Engine (Die Warzau album) explained

Engine
Type:studio
Artist:Die Warzau
Cover:Die Warzau - Engine.jpg
Released:[1]
Studio:Warzone 1
(Chicago, Illinois)
Length:74:42
Label:TVT/Wax Trax!
Prev Title:Big Electric Metal Bass Face
Prev Year:1991
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Next Year:2004

Engine is the third studio album by Die Warzau, released on February 28, 1995, by TVT and Wax Trax! Records.[2] [3] [4] [5] It was the band's first album in over two years and upon release was considered a masterpiece of industrial music.[6] [7]

Reception

William Cooper of AllMusic championed Engine as one of the greatest industrial albums of all times and a marked improvement over the band's previous output in both sonic and stylistic variety. He calling the album "a major leap forward for Die Warzau, as it contains some of its most hard-hitting (and surprisingly pop-friendly) material" and that "the mixture of moods and musical approach shows astonishing artistic depth." Alternative Press praised the Die Warzau's musical craftmanship and careful attention to details, saying "with Engine they've achieved true mastery of the electronic craft" and "the skilled mixings of genres and styles is mere child's play for them."[8] Option lauded the band for complex configuration of funk, free jazz, house and world music in complex configurations but decried the shallowness of the band's message, saying "Engine may be loaded with advanced socialist ideals and sharp commentary on such horrid sins as materialism and oppression, but the only people who are going to stand up and listen are the already techno-converted."[9] Tony Fletcher of Trouser Press said the album "gets busy with crashing beats, distorted vocals and disorienting sonic effects" and "what holds the disparate pieces together is invention and an overriding sense of fun. Even with the air is heavy, the mood stays upbeat."[10]

Accolades

YearPublicationCountryAccoladeRankclass=unsortable
1995 CMJ New Music Monthly United States"Dance" 14 [11]
1995 CMJ New Music Report United States"Radio Top 150" 78 [12]

Personnel

Adapted from the Engine liner notes.[13]

Die Warzau

Additional performers

Production and design

External links

Notes and References

  1. Becky . Barnhart . Schwann Spectrum . . Stereophile, Incorporated . 2000 . 9 . 2 . 99 . 9781575980782 . August 4, 2020.
  2. Web site: Steve . Huey . [{{AllMusic|class=artist|id=mn0000222857/biography|pure_url=yes}} Die Warzau > Biography ]. AllMusic . August 4, 2020.
  3. Chris . Christian . Interview With Die Warzau at Club Soda in Kalamazoo, MI . Sonic Boom . July 15, 1995 . 3 . 5 . August 4, 2020.
  4. Katarzyna NINa . Górnisiewicz . Die Warzau – Interview . Fabryka Industrial Rock & Metal Encyclopedia . Fabryka Music Magazine . December 24, 2005 . August 2, 2020.
  5. Ilker . Yücel . Jim Marcus InterView: Go, Going, Gone, Go Fight! . ReGen . May 1, 2012 . August 4, 2020.
  6. Doug . Reece . Popular Uprisings . . . March 5, 1994 . 106 . 10 . 29 . July 29, 2020.
  7. Book: Thompson, Dave . Dave Thompson (author) . Alternative Rock: Third Ear – The Essential Listening Companion . . November 1, 2000 . 71 . 9780879306076 . July 26, 2019.
  8. columnist . Die Warzau: Engine . . Alternative Press Magazine, Inc. . February 1995 . 58–59.
  9. Elisabeth . Vincentelli . Die Warzau: Engine . . Sonic Options Network . 1995 . 60–63 . 65 . 99.
  10. Tony . Fletcher . Ira . Robbins . Tony Fletcher . Die Warzau . . . 1991 . 191 . August 4, 2020.
  11. Tim . Haslett . Dance Top 25 . . CMJ Network, Inc. . June 1995 . 22 . 48 . August 4, 2020.
  12. McLaughlin . Megan . CMJ Radio Top 150 . CMJ New Music Report . 17 April 1995 . 42 . 423 . 7–8 . 27 November 2021 . College Media, Inc. . Great Neck, NY . 0890-0795.
  13. Engine . Engine (Die Warzau album) . . 1995 . booklet . . New York City/Chicago, Illinois.