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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
The most polished and professional Bungle album., 7 Nov 2003
By A Customer
This album is basically Mr. Bungle's finest album to date. The only way to describe it is as a homage to American music over the 20th century. An enormous amount of styles are blended seamlesly together, lounge music, easy listening, Hawaian music, techno, surf, rap, jazz and the list goes on. Unlike the two previous albums, the distorted electric guitar work of Trey Spruance is blended in to the pieces rather than being accentuated by it's nature. The effect of this is that, while Spruance may be playing what would sound like heavy rock riffs alone, the overall mood of the songs remain after he begins to play (e.g. None of them knew they were robots). As a result, the album will sound a lot less heavy than it actually is (I'd imagine some of these songs would sound quite differet live). Coherance is the key to this albums power, where it was the lack of which which hampered 'Disco Volante'. The degree of complexity on some of the instrumental arrangements is simply staggering and making this sound simple and texturally beutifull is an immense achievment in itself. Although this album may sound less experimental than 'Disco Volante' the experimental nature of the band actually has not disappeared from Bungle's music, it is just the case that the band have learned to use this aspect to enhance the songs rather than including it for the sake of including it. Mike Patton displays some of his finest writing, which he may find difficult to better in the future. The rest of the band are at least, if not more, involved with Dunn and Spruance playing a very large part. The lyrics are complex and thought-provoking, definately the finest the band has produced. Most of all however, the band still show a sense of humour, which has matured significantly since the messy debut. If you are new to Mr. Bungle, then I would say that this is ceratainly the best place to start. It is interesting to note that while this is one of the most important rock albums of the last decade, it seems woefully neglected. If it is possible for music to be 'postmodernist' then this is it. A postmodernist classic, and there isn't many of them!
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
Buy this record and wonder how you ever managed without it, 28 Jan 2006
Bungle are of course no more now, but their legacy was three completely diverse pieces of work. From the ska-punk-metal crossover of the first album, to the bizarre death metal-clubland mess of Disco Volante, to this glorious exploration of the dark side of sun-kissed west-coast 50's and 60's teen culture. All the influences are here: the Beach Boys on "Air-conditioned Nightmare"; Chris Isaac on "Pink Cigarette"; 50's rockabilly on "None Of Them Knew They Were Robots"; Hawaiian pedal-steel and Phil Spector-esque production on "Sweet Charity"; Doo-wop on "Vanity Faire"...and yet all with Bungle's superb knack for giving them a new and surreal twist. As always, Patton's vocals are immaculate. And there are two genuinely brilliant pieces: the fusion of Greek-style ceremony and lyre with metal on "Ars Moriendi", and a fantastic power-pop ballad in "Retrovertigo", genuinely touching and presented with absolute respect to the form. Bungle went out on a massive high, and it's a great shame that they never worked together again, because, as this record demonstrates, they had so much individual and diverse innovative and creative talent, which somehow worked perfectly as a whole. Magnificent.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
a more mature sound, 1 Nov 2003
Mr. Bungle came a long way from their self titled first album to create this work of what I can only describe as genius. The mixture of styles, although about as varied as you can get, compliment each other wonderfully to create a beautiful album. The highlights include 'The Air-Conditioned Nightmare', Beach Boys style surf rock twisted into something that somehow manages to be dark and upbeat at the same time, 'Pink Cigarette', a ballad about as black as they come, and the very funky 'Gollum II (the bionic vapour boy)'. I first heard Mike Patton in Faith No More, but I feel this album surpasses their later work with ease. If you're a Mike Patton fan, you'll love this. If you're not, you will be by track three.
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