Napalm Death - Fear, Emptiness, Despair
I highly recommend the recent film adaptation of Stephen King's The Mist. It's a monster movie, but its real monsters are humans. The film explores human psychology - specifically, the response in a confined space to an unknown threat. Interestingly, director Frank Darabont (The Shawshank Redemption, The Green Mile) made the ending darker than King's original - not the usual Hollywood trajectory. The ending is a Twilight Zone-type shocker, causing Thomas Jane's protagonist to emit an intense primal scream. It immediately reminded me of Barney Greenway's guttural growl at the beginning of "Twist the Knife (Slowly)," which leads off Napalm Death's Fear, Emptiness, Despair (Earache/Columbia, 1994).Fear, Emptiness, Despair is by far my favorite Napalm Death record. Ironically, it's probably the one most unlike their legacy as grindcore pioneers, as it's mostly straight-up death metal. Some have called it "experimental," but that term better suits the follow-up Diatribes, which flirts with clean tones and hip hop. Sure, this was the band's major label record - but they put that money to good use. The sound is cold, clinical, and the biggest Napalm Death ever had.
The recording process was fraught with tension, and it shows. FED churns with roiling, mid-paced riffs alternating with upper-register tremolo picking (a Napalm Death signature from this point on). Danny Herrera's drumming is bulletproof; while Mick Harris deservedly gets props as inventor of the blastbeat, Herrera kicked the band up a notch. Industrial harmonics in "Armageddon x 7"; sheets of jangly dissonance in "Fasting on Deception"; wild machine gun melodies in "Primed Time" - all cruel and thrilling. "Hung" begins like an outtake from Sepultura's Chaos A.D., then shifts into a neck-snapping hail of blastbeats and thrash beats. Absolutely essential.
Labels: clee, death metal, uk















7 Comments:
I'm a big fan of this record, too - and Diatribes, easily their most experimental album. I think Napalm only got really good once their lineup solidified, and they've stayed ridiculously strong - last year's Smear Campaign is fucking killer.
A GREAT album, "Plague Rages" is still one of my favorites.
I'd been a fan of their early stuff and own the album Diatribes (still have it on cassette!) so it was cool to hear this. I forgot how Barney can totally howl out the vocals. I still think he's one of the greatest vocalist out there and is pretty much unmatched to this day.
i think it took till Enemy of the Music Business to get there proverbial ball rolling again.....
This record is fan-fucking-tastic! It's been a while since I've heard anyone mention it as well. Props to this blog! I remember when this first came out and everyone I knew thought this was a poserish sell out of a record...I think I agreed with that mentality for a few weeks as I was absolutely hooked on "Scum", "Harmony Corruption", and the killer "Death By Manipulation" odds n' sods record which still reigns as my favorite today. Then I saw their video for this record (1st track I believe?) on one of those cheesy metal video VHS comps and I was hooked...pun completely intended as I was finally able to appreciate the brilliant hook and groove of the new Napalm machine. I even remember drawing the new ND logo on my folders in high school (yes I was in high school in 94) after being converted completely by this and "Diatribes"...that album which of course is an entirely less friendly though more unique animal I'm sure most will agree.
I'm still a "Utopia Banished" man myself ("Dementia Access" and "Contemptuous" simply can't be topped), but the funny thing is I never bought "F.E.D." on CD. I had the tape when I was a kid, and liked it, but never really listened to it much later on. I need to correct that problem this weekend... these tracks are proving that fact for sure, ha.
Hey Cosmos: This also is my favorite Napalm Death. One of the first death metal records that got me hooked on the genre, along with Carcass' HEARTWORK and Entombed's CLANDESTINE. I grew out my hair and started wearing black tees with skulls. Ah the memories.
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