Nihil [Bonus Track] [Remaster]KMFDM
Release Date: 03/06/2007
Original Release:
1995
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 972836_CD
UPC # 782388047524
Label: Metropolis
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Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: KMFDM
Engineer: Chris Shepard; Sascha Konietzko; Sam Hofstedt; Chris Shepard Producer: Chris Shepard; Sascha Konietzko; Sascha Konietzko; Chris Shepard Distributor: Alternative Dis. Alliance Notes: KMFDM includes: Mark Durantula, Gunter Schulz (guitar); En Esch, Sascha Konietzko, Raymond "Pig" Watts. Composer: Sascha Konietzko. Lyricist: Sascha Konietzko. KMFDM: Fritz Whitney (baritone saxophone); Jim Christiansen (trombone); G�nter Schulz, Raymond Watts, Sascha Konietzko (bass instrument); Dorona Alberti (background vocals); Jennifer Ginsberg, En Esch, Jeff Olson, Mark Durante, William Rieflin. Personnel: En Esch (vocals, guitar, harmonica, drums); Sascha Konietzko (vocals, synthesizer, drums, programming); Raymond Watts (vocals, programming); G�nter Schulz, Mark Durante (guitar); Jeff Olson (trumpet); William Rieflin (drums); Jennifer Ginsberg (background vocals). Audio Mixers: Chris Shepard; Sascha Konietzko. Audio Remasterer: Brian Gardner . Recording information: Bad Animals, Seattle, WA. Editor: Sascha Konietzko. Photographer: Trisha Leeper. KMFDM's seventh album, Nihil, finds the band sitting comfortably in the groove it started with 1990s Na�ve. At this point, the German outfit has become an industrial musical collective, with various contributing vocalists and musicians coming in and out of the fold, while the nerve center of the group continues to be founders En Esch and Sasha Konietzko. Additionally, the group's ingenious marketing/merchandising skills (using the bold-faced KMFDM logo, idealistic sloganeering, and appropriately simplistic comic book artwork of Brute) have given the band a powerful, iconic image. The anthemic "Juke Joint Jezebel," with its disco-diva vocals (courtesy of Jennifer Ginsberg), remains the band's biggest "hit" to date; it is an enduring and indispensable dancefloor favorite at goth/industrial clubs around the world. Other high points include the politically charged "Terror" and "Disobedience." Throughout the album, there is a core of intelligence which lifts KMFDM above many of their contemporaries. Significant contributions by growling vocalist Raymond Watts and super-tight guitarist Gunter Shulz add new colors to the KMFDM palette, and the overall production skills on Nihil are state of the art. While industrial music has a reputation for being abrasive, KMFDM's sound is actually quite polished and tight, with any real "noise" expertly airbrushed out of the mix. Which doesn't diminish the impact of the material; it merely streamlines the band's attack. ~ Andy Hinds KMFDM's seventh album, Nihil, finds the band sitting comfortably in the groove it started with 1990s Na�ve. At this point, the German outfit has become an industrial musical collective, with various contributing vocalists and musicians coming in and out of the fold, while the nerve center of the group continues to be founders En Esch and Sasha Konietzko. Additionally, the group's ingenious marketing/merchandising skills (using the bold-faced KMFDM logo, idealistic sloganeering, and appropriately simplistic comic book artwork of Brute) have given the band a powerful, iconic image. The anthemic "Juke Joint Jezebel," with its disco-diva vocals (courtesy of Jennifer Ginsberg), remains the band's biggest "hit" to date; it is an enduring and indispensable dancefloor favorite at goth/industrial clubs around the world. Other high points include the politically charged "Terror" and "Disobedience." Throughout the album, there is a core of intelligence which lifts KMFDM above many of their contemporaries. Significant contributions by growling vocalist Raymond Watts and super-tight guitarist Gunter Shulz add new colors to the KMFDM palette, and the overall production skills on Nihil are state of the art. While industrial music has a reputation for being abrasive, KMFDM's sound is actually quite polished and tight, with any real "noise" expertly airbrushed out of the mix. Which doesn't diminish the impact of the material; it merely streamlines the band's attack. [The 2007 reissue adds one track: "Nihil".] ~ Andy Hinds
Alternative Press (8/95, p.112) - "KMFDM spend most of NIHIL blending their savage guitar attack with a hard base of electronic rhythms--the sound that has become their trademark....the line between the two arenas has been getting thinner, and KMFDM have always played tantalizingly close to the boundary....both sides of this record work....Kick in and enjoy."
Option (7-8/95, p.115) - "...NIHIL is filled with a molten swill of industrio-techno-aggro-dance-metal, forcing KMFDM's sound to exist somewhere in the nether void between the worlds of Nine Inch Nails, Consolidated and Sisters Of Mercy..."
The German industrial dance act KMFDM were one of the first bands to recognize the link between the mechanical ferocity of industrial music and the unrelenting rhythms of the dance floor. Although they formed in Germany in 1984, they soon made a name for themselves in the United States as one of the premier bands on the seminal Chicago industrial label Wax Trax. While their popularity faltered a bit in the wake of more cartoonish American versions of KMFDM's aesthetic, the band's influence on industrial music can not be underestimated.
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