| | Fear Factory Soul Of A New Machine CD Fear Factory Discography of CDs
(1 Customer Review)
Soul of a New Machine ushered in the '90s alternative metal era, even if few realized it at the time. Fear Factory were quite ahead of their time in 1992, the year Roadrunner Records released Soul, their debut album (though not technically their first, which would be the later-unearthed, Ross Robinson-produced Concrete demo album). The band didn't fit neatly into any of the metal camps of the day: thrash metal (Pantera, Slayer, Sepultura), crossover metal (Metallica, Megadeth, Ozzy), industrial metal (Ministry, Nine Inch Nails, Godflesh), death metal (Morbid Angel, Death, Obituary), grindcore (Napalm Death, Brutal Truth, Lawnmower Deth), and so on. This fact alone made Fear Factory an anomaly among the market-driven metal field of the day. That Roadrunner even gave them a chance regardless goes to show how much promise Fear Factory exhibited at the time -- market or no market, Roadrunner sensed there was something special about this band and decided to take a chance. And indeed there was something special about Fear Factory, as Soul of a New Machine went on to demonstrate. One of the top two death metal producers of the day, Colin Richardson, flew from England into Los Angeles (only days after the 1992 riots had ravaged the city), and for the next four weeks, he produced what would become a downright groundbreaking metal album.
Soul of a New Machine was so groundbreaking because it fuses together some of the best aspects of numerous metal subgenres: the rhythmic crunch of thrash, the melodies of crossover metal, the syncopated man-machine lock-step of industrial, the growling low end of death metal, and the blitzkrieg impact of grindcore. Just as importantly, it did away with the generic aspects of each subgenre, resulting in a unique sound that was in no way whatsoever clichéd (though it would later become a cliché itself years later). Granted, Soul of a New Machine isn't Fear Factory's best album, not even by a stretch, and it didn't shake up the metal world at the time of its release. However, a few years later, once the band broke through with Demanufacture (1995), there were myriad bands mixing and matching different metal equations, thus bringing about the "alternative metal" descriptor. So if you're curious about where it all began, Soul of a New Machine is arguably ground zero. If you're simply looking for some kick-ass metal, though, there's plenty of that here too, especially the first half of the album, with "Martyr," "Scapegoat," and "Scumgrief" standing out as particular highlights. And if you like what you hear here, you'll also want to pick up the Fear Is the Mindkiller remix EP that followed a year later. It takes the music a logical step further, to amazing results (courtesy of Bill Leeb and Rhys Fulber of Front Line Assembly). Roadrunner thankfully remastered and reissued both in 2004 as a single deluxe package. ~ Jason Birchmeier
Remastered repressing with a bonus CD including 6 rare remixes.
Includes a bonus disc.
Fear Factory: Burton C. Bell (vocals); Dino Cazares (guitar, bass guitar); Raymond Herrera (drums).
Additional personnel: Colin Richardson, Lora Porter, Robert Fayer.Kerrang (Magazine) (p.61) - "[The album] contains all the unrefined qualities that would soon make Fear Factory legendary..." Soul Of A New Machine Music Fear Factory Soul Of A New Machine Songs Soul Of A New Machine Music Soul Of A New Machine Music Review Purchase Soul Of A New Machine CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Deicide Insineratehymn CD (2000)
Soul Of A New Machine album
$15.05 Deicide Glen Benton (vocals, bass); Eric Hoffman, Brian Hoffman (guitar); Steve Asheim (drums).
Not that Deicide care, but Insineratehymm ...
| | Deicide CD (1990) Remastered
Soul Of A New Machine CD music
$14.45 Digitally remastered by George Marino at Sterling Sound, New York, New York.
With a shockingly tight performance and a handful of evil anthems, Glen Benton and company managed to craft a death metal classic with their eponymous debut. Taking their Satanism to a new level of seriousness, Benton was burning crosses into his forehead and desecrating churches to promote this album, something that didn't exactly endear them to the mainstream metal media. While similar (and even weaker) groups were getting hyped up as the leaders of the death metal underworld, this album struck a chord that would, for good or bad, instantly inspire legions of like-minded groups. The riffs are actually memorable, with insane blastbeat drums and an uncanny sense of timing guiding the songs as they charge through one by one. "Lunatic of God's Creation" may be one of the best death metal songs written in this period, taking all of these elements to their natural extreme and crafting an ugly Satanic epic. "Carnage in the Temple of the Damned" is a speed-happy chunk of ...
| | Deicide Legion CD (1992)
Soul Of A New Machine music CDs
$14.25 This onslaught of ever-shifting ...
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Soul Of A New Machine songs
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| | Fear Factory Archetype CD (2004)
Soul Of A New Machine album
$12.59 As influential originators of a revolutionary and oft-copied hybrid of metal and industrial dance music, Fear Factory is one of the few groups that could release an album entitled ARCHETYPE without ...
| | Fear Factory Demanufacture CDs (1995) Bonus CD; Bonus Tracks; Reissue
Soul Of A New Machine CD music
$17.89 Not too many folks really took note at the time, but Fear Factory were really onto something with their 1992 debut album, Soul of a New Machine. Though it wasn't a beginning-to-end classic, it was an exceptional album and arguably ushered in the alternative metal era with its fusion of metal styles. When Fear Factory returned ...
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| | Melissa O'Neil CD (2005) (Import) Canada
Soul Of A New Machine CD music
$33.59 When Canadian teen sensation Melissa O'Neil earned the title of Canadian Idol in 2005, much speculation arose about the pop protégée's bright young career. O'Neil, a Western Canadian singer whose masterful voice carried her through the competition, knocked out her competitors week after week by varying her song choice and using impeccable vocals to translate her from casual pop princess to glamorous young diva. Ultimately, this presented a dilemma in O'Neil's marketing department, now responsible for representing an artist stuck between two realms where her chances of success were probably about equally divided; O'Neil's personality and charm could easily impress older audiences through more adult contemporary tracks, while she could also seamlessly translate onto bubblegum radio with translucent tunes and infectious dance hooks. This dilemma was not assuaged in any way by the launch of her first multi-platinum single, "Alive," which toed the line between effervescent teenage hopes and polished maturity in a flighty manner. In the end, the launch of Melissa O'Neil's eponymous debut is quite frankly a refusal to compromise in either direction. This debut release is obviously rooted in many casual common teenage hooks (specifically on numbers like "Just Like January" and the album's light first single, "Let It Go"), and O'Neil certainly dips into cheeky pop on the album's more breezy numbers. Yet at the same time, O'Neil easily jumps into more dramatic swooping ballads, using heavy drums to perfect a darker sound to balance out the airy singles that support the album. The album shows O'Neil in an excellent light, allowing her to appeal to both younger and older audiences by presenting a pack of tunes that would support neither audience in the album's entirety, yet pleases both sets of listeners in various groupings of songs -- in today's market buoyed by singles, this is a crafty display of marketing genius (nicely noted in the contrast between the aforementioned first single and the album's haunting second radio sampling, "Speechless"). The paradox between genres that O'Neil presents isn't necessarily successful, in the sense that few people will enjoy the album all the way through, yet any fan of O'Neil's icy tones or her endearing personality will appreciate the first sampling by an artist who has displayed mounds of potential in a myriad of genres, and as a winner of a television talent show with a wide audience, O'Neil doesn't leave even her smallest fan without something to love. ~ Matthew Chisling
In what may be the strongest release yet from the Canadian Idol talent competition, 17-year-old Calgarian Melissa O'Neil has put together a collection of rock-heavy pop destined to bring forth comparisons her to American Idol counterpart, Kelly Clarkson, with similarities in their ...
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