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Album Review

That's it, screwheads. It's over. Pack up your trunks, deconstruct the drum kit, and hightail it back to Athens, 'cause the Dillinger Escape Plan just handed you your ass. Again. "Surprise!" new vocalist Greg Puciato begins on "Van Damsel." "It's not what you thought as it runs a dead stop." A thousand bands would've quit at "...what you thought"; Dillinger adds "runs a dead stop," and makes you leap out of the way of its hardcore car crashing into the jazz establishment. No kidding! After five years, the band has lost nothing, only gained. Time signatures are a play toy, genres are a joke, and the wannabes' goofy "I'm so tortured, listen to me scream" is nowhere to be found. Here, jarring instrumental changes work as a bitches' brew of stealthy genius, sticking you with a shiv and changing faces in the dark. Technical metal, righteous hardcore, twittering jazz interludes, and starkly melodic, seemingly post-punk-inspired segments all put the punters soundly in their place. Miss Machine doesn't even really seem that angry. Well, not anger for anger's sake, anyway. Cuts like "Panasonic Youth" and "We Are the Storm" are fueled by a manic alchemy of metal and hardcore, and Puciato's veins couldn't have survived the sessions. But the rage is artful; it's an integral part of Dillinger's larger performance. In the near future, rich women and fuddy-duddies will consider Miss Machine through opera glasses as sweaty children lash each other with cat-o'-nine-tails. There's nothing more to say — the next true image of rock & roll has crawled out of the swamps of Jersey.

Customer Reviews

They've grown and this cd is sweet.

Calculating Infinity the first full length of Dillinger's was an important cd to anyone that understood it. I'm not dancing around the point here this is my favorite band ever, the live show will blow you away, and most importantly recorded or live their capabilities as a band are top notch. When you make music you love it inherently becomes much more enjoyable for everyone else. For example, Dillinger's love for there music is shown perfectly live. Go see a metal band and maybe one headbangs a little harder then the other. Plus the undescribable "soul" the music has is just awesome. Dillinger loves what they do and do what they want. Therefore freely incorporating punk, metal, atmopheric, pop, a little latin, and jazz. Jazz is more of a transparent foundation for Dillinger's complex side. In other words its like an expierimental jazz musician adding distortion to his music. This is just accomplished musicians playing what they love. This review probly didn't help you at all, just listen to the demo's if you like them just wait until you hear the whole thing. If your the right person this is inspirational stuff at its best.

best metal album of the last decade, maybe ever

this is DEP's most important release. calculating infinity, their last full length was amazing and mind alterring, but more spastic, and therefore not well received by many. although this is not a problem for me, miss machine opens boundaries and minds to something that would not necessarily interest many people. jazz plays a huge role in the chord structures, time signatures, and song structures. the musicianship is phenomenal, mind bogglingly fast and precise. if you like music that keeps you on your toes, wondering anxiously what's coming next and intices you when it changes from one odd riff to another, then this is definitely a must have for the jazz/tech metal fans out there.

D.E.P. has Matured Over the Years...

No boundaries on this album, and MUCH better than the shriek-fest that Calculating Infinity was. Once they got rid of Dmitri as their singer... and their old bass player, Adam, who cut me in the head with a tuning peg in Atlanta many years ago... long story) this band improved by leaps and bounds. Can't wait to see them again. Check out their mini-EP of them covering Massive Attack, Soundgarden, and NIN... as it's actually pretty good. Their Justin Timberlake cover is hysterical, and I'm waiting for all the young hip-hop idiots to get caught in the D.E.P. mousetrap and have their eardrums shattered by "Panasonic Youth" or "Baby's First Coffin". Everyone else do yourself a favor and buy this album. If it's possible to wear-out the grooves in a compact disk, you'll do it with this record.

Biography

Formed: Nj

Genre: Rock

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

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

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