City
Download links and information about City by Strapping Young Lad. This album was released in 1997 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal genres. It contains 9 tracks with total duration of 39:19 minutes.
Artist: | Strapping Young Lad |
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Release date: | 1997 |
Genre: | Rock, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal |
Tracks: | 9 |
Duration: | 39:19 |
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Tracks
[Edit]No. | Title | Length |
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1. | Velvet Kevorkian | 1:17 |
2. | All Hail the New Flesh | 5:24 |
3. | Oh My F*****g God | 3:34 |
4. | Detox | 5:37 |
5. | Home Nucleonics | 2:31 |
6. | Aaa | 5:21 |
7. | Underneath the Waves | 3:40 |
8. | Room 429 | 5:21 |
9. | Spirituality | 6:34 |
Details
[Edit]A sense of humor is something that very few artists in underground metal possess — and that's precisely why Canadian Devin Townsend and his wall-of-noise industrial-thrash outfit Strapping Young Lad stand out amongst the melee. City is a fine example of Townsend's metal-mad scientist approach (dubbed "Devy metal" by affectionate followers): An absolutely manic cyber-grind propelled by the elephant stampede kicked up by drummer extraordinaire Gene Hoglan (ex-Death, Dark Angel), thickened by frenzied, nigh out of control guitar riffs and existing in a cloudy electro-haze of pulverized circuit boards crushed to dust, shot into the atmosphere, and breathed in by all involved parties. So this album's predecessor, Heavy as a Really Heavy Thing, was appropriately titled, although City is a smidgen more focused, mature, and, yes, heavy, although Townsend's subsequent solo projects, Ocean Machine, Infinity, Physicist, and Terria, are less overtly metallic, more fully realized, prog-influenced, and ambitious. What makes Strapping Young Lad most compelling isn't the band's capacity for schizoid arrangements, but rather Townsend's realization that the over the top clichés of the metal genre — which he robustly embraces with a maniacal grin — are innately absurd. So he trots out irony-packed tunes such as "Oh My F*****g God," "All Hail the New Flesh," and "AAA" with such ridiculous bombast and bizarre, borderline non sequitur lyrics (a quick sample: "Devy in the corner of his teen year/Born to run away/Children in the middle with the village idiot/So he never made the potty grade" from "AAA"), all used to skewer the inherent ludicrousness of not just metal, but life in general. On the surface, City is a noisy excuse to put yourself in a neck brace, but closer inspection will reveal Townsend's mentally depraved genius, his mind weighted down with, um, really heavy things. [A Deluxe Reissue from Century Media was released in 2007.]