Fook (album) explained
Fook is the second studio album by industrial rock supergroup Pigface, released in 1992 on Invisible Records.
Reception
Fook was well received. Jim Harper of Allmusic praised the album strongly, noting that Pigface has a reputation for inconsistency, and saying, "when the mixture works—as it does on Fook—the results can be spectacular.... This is the sound of Pigface at their best, and having a damn good time too."[1]
Personnel
All information from 1992 CD booklet.[2]
Musicians
- Martin Atkins - drums, production, backing vocals (9, 10)
- Chris Connelly - vocals (2, 10), guitar (10)
- William Tucker - guitar (1, 3, 6, 9), programming (3, 5, 7, 9), samples (7, 9), bass (3), keyboards (8)
- Paul Raven - bass (1, 5, 6)
- Andrew Weiss - bass (1, 3, 5, 6–8), programming (6)
- Nivek Ogre - vocals (4, 9), backing vocals (7)
- En Esch - guitar (1, 2, 5, 6, 8), vocals (1, 7, 9), drums (1), programming (1)
- Günter Schulz - guitar (1)
- Mary Byker - vocals (3, 5, 6, 8)
- Barbara Hunter - cello (2)
- Lesley Rankine - vocals (2, 5)
- Fuzz - guitar (5)
- Chris Haskett - guitar (6)
- Matt Schultz - sounds (2, 4)
- Sean Joyce - scratching (4)
- Bella Black - backing vocals (1)
- David Sims - bass (10)
Production
- Producer – Martin Atkins
- Engineers – Mark Walk, Andy Reilly, Lee Popa, Keith Auerbach
- Assistant engineers – Eric Anderson, Andy Levine, Dino Morelli
- Mastering – Jack Skinner
- Artwork – Fred Blue
- Design and layout - Patrick Siemer
Notes and References
- Web site: Fook Review . Harper, Jim . Allmusic. Rovi Corporation.
- Fook . . . Chicago, Illinois . 1992.