Shopping > Music > Meat Beat Manifesto > Armed Audio Warfare

Meat Beat Manifesto - Armed Audio Warfare (CD)

Armed Audio Warfare
$16.99
4.5 out of 5.0 stars 2 Ratings (1 Review)

Album Details: Armed Audio Warfare

Release Date:04/01/1989
Label:Wax Trax Record
UPC:017837710620

Other Available Formats: Armed Audio Warfare

User Reviews: Armed Audio Warfare

  • Overall:

    Pure unadulterated noise.

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 11, 2001

    What? No-one's written a review for this yet? Actually that's understandable... this CD ain't exactly easy to get hold of (I only just got mine the other day).This is classic Manifesto material. Looking for a sound that will make the Chemical Brother...s seem decidedly average by comparison? Look no further. It honestly makes me sick just how little media coverage Jack Dangers' work has got. It's influenced countless other electronic dance acts out there, and even his (much) later work (eg. Actual Sounds and Voices) still remains fresh and creative. To anyone who thinks Fatboy Slim is prime electronica: wrap your ears 'round this - you'll be in for a shock.Best traxs: Mister President (kudos for the sampling of Public Enemy), Reanimator, Kick That Man (those who fear white noise need not apply), Give Your Body its Freedom, Cutman. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Armed Audio Warfare

  • All Music Guide

    Armed Audio Warfare indeed What a perfect title for this massively punishing collection of rare and previously unreleased songs that give a glimpse into what Meat Beat Manifesto's debut album might have sounded like had its masters not been destroyed in a fire. The 11 songs here see Jack Dangers operating in the same fusion of dance, hip-hop, and industrial styles that would make 99 and Satyricon the cult classics they are, but here things are much more intense. One could even make a case that Armed Audio Warfare is one of the hardest and harshest albums of all time. At every twist and turn, hooks and melodies appear out of the acid-rain mist that is the album's heavily distorted and fuzzy underbelly. From its subject matter to its unrelenting sonic buzz, the album evokes a sense that a jackhammer has been used to sculpt its songs. Jack Dangers intones like a madman on "Genocide," a diving and darting dose of screams, Public Enemy-like ferocity, and crunchy electronic sounds that make ...Nitzer Ebb sound like giggling toddlers. Funky, tropical rhythms worthy of 99 make "Reanimator" a lighter change of pace. "I Got the Fear" pummels a listener with aggressive, metallic sound fragments, seemingly birthing the drill'n'bass genre; one imagines Aphex Twin and Squarepusher drooling and taking notes. "Kick That Man" and "Give Your Body Its Freedom" are the other highlights, both of them political, experimental, and cacophonous masterworks, fitted with pistons and funk. If Dangers sometimes falters a bit when tries to rap over his beautifully squalid songs, one can chalk it up to a sense of humor and move on. Call it the middle ground between Foetus and Public Enemy, but definitely call it a slice of maverick genius. Though one can't guess at how powerful the lost debut album would have been, Armed Audio Warfare is an accessible and stunning masterpiece that makes the loss less painful. - Tim DiGravina, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Armed Audio Warfare

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$16.99Total Price N/A New Item fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Armed Audio Warfare

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Armed Audio Warfare

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Meat Beat Manifesto

Beginning in 1987 as an experimental/industrial duo inspired by the cut-and-paste attitudes of hip-hop and dub, Meat Beat Manifesto increasingly became a vehicle for its frontman Jack Dangers to explore the emerging electronics of techno, trip-hop and jungle. Though the group was initially pegged as an industrial act (simply appearing on Wax Trax was enough to do the tr... Read more