Look. Here's the thing. Fear Factory
started something new back in the 1990's when they first came on the
scene. It was different and it was a little scary, just the right
elements to draw fans in from any number of genres of music. There has
been a lot of good stuff, and some average stuff. With the previous
three albums (two of which did not have original guitarist Dino Cavares
involved) it has been the same, a lot of good stuff mixed with a bit f
the average. One of the problems that appeared to be raising its head as
these albums progressed was that... well... they all seem to be
sounding a little on the similar side. I mean, if you didn't know the
band, and you threw on Archetype and then threw on Transgression
would you really know that the albums had been changed? For heavens
sake, I like a lot of Fear Factory, and I have trouble discerning
between the two myself! So when it came to first getting and listening
to Mechanize
I wondered if the title was giving something away about the music
itself. So yes, trepidation confronts me as I approached this new Fear
Factory album. Whilst for the majority I enjoyed Archetype, the bad taste of Transgression still sits like a mouthful of out of date chunky sour milk.
Despite
the circumstances around the abandonment of original members Raymond
Herrera and Christian Olde Wolbers for this album, I could only applaud
the recruitment of Gene Hoglan to play drums for this album. He is
incredible under most circumstances, but his work here is quite
astounding. I'm really not sure how many arms and legs he has in real
life, because the speed and precision with which he plays his instrument
on this album is quite extraordinary. Dino's guitaring (playing all
guitars and bass on the album) is as precision perfect as always, while
Burton's vocals move between the menacing growl to the clear anguish
cries with abandon. And it's quite a change between the two when it
occurs too. I sometimes wonder if it is too much, in the same way on
early Trivium albums Matt Heafy does the same huge change between growl
and clear vocals. Probably it's just me being too precious.
OK, so
we've considered what could be seen as the similarity between songs and
albums musically, and we've considered the vocal techniques used. As to
the album itself taking those things into the mix, I still like most of
this album. the opening track "Mechanize", it hits the ground running
with aggression and power, with Burton's vocal chords getting a huge
work out at every level throughout. The album flows nicely into
"Industrial Discipline", "Fear Campaign" and "Powershifter", all the
while being pushed along at speed by Hoglan's machine gun drumming. More
is to come, with "Christploitation" careering through into "Oxidizer"
and "Controlled Demolition". "Designing the Enemy" uses a similar theme
and tracking, but the vocals by now start to grate, though more
succinctly the randomness between the almost incomprehensible deep
growling into the moaning clear vocal over the top of the synth
programming with those drums still underneath. It's all a little too
much for me by this stage. I don't like the structure and having made it
so far into the album with some degree of enjoyment it is beginning to
seep away. The instrumental joiner "Metallic Division" introduces itself
into the final track "Final Exit", which combines the fast paced intro
into the clear guitar and vocal combination before ebbing and flowing
throughout the track, with a complete fade out to the finish. Given how
the album started, this is a real character change to complete the
album.
There was a real excitement about this when it was
released, with the return of Dino to the fold, and while many parts of
this album are enjoyable for me, as an overall package I didn't get as
much from it as I expected. Still, for the drumming alone, this is worth
a listen to try and figure out just how Gene Hoglan can play like this.
And then wonder why they went with a drum machine on the next album.
Rating: Dawn of our extinction, the human affliction. 3/5
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