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Complete Total Terror

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Download links and information about Complete Total Terror by Front Line Assembly. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Electronica, Industrial, Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 27 tracks with total duration of 02:17:14 minutes.

Artist: Front Line Assembly
Release date: 2004
Genre: Electronica, Industrial, Rock, Hard Rock, Heavy Metal
Tracks: 27
Duration: 02:17:14
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Total Terror 6:24
2. A Decade 5:01
3. Rebels In Afghanistan 5:14
4. Developing Suicide 4:42
5. Black Fluid 5:35
6. Falling There 4:28
7. All You Do 4:21
8. Seeing Is Believing 4:33
9. Empty Walls 4:45
10. Enemy Number One 4:19
11. On the Cross 5:52
12. Freedom 5:45
13. Distorted Vision 5:44
14. Cleanser 2:16
15. Assassination 5:56
16. Intensive Care Unit 5:04
17. Immobilized 4:10
18. They're Going to Kill Us 5:52
19. Stimulant Combat 6:10
20. Hatred By Society 4:11
21. Intruder 5:24
22. Face Puller 7:03
23. A.E.C. Krunch 6:21
24. Cro-Magnon 6:17
25. Guilty 2:24
26. Attack Decay 3:59
27. The Bonening 5:24

Details

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A collection of home studio recordings from the time when Bill Leeb was Front Line Assembly in total, Complete Total Terror collects both Total Terror releases, making the group's early demos easily obtainable and providing a redundant title that Leslie Nielsen could appreciate. Leeb had purpose from the start, and there's very little here that could be considered noodling. Synths and the recording equipment might have been primitive, but Leeb skillfully used them to construct cinematic and layered pieces, equally concerned with structure and melody. Things are dark, but there's less dissonance than expected. The influence of Front 242 and SPK around the time of Auto DaFe can be heard, but pre-Micro-Phonies Cabaret Voltaire were obviously an obsession for Leeb, especially Stephen Mallinder's buried-growl vocals and the long bits of sampled dialogue. Rhys Fulber — not yet a full-time member at the time of these recordings — does some guest spots, but the liner notes don't bother to point out where they are. Even better is that the spine reads "Complete Total Chaos," another blunder from the never reliable Cleopatra label. Luckily, the label doesn't mess with the music, which Leeb and Fulber have remastered into a clear-sounding mix. At over two hours long it's a bit much for newcomers, but fans should ignore Cleopatra's shoddy packaging and enjoy this tour through the band's origins.