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Punishment in Capitals [PA] [Digipak]

Napalm Death
Release Date: 08/23/2005
Original Release:  2005
# of Discs:   1
J&R Item # 598036_CD
UPC # 636551617628
Label: Snapper
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$11.99
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Track Details Credits Reviews Artist Related Shipping
Disc: 1
1. Lucid Fairytale
2. Take the Poison
3. Next on the List
4. Constitutional Hell
5. Suffer the Children
6. Cleanse Impure
7. Politicians
8. Breed to Breathe
9. Vermin
10. World Keeps Turning, The
11. Can't Play Won't Pay
12. Unchallenged Hate
13. Volume of Neglect
14. Narcoleptic
15. Hung
16. From Enslavement to Obliteration
17. Scum
18. Life
19. Kill, The
20. Deceiver
21. You Suffer
22. Cure for a Common Complaint
23. Mass Appeal Madness
24. Creed Killing
25. Instinct of Survival
26. Nazi Punks Fuck Off
27. Back from the Dead
28. Siege of Power

Performer: Napalm Death
Distributor: E1 Distribution (USA)

Notes: Recorded live at ULU in London, England, April 27 2002. Napalm Death: Mitch Harris, Jesse Pintado (guitar); Shane Embury (bass guitar); Danny Herrera (drums); Barney Greenway. Personnel: Barney Greenway (vocals). Liner Note Author: Malcolm Dome. Authors: Shane Embury; Barney Greenway. Napalm Death has always been an interesting anomaly in the metal underground: generally considered to be the inventors of grindcore, the band eventually became a ragged patchwork of punk, death metal, and hardcore that was simultaneously sloppy, technical, unwaveringly ugly, and downright vicious. And political -- proof being this live DVD, shot in 2002 at a London animal rights benefit gig. Hence the anomaly; while slaughter, fantasy, and war are thematic crutches for much of the metal underground, Napalm is intent on righting the injustices of the world. Punishment in Capitals does a decent job of capturing the group's focus and intensity on-stage, the band rampaging through 28 songs in 90 minutes, from haphazardly arranged early donkey punches "Scum" and "Lucid Fairytale" to latter-day pneumatic drillers "Can't Play Won't Pay" and "Breed to Breathe." Visually, the live show is more than adequate, with enough camera angles to keep diehards relatively interested throughout, even if sonically the live mix is a bit gutted (strangely, the between-song chatter of singer Mark "Barney" Greenway is mixed much louder than his actual during-song vocalizations). Strictly for droolingly devoted Napalm drinkers is a jittery, D.I.Y., 45-minute documentary tacked on as a bonus feature, with mostly Barney-centric interviews covering relatively interesting territory (the band's political views) and the transcendentally mundane (what the band members eat before a show). Also added to the fray are two grainy cuts camcordered in Tokyo in 1996, and a half-dozen more culled from a particularly frenzied gig in Santiago, Chile, in 1997. Long-in-the-tooth Napalm punters will find plenty of meat and potatoes to consume in Punishment in Capitals, and the general no-bones-about-it approach nicely conveys the compelling grit of the hard-working and rightfully well-respected band at its center. [Snapper Music also released a CD edition, without the 1996 and 1997 bonus recordings.] ~ John Serba
Q (2/04, p.104) - 3 stars out of 5 - "[T]hey remain a remarkable band and one the British music industry should be justifiably proud of."
Napalm Death was one of the definitive death metal/grindcore bands to emerge from England's anarcho-punk scene of the early-1980s. They've written some of the most sonically ferocious songs ever, playing a brutally loud, ridiculously fast hybrid of punk and metal and infusing it with politically charged lyrics, which are often obscured by rumbling, razor-shredded vocals. The band continued to record throughout the 1990s and into the 2000s, and has helped spawn numerous equally extreme subgenres--from doom and black metal to power violence and metalcore.
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PID # 4050180


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