Fear Factory
Mechanize
Rating
Style: Industrial metal
Release date: February 5th 2010
 

On "Mechanize," Fear Factory goes back to their roots, playing the influential industrialized metal that people grew to love on "Soul Of A New Machine" and "Demanufacture."

Let’s face it, after "Obsolete," Fear Factory were a mess. Some say their cover of Gary Numan's "Cars" led to their downfall, alienating die-hard fans. They weren’t helped by contract obligations and troublesome managers, turmoil in the band that led vocalist Burton C. Bell to quit in 2002, and the well-publicized fallout between Bell and guitarist Dino Cazares, which led to Cazares' getting sacked. They carried on with Christian Olde Wolbers switching from bass to guitar and enlisted former Strapping Young Lad bassist Byron Stroud, recording "Archetype" and "Transgression" to little fanfare.

Then came the announcement in mid-2009 of a new Fear Factory formation with Bell, Stroud, mammoth drummer Gene Hoglan and Cazares. That caused Olde Wolbers and original drummer Raymond Herrera to split, forming Arkaea and forcing a legal dispute over the Fear Factory name.

With "Mechanize," Burton and Cazares have put their differences aside and created something that will restore the faith of the Fear Factory faithful. The band’s chemistry has been rekindled. Obtaining Hoglan doesn't hurt, either: he's one of metal's premier drummers. And Cazares shows he has something to prove. Cazares’ trademark riffs, precise in their execution, mixed with Hoglan's monstrous drumming give "Mechanize" a maturity that has been missing since "Obsolete."

The title track stays true to Fear Factory’s mechanical precision, with the sound of machines pounding away right from the start, then leading into a blistering riff from Cazares. Throughout the song, Bell mixes melodic vocals and haunting spoken word passages, with the aggressive bark he's known for. "Powershifter" was featured on YouTube months before the release, and the response and comments were unanimous: Fear Factory were back. Three standout tracks — "Fear Campaign," with a Cazares guitar solo, "Christploitation" and "Oxidizer" — take an aggressive approach with touches of classic melody that Fear Factory brilliantly weave into such pummelling songs. "Controlled Demolition" deserves a mention as well. Actually, every song on "Mechanize" kills; there are no filler tracks here. This is the perfect mix of Fear Factory and Strapping Young Lad, maybe to the dismay of some fans, but it seems to work.

"Mechanize" is highly produced, some might think overproduced. But previous Fear Factory knob-twirler/keyboardist Rhys Fulber has been welcomed back, and it's an obvious choice. Fans will not be disappointed with "Mechanize," and they’ll be reminded of why Fear Factory were one of the most important bands of extreme music at one time. An absolutely necessary purchase.

 Thomas says:

I would love to dispute Kelley's assessment of the-band-that-is-probably-Fear-Factory's latest effort. Just for the sake of drama, naturally.

Problem is that I can't dispute anything. From the sublime drumming by percussion monster Hoglan to the clinical precision of Dino's riffs, everything on 'Mechanize' is in its place.

Fear Factory takes a swing back to better times, and it is primarily 'Demanufacture' that rears its powerful head. I'm not complaining - it is the return to form we've all been waiting for. 'nuff said - the music speaks for it self.


Tracklist
01. Mechanize (4:41)
02. Industrial Discipline (3:38)
03. Fear Campaign (4:54)
04. Powershifter (3:51)
05. Christploitation (4:58)
06. Oxidizer (3:44)
07. Controlled Demolition (4:24)
08. Designing The Enemy (4:54)
09. Metallic Division (1:30)
10. Final Exit (8:16)
Label: AFM Records
Distribution: Target (Denmark)
Reviewed by: Kelley Simms
Date: February 3rd 2010
Website: www.fearfactorymusic.com