frenetic or creative, as on the blunt charge of "Demonised Soul" or the echoed rage and rave of "Furious," it's a treat. Nawaz seems to be a one-man band throughout, with only a bassist and banjo player otherwise credited, though he again works with Graeme Pickering as engineer. Various samples of Indian music again appear with regularity throughout Erotic Terrorism, but equally prominent are huge slabs of feedback and massive drumming and percussion loops. Where chanting and tablas have more of the focus, as on the soaring, inspirational stomp of "Ja Sha Taan," there's still a rough, low electronic undercurrent. Given Nawaz's own rock drumming background via groups like the Southern Death Cult, it's not too surprising to hear in context, just a bit of a jarring leap. Nawaz and Pickering actually do show a greater sense of drama and dynamics than before -- sudden cuts between loud and soft passages create some effective moments throughout, while the grunts and children's cries on "Blood in Transit" are disturbing. Above all else, there's the overriding message of the fight against bigotry and oppression -- as the horribly tasteless and racist old song that's sampled to start things off makes all too clear. ~ Ned Raggett|
Rovi

メンバーズレビュー

レビューを書いてみませんか?

読み込み中にエラーが発生しました。

画面をリロードして、再読み込みしてください。