Front by FrontFront 242
Release Date: 06/25/2008
Original Release:
1988
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 1051898_CD
UPC # 886972378121
Label: Epic (USA)
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
1.
Until Death (Us Do Part)
2.
Circling Overland
3.
Im Rhythmus Bleiben - (German)
4.
Felines
5.
First in/First Out
6.
Blend the Strengths
7.
Headhunter
8.
Work
9.
Terminal State
10.
Welcome to Paradise
11.
Headhunter
12.
Never Stop!
13.
Work 242 N.Off Is N.Off
14.
Never Stop!
15.
Agony (Until Death)
16.
Work 242 - (German)
Performer: Front 242
Distributor: Sony Music Distribution ( Notes: Booklet provides Beats Per Minute (BPM) for each track. The early work of Belgian techno outfit Front 242 was frequently overshadowed by the band's reliance on such influences as Cabaret Voltaire and Kraftwerk. With FRONT BY FRONT, the band's Front 242 album, the band finally came into its own. Using rapid-fire beats, blasts of synthesized vitriol, and samples of everything from children playing to fighter pilot back-chatter, Front 242 makes brutal, politically aggressive dance music. The album's standouts are "Circling Overland," "Im Rhythmus Bleiben," and the underground hit "Headhunter." The lyric of the first, apparently describing a nighttime military air strike, accompanies a synthetic martial beat and features such niceties as "we don't negotiate." "Im Rhythmus Bleiben" adds gruesome wails and cranks up the BPM significantly. "Headhunter," built around a repeated beat and a synthesized organ sound, abandons all pretenses of pleasantry. The lyrics are overtly threatening, describing hunting humans for profit. Even hard-beat techno is seldom this unforgiving. The CD reissue appends 7 tracks, including remixes that are even more punishing than the originals.
Alternative Press (7/95, pp.114-115) - "...An album which put the finishing touches on the design. Rich rhythms, often created by voice manipulations; hard-edged sequencers, offset by angry electronic drums; Front 242 seemed the ultimate in vicious dance..."
The harsh electronic dance sounds of the 1980s industrial outfit Front 242 owed a lot to Throbbing Gristle's cutting-edge arty abrasion and the structured experimentalism of Cabaret Voltaire. Embraced in the mid-1980s by the nascent Chicago dance underground fostered by the Wax Trax label, Front 242 became forebears of the techno revolution.
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