Concrete (Fear Factory album)

Concrete is an album by Fear Factory, released on July 30, 2002. It contains songs recorded in 1991 which were intended to be the band's first release, half of which were re-recorded a year later and released on their debut album Soul of a New Machine.

Concrete
Studio album by
ReleasedJuly 30, 2002 (2002-07-30)
Recorded1991
GenreDeath metal[1]
Length41:44
LabelRoadrunner
ProducerRoss Robinson
Fear Factory chronology
Digimortal
(2001)
Concrete
(2002)
Hatefiles
(2003)
Singles from Concrete
  1. "Sangre de Niños"
    Released: 2002
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]
Blogcriticsfavorable[2]
PopMattersfavorable[3]

Album information

Although released in 2002, Concrete was recorded in 1991 in Blackie Lawless's studios. It was intended to be Fear Factory's first release, but the band wasn't happy with the record deal they were in, so they left their producer, Ross Robinson.

When they were taken to court, Robinson won the rights to the album, and the band retained the rights to the songs. Fear Factory would later re-record eight of the songs for their 1992 debut, Soul of a New Machine, recording under the name "Factoría de Miedo" (Spanish for "Fear Factory") to hide from their label. Robinson would use the album to promote himself, eventually leading to him producing Korn, which would make him the most sought-after nu metal producer of the 1990s. After the band's breakup in 2002, Roadrunner Records released the album to help meet unfulfilled contractual obligations.

Songs

Eight of the songs on Concrete were re-recorded in 1992 and released on Soul of a New Machine: "Big God/Raped Souls", "Arise Above Oppression", "Crisis", "Escape Confusion", "Dragged Down by the Weight of Existence" (re-recorded as "W.O.E"), "Desecrate", "Suffer Age", and "Self Immolation". "Concrete" was later renamed as "Concreto" and re-recorded as a b-side for the "Dog Day Sunrise" single, and later appeared as a bonus track for the digipak release of Obsolete.

"Piss Christ" is not the same song as "Pisschrist", which appears on Demanufacture. "Ulceration" is named after the band's original name. "Sangre de Niños" ("Children's Blood" in Spanish) was originally featured on one of the Cry Now, Cry Later 7" compilations released under the "Factoría de Miedo" moniker. "Soulwound" (a bonus track for Obsolete) is a renamed and re-recorded version of "Soulwomb". The opening guitar riff in "Echoes of Innocence" was used as a synthesized motif in "A Therapy for Pain", the final track on Demanufacture. The title also appears in that song as a lyric.

Track listing

No.TitleMusicLength
1."Big God/Raped Souls"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:36
2."Arise Above Oppression"Bell, Cazares, Herrera1:57
3."Concrete"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:28
4."Crisis"Bell, Cazares, Herrera3:33
5."Escape Confusion"Cazares, Herrera3:37
6."Sangre de Niños"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:03
7."Soulwomb"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:35
8."Echoes of Innocence"Bell, Cazares, Herrera3:04
9."Dragged Down by the Weight of Existence"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:42
10."Deception"Bell, Cazares, Herrera0:29
11."Desecrate"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:37
12."Suffer Age"Cazares, Herrera3:45
13."Anxiety"Bell, Cazares, Herrera1:39
14."Self Immolation"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:34
15."Piss Christ"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:41
16."Ulceration"Bell, Cazares, Herrera2:45
Total length:41:44

Credits

Writing, performance and production credits are adapted from the album liner notes.[4]

Personnel

Fear Factory

Additional musicians

  • Dave Gibney − spoken word intro on "Big God", vocals on "Raped Souls"

Production

Visual art

  • t42design – art direction, design
  • Howard Rosenberg – photography (cover)
  • Rick Ferdinande – photography (band)

Studios

  • Blackie Lawless's Fort Apache Studio, Los Angeles, CA, USA – engineering, mixing
  • Oasis Mastering, Los Angeles, CA, USA – mastering
gollark: That sounds unpleasant. No.
gollark: In general, no.
gollark: So I assume you invoked dark bee god #770604 or something. You should avoid doing that.
gollark: I see. That's probably for the best.
gollark: Just generate data at random if you have enough free memory.

References

  1. "Concrete - Fear Factory". Allmusic.
  2. "Fear Factory: Concrete ...Everything Old Is New, Eventually". Blogcritics. Archived from the original on 2002-09-13.
  3. "Fear Factory: Concrete". PopMatters.
  4. Concrete (liner notes). Fear Factory. Roadrunner Records. 2002. RR8439-2. Retrieved March 12, 2017.CS1 maint: others (link)
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