| | Napalm Death Enemy Of The Music Business CD Napalm Death Discography of CDs
(3 Customer Reviews)
While no one should ever accuse Napalm Death of being complacent, there's nothing like record label troubles to force a band to pool its collective energy and refocus its intent. Napalm's previous two records, Inside the Torn Apart and Words From the Exit Wound, were every bit the grind metal excursions fans expected them to be, although they seemed a bit uninspired in comparison to the band's benchmark releases Scum, Harmony Corruption, and Fear Emptiness Despair. When the group's longtime relationship with Earache Records hit the skids, the subsequent bitterness from both parties gave Napalm Death the fuel to regroup, reorganize, and reemerge as the unwieldy, venom-spewing grind python that longtime followers craved. The result? The none-too-subtle Enemy of the Music Business, which kicks off with "Take the Poison," one minute and 49 seconds of abject, heart-bursting terror, guitarists Jesse Pintado and Mitch Harris peeling off flesh-filleting riffs with deadly accuracy as lead throat Barney Greenway shrieks like a speared baboon. In fact, the first seven cuts on Enemy just don't let up, no riff, growl, or certifiably insane drum fill wasted, all muscle and no fat, slabs of meat meant to be consumed by only the strongest of stomachs, 20 suffocating minutes of limb-flailing, venomous, full-tilt Armageddon punctuated by lung-busters "Thanks for Nothing" and "Can't Play, Won't Pay." Of course, the album's second half resumes the destruction, although relatively pacing itself by tossing wrecking balls at personal and political injustices in the form of "Necessary Evil" and "C.S. (Conservative Shithead), Pt. 2," a throwback to the band's Scum days. Although casual listening will cause the album to occasionally veer into wall-of-white-noise monotony -- something Napalm Death, even in its brilliance, has always contended with -- it never strays from the band's above-average to excellent song construction; in fact, closer examination and repeat spins will reveal ugly little bile-splattered nooks and crannies in the arrangements, as well as consistently thought-provoking lyrics. Whether you side with Greenway's generally socialist views is irrelevant (it's impossible to understand him through his guttural, lungs-of-hell delivery without close examination of the lyric book, anyway); it's the band's wall-to-wall rage that the punters will connect with -- something that Napalm Death hadn't really done since the early to mid-'90s. Calling Enemy of the Music Business a return to form is an appalling understatement. ~ John Serba
Recorded at Parkgate Studios, England between May 26 and June 8, 2000.
Personnel: Mark Greenway (vocals); Jesse Pintado, Mitch Harris (guitar); Danny Herrera (drums).
Recording information: Parkgate Studios, England (05/26/2000-06/08/2000).
Napalm Death includes: Mark " Barney" Greenway (vocals); Jesse Pintado, Mitch Harris (guitar); Shane Embury (bass); Danny Herrea (drums).
CMJ (3/5/01, p.20) - "...[They] haev been making mincemeat out of death metal/grindcore fans' ears for years, and ENEMY finds them refusing to soften their approach one iota..." Enemy Of The Music Business Music Enemy Of The Music Business Music Enemy Of The Music Business Music Review Purchase Enemy Of The Music Business CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Dimmu Borgir Puritanical Euphoric Misanthropy CD (2001)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$13.35 In spite of straying so far from its black metal roots as to almost seem a completely different band at times, Dimmu Borgir still packs a powerful punch on Puritanical Euphoric Misanthropia. New guitarist Galder (formerly of Old Man's Child) nicely infuses more traditional metallic mannerisms, but the addition of drummer Nicholas Barker (Cradle of Filth and Lock Up) is critical. His always-punishing percussive prowess allows the seamless melding of speedy black metal with considerably more orchestration, this time around provided by the ...
| | Arch Enemy Wages Of Sin CDs (2001)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$13.45 This an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files.
Sounding like a particularly rotten day during the apocalypse, Arch Enemy is a ferocious gang of Swedish death metalers bent on throttling their listeners, and they succeed most magnificently on Wages of Sin. The Scandinavians in general are known most for their allegiance to black metal: atmospheric, epic-sounding, satanic-leaning stuff which they invented. But Arch Enemy, who includes members and former members of Carcass, Armageddon, and Mercyful Fate, is more death than black, but there's a little bit of everything in their mix of Sepultura-like riffage; mid-'80s classic, over-the-top metal solos; meat-cleaver-style hooks; and dirty Florida swamp-style death metal. Of course, death metal can easily become monotonous, but this is not at all the case with Arch Enemy, whose songwriting is way above par. Wages ...
| | Kreator Pleasure To Kill CD (1986) Remastered
Enemy Of The Music Business
$10.39 Metal band Kreator had been around for awhile before they released Pleasure to Kill in 1986. Many in the ...
| | Kreator Extreme Aggression CD (1989)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$10.45 On Extreme Aggression, a successful Kreator closes the '80s by delivering their final thrash triumph. With the most hallowed Kreator lineup ( Mille Petrozza on vocals and guitar, Jorg ...
| | Kreator Terrible Certainty CD (1988) Remastered
Enemy Of The Music Business
$10.45 Principally recorded at Horus Studios, Hanover, Germany and Musiclab Studios, Berlin, Germany in 1988. Includes liner notes by Mille Petrozza.
Kreator dialed in their modern thrash on Terrible Certainty, the group's third full-length offering. One of the most highly anticipated European metal records of the decade, this 1987 release proves that the previous year's hit, Pleasure to Kill, wasn't a fluke, and that Kreator was capable of delivering under pressure. ...
| | Napalm Death Order Of The Leech CD (2002)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$11.65 The old dog might not have learned any new tricks, but that doesn't mean that it can't improve on what it already figured out. When Napalm Death started, ...
| | Scorpions Fly To The Rainbow CD (1974) (Import) Germany
Enemy Of The Music Business
$9.89 This is the Germany ...
| | Carnivore Retaliation CD (1987)
Enemy Of The Music Business
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| | Mystro Clark Sexy, Funny, Bastard! CD (2003)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$9.15
| | Evildoer Terror Audio CD (2005)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$11.05
| | Cuban Rhythm CD (1999) (Import) Netherlands
Enemy Of The Music Business
$9.19
| | Chico Buarque: Carioca DVD (2006) +DVD; NTSC / RC-0
Enemy Of The Music Business
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| | Helloween Keeper Of Seven Keys Part II CD (1988) Bonus Tracks
Enemy Of The Music Business
$15.99 Released in 1988, Helloween's third full-length studio album firmly established the band as a force on the international scene. KEEPER OF THE SEVEN KEYS PART II expanded beyond their neo-progressive and Iron Maiden influences, and allowed Helloween to lay the blueprint for the entire power metal movement. Rich with equal amounts of emotive drama, theatrical pomp, and musical humor, KEEPERS invokes the triumphs of the human spirit through grandiose songwriting and Michael Kiske's anthemic vocal style. The album also features perennial favorites "Dr. Stein" and "I Want Out", which are spotlighted in Helloween's live performances to this day.
Having established an immensely influential blueprint with Keeper of the Seven Keys, Pt. 1, Helloween released the obviously titled follow-up, Keeper of the Seven Keys, Pt. 2, a year later. But it seemed that Helloween's heretofore leader, guitarist Kai Hansen, had lost interest in his own band, and the result was a terribly inconsistent album. Except for the excellent "I Want Out," his few song contributions reek of indifference, leaving vocalist Michael Kiske and second guitarist Michael Weikath to try and pick up the slack -- with mixed results. Weikath gets it right on the catchy and humorous "Dr. Stein," but his attempt to replicate Hansen's epic songwriting on the 13-plus-minute title track collapses from early promise into a complete mess of embarrassing proportions. Still, the album sold well, delaying the problems looming on the horizon. Hansen would confirm his apathy by quitting soon after to form Gamma Ray, and ...
| | Gathering How To Measure A Planet CD (2006) (Import)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$19.69
| | Abby Mott Hearts A Flutter CD (2007)
Enemy Of The Music Business
$16.45
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