Details

Track Listing 1. What About Us? 2. Stigmata 3. Land of Rape and Honey, The 4. Thieves 5. So What - (Live) 6. N.W.O. 7. Just One Fix 8. Jesus Built My Hotrod 9. Reload 12" 10. Lay Lady Lay 11. Supermanic Soul 12. Bad Blood 13. Supernaut
| Details | | Producer: | Hermes Pan, Hypo Luxa | | Distributor: | WEA (Distributor) | | Recording Type: | Mixed | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | n/a |
Album Notes Ministry: Alain Jourgensen (vocals, guitar, organ, programming); Paul Barker (bass, programming). Additional personnel includes: Gibby Haynes, Ty Coon (vocals); Louis Svitek (acoustic guitar); Mike Scaccia (guitar); Duane Buford (keyboards); William Rieflin (drums, background vocals); Rey Washam, Jeff Ward, Max Brody (drums); Michael Balch (programming); Joe Kelly (background vocals). Engineers include: Jeff Newell, Paul Manno, Ministry. Additional personnel: Al Jourgensen (vocals, guitars, slide guitar, programming); Ty Coon, Gibby Haynes (vocals); Mike Scaccia, Louis Svitek (guitar); Duane Buford (keyboards); Paul Barker (bass guitar, programming); Max Brody (drums, programming); William Rieflin (drums, background vocals); Rey Washam, Jeff Ward (drums); Michael Balch (programming). Presenting tracks dating back to1988, when Ministry mastermind Al Jourgensen decided to get hyper-aggressive with his increasingly metal-tinged industrial music, GREATEST FITS is an aptly named collection, since it offers a sampling of the band's fiercest work (up to 2001). Although the classic transitional albums THE LAND OF RAPE AND HONEY and THE MIND IS A TERRIBLE THING TO TASTE, where Jourgensen abandoned his early-'80s dance-pop sound, are underrepresented, there's no shortage of distorted vocals, crushingly heavy guitar riffs, and machine-gun-like beats here. With the exception of the scathing opening track, "What About Us?," (featured in the film A.I.), GREATEST FITS moves in (roughly) chronological order. "Stigmata" is a vitriolic primal scream synced up to keyboards, while "Thieves" focuses its anger to laser-like precision, a surgical strike powered by relentless guitars. Other highlights include the gleefully absurd "Jesus Built My Hotrod" (with vocals by Butthole Surfer Gibby Haynes), a pummeling 12" mix of "Reload," and a potent cover of Black Sabbath's "Supernaut." Although, GREATEST FITS makes for a solid introduction to latter-day Ministry, those seeking more should look to the group's mid-to-late '80s albums to discover the sound that inspired Nine Inch Nails and numerous other industrial acts.
Industry Reviews 7 out of 10 - ...Like disgustingly expensive disaster movies, it's all big dumb fun... NME (07/28/2001)
4 stars out of 5 - ...[They] took heavy metal to boot camp, returning it lean, disciplined and well-drilled in the pummelling repetition of industrial dance music... Q (08/01/2001)
|
|