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Digimortal

Fear Factory

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Album Review

Looking for some bone-crunching aural action? Die-hard heavy, death, and nu metal fans need look no further than Fear Factory. The hard-rocking quartet has churned out another spine-chilling album with their 2001 release, Digimortal. Born of all things electronic and evil, Digimortal is a cornucopia of apocalyptic views of the evils waiting outside your door, under your bed, and inside your computer. The complete set of warnings on the dark days ahead linger like dense, lurking shadows in the form of the 11 foreboding tracks on the album. A sincere sense of heeded warning comes straight from Fear Factory's ominous crystal ball on tracks like the terse "What Will Become." The roar-filled title track, "Digimortal," where singer Burton C. Bell speaks of lost innocence and wails repeatedly about getting "one step closer/to my fate," is a more rhythmic version of the same cynical outlook, but with a more musically muscular impact. The techno-like beat and the pounding guitar of "Linchpin" combine to form the perfect eerie backdrop for rap-like spitting of lyrics for Fear Factory's gravely serious pleas for social awareness, when Bell sings, "We will never see the end/we will never breathe again." The lyrics take a defiant stance with "you can't change me," a statement that echoes the sincerity of the sentiments in the movie Shawshank Redemption when the prisoners speak of the safeguarded hope (that place they can't tamper with or destroy) deep inside. Digimortal is an ear-drum puncturing and adrenaline-induced cry out against a warning that the digital age may bring everyone those final fatal steps closer to their eminent doom as vital, viable human beings.

Customer Reviews

Their last industrial album.

While this album had huge expectations and was generally panned by most critics and fans alike, I found it to be quite rocking. The rockitude and rockage simply overwhelmed me on so many rockified levels. However, "Back the F**k Up" is totally out of place on this album and should never have been included. Despite that minor setback, "What Will Become", "Damaged", "No One", "Linchpin", and "Invisible Wounds" are every bit as rockin' as anything on Obsolete or Demanufacture. If you like those two albums, I see no reason why you wouldn't like this.

What are they talking about?

I had to write a review in Digimortal's defense after reading all this negative feedback. This is in my opinion is a great Fear Factory album. Every song is really good except for Back the F**k Up because it had B-real in it which was kind of corny. That song is still good if you listen to the parts that don't have B-Real rapping or singing. Dino's rifts are fast as hell and sound really good with Raymond's drums against all the samples. It's a good Fear Factory album just like the rest, and I don't know why people say bad things about it, except for it didn't match up to the previous 2 albums. It's a great album.

its just not right

A great ff album and doesn't rate 1 star, period

Biography

Formed: 1990

Genre: Rock

Years Active: '80s, '90s, '00s, '10s

Fear Factory was one of the first bands to fuse the loud, crushing intensity of death metal with the cold harshness of industrial electronics and samples, producing a more varied sonic palette with which to express their bleak, pessimistic view of modern, technology-driven society. The group was formed in Los Angeles in 1990 by vocalist Burton C. Bell (formerly of Hate Face), percussionist Raymond Herrera, and guitarist and ex-Douche Lord Dino Cazares. Following their contribution of two tracks to...
Full Bio

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