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Suture

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Download links and information about Suture by Chemlab. This album was released in 2001 and it belongs to Electronica, Industrial, Rock, Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 01:10:42 minutes.

Artist: Chemlab
Release date: 2001
Genre: Electronica, Industrial, Rock, Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 15
Duration: 01:10:42
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Chemical Halo (Bruised Regeneration) 5:45
2. 21st Century (Rough Sex Demo) 5:07
3. Chemical Halo (Drag-Strip Download) 7:51
4. Codeine, Glue and You (Scorched Remix) 4:45
5. Filament 5:14
6. I Still Bleed 3:56
7. Blunt Force Trauma 3:30
8. Black Radio (in the Neon Blur) 6:00
9. Electric Molecular (KMFDM Death Before Takes Mix) 4:07
10. Electric Molecular (KMFDM Instrumental No Takes Mix) 4:06
11. Lectric Molecular (Black Metal Box Malignant Mix) 4:52
12. Exile On Mainline (Extended Dance) 4:56
13. Exile On Mainline (Radio) 3:13
14. Jesus Christ Porno Star (Lick-a-licious Mix) 6:16
15. Static Haze (Lost Suture) 1:04

Details

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The membership of Chemlab isn't terribly consistent, but the nucleus of the band consists of singer/lyricist Jared Louche and composer Dylan More. Chemlab's sound is a sort of aggro-industrial stew that draws heavily on Ministry and the late-'80s industrial scene (especially Front 242 and KMFDM) for its influences. Louche's singing style is, to put it kindly, declamatory — there are melodies there, but not so's you'd notice them. Suture is essentially a reissue of the obscure 10 Ton Pressure EP along with numerous rare remixes, including two especially fine ones by KMFDM. The remixes offer the album's most interesting moments; while songs like "Blunt Force Trauma" and the Tackhead-ish "Filament" are attention-getting enough on their own, the others tend to do better with the added sonic muscle that a like-minded producer can bring (as on the KMFDM mixes) or that Louche and More themselves bring to their own work when working in remix mode. "Codeine, Glue and You" and the extended dance version of "Exile on Mainline" are both good examples. Highly recommended to fans of funky industrialism.