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Irony Is a Dead Scene - EP

The Dillinger Escape Plan with Mike Patton

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Hollywood Squares The Dillinger Escape Plan with Mike Patton 4:08 $1.29 View In iTunes
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Pig Latin The Dillinger Escape Plan with Mike Patton 3:31 $1.29 View In iTunes
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When Good Dogs Do Bad Things The Dillinger Escape Plan with Mike Patton 6:00 $1.29 View In iTunes
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Album Review

When Dillinger Escape Plan opened for Mike Patton's Mr. Bungle in 1999, the show was a dream for fans of experimental metal. When a break between vocalists allowed Dillinger Escape Plan to seek out a collaborator to fill the time, Patton seemed like an inspired choice to mix up their assault. Despite the ridiculously high expectations from both artists' fan bases, Irony Is a Dead Scene is a brilliant collaboration between the two. Coming off as a challenge to the stale rap metal scene that often sites Patton as an influence, it's hard not to view this as the natural progression of Faith No More's King for a Day... sound. Dillinger Escape Plan builds mountains of molten guitar riffs and eerie sound effects into an angular landscape of complex ideas, just to let Patton pull the whole thing together with his multi-faceted croon. One only needs to hear the Mel Blanc-meets-Ian MacKaye jabbering on "When Good Dogs Do Bad Things" to understand how brilliant he can be on the microphone, and if that doesn't convince listeners, then maybe the falsetto breakdown or grizzled rap found later in the song can do the job. The songwriting here is truly inspired, displaying the prodigious chops of Dillinger better than anything they've done since Calculating Infinity. It would be impossible to cite all the genres covered in the 18 minutes of music here, but this band has truly earned its standing as the heir to Faith No More's infamous versatility. A disappointing cover of Aphex Twin's "Come to Daddy" (barely) fails to match the original's unpleasant atmosphere and manic approach, but otherwise this is an excellent EP that confounds as much as it inspires. To anyone disillusioned with the mainstream metal scene in 2002, this is what rock-radio junkies were missing out on that summer.

Customer Reviews

Damn Good
     

The combination of Mike Patton with the Dillinger Escape Plan (who probably have the coolest band name at the moment) is excellent.... if you ignore "Come to Daddy" which, while pretty decent, doesn't live up to the hype of a DEP/Patton EP.

The Coolest Thing They Ever Released
     

Being a huge Mike Patton fan, and also a huge Dillinger fan. I wouldve never imagined those two worlds colliding into something this amazing. Besides the lackluster 'Come To Daddy' cover, while still kinda cool just sort of falls flat somehwere in the middle. The first three songs are absolute chaos, full of sick hardcore mayhem and mind boggling experimentalism the band (and of course Mr. Patton) are known for. Ive noticed with this band, that the vocalists really control the shape and direction of their sound. Patton injects it with a sense of sheer psychosis it never accomplished before this release. With his inhuman shrieks, flawless singing, and overall lunacy; Mike Patton leaves his mark on the world of technical hardcore with such a memorable performance. 'When Good Dogs Do Bad Things' is arguably Dillinger's finest moment. You can hear the last of their old sound dying within that song.

one can dream
     

Aside from the Aphex Twin cover, this EP is absolutely amazing and billiant. If only it was full-length. It would've been a true classic.

Biography

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '90s, '00s

The Dillinger Escape Plan create maniacally intense, crushingly metallic, and decidedly hardcore punk-infused jazz-time-signature-invoking compositions displaying an unparalleled musical bravery, precision musicianship, meticulously thought-out, and complex structuring, and rigorous physical endurance. The band's guitarists and drummer are regular features in publications geared toward the guitar- and drum-playing set. The depth of extremity and mental challenge presented by their music virtually...
Full Bio