Antipop

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  • Artist: Primus
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: October 19, 1999
  • Total Time: 63:09
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

On the surface, all Primus albums seem to sound alike, especially to outsiders (read: anyone who either respects the group but doesn't get them, or the minority that actively hates them, particularly Les Claypool's demented comedy schtick). That's not really true, even if the same basic elements remain in place each time, no matter who is in the band. And Primus has never tried to shake things up as much as they do on their seventh album, AntiPop. Primus enlisted a dizzying array of collaborators -- Stewart Copeland, Tom Waits, James Hetfield, Tom Morello, Jim Martin, Matt Stone, Martina, and Fred Durst among them -- all in the purpose of challenging themselves to find different dimensions to its music. Some play or sing, some produce, but it's amazing how much each individual guest changes the tone of the music. It's not always for the best, but it keeps things fresh, if not necessarily coherent. Though there are a couple of good lyrics here, this is by and large an album about music; it would have been even better if it had been primarily an instrumental album, actually, since the vocals get in the way occasionally. By now, the popping bass, dissonance, and angular riffs don't seem like schtick, but the lyrics and singing do. Still, it's possible to get past those and hear AntiPop as one of Primus' most ambitious and best efforts. No, they're not always successful, but no two songs sound the same, and some collaborations are among the best things Primus has ever recorded. AntiPop is dense music that isn't afraid to be goofy or fall on its face -- and even if it's not to your particular taste, it's hard not to respect this. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine, Rovi

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Antipop
Studio album by Primus
Released October 19, 1999
Recorded 1999
Genre Alternative metal, funk rock
Length 1:03:15
Label Interscope, Prawn Song
Producer Primus, Tom Morello, Stewart Copeland, Tom Waits, Matt Stone, Fred Durst
Primus chronology
Brown Album
(1997)
Antipop
(1999)
Green Naugahyde
(2011)
Singles from Antipop
  1. "Lacquer Head"
    Released: 1999
  2. "Electric Uncle Sam"
    Released: 1999

Antipop is the sixth studio album by alternative rock band Primus, released on October 19, 1999 before their hiatus in 2000-2003. It is also the last album with drummer Bryan Mantia.

Contents

Production

The album features several well-known guest musicians and producers, including Tom Waits, James Hetfield (of Metallica), Jim Martin (former member of Faith No More), Fred Durst (of Limp Bizkit), and Tom Morello (of Rage Against the Machine).

Music and lyrics

While producing the song "Lacquer Head", Durst encouraged Primus to return to the more aggressive sound of their earlier albums for Antipop.[1]

Track listing

No. Title Featuring Length
1. "Intro"   Tom Waits 0:17
2. "Electric Uncle Sam"   Tom Morello 2:55
3. "Natural Joe"   Matt Stone (producer) 4:12
4. "Lacquer Head"   Fred Durst (producer) 3:49
5. "The Antipop"     5:33
6. "Eclectic Electric"   James Hetfield and Jim Martin 8:34
7. "Greet the Sacred Cow"     5:10
8. "Mama Didn't Raise No Fool"   Tom Morello 5:04
9. "Dirty Drowning Man"   Martina Topley-Bird, Stewart Copeland (producer) 4:48
10. "Ballad of Bodacious"     3:28
11. "Power Mad"   Tom Morello 3:42
12. "The Final Voyage of the Liquid Sky"     5:39
13. "Coattails of a Dead Man"   Martina Topley-Bird and Tom Waits 9:57
  • There is a hidden track 6:16 minutes into track 13, a studio version of "The Heckler" from Suck on This.
  • On track 5, around 38 seconds into the track the phrase "They're Here", from Poltergeist, can be heard right before the music starts playing.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
Source Rating
Allmusic 4/5 stars[2]

In his review for Allmusic, Stephen Thomas Erlewine described the album as "one of Primus' most ambitious and best efforts", noting that "some collaborations are among the best things Primus has ever recorded". Towards the end of the piece, Erlewine sums up his views by admitting that "they're not always successful, but no two songs sound the same [...] and even if it's not to your particular taste, it's hard not to respect this."[2]

Personnel

Guest Musicians

Guest Producers

Charts

Album

Year Chart Position
1999 The Billboard 200 #44

References

  1. ^ Devenish, Colin (2000). Limp Bizkit. St. Martin's. pp. 159–60. ISBN 0-312-26349-X. 
  2. ^ a b Antipop review at allmusic.

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Mentioned in

The Isolationist (Electronica Band, '90s)
Antipop Consortium (Jazz Band, '90s, 2000s)
Ghost Cauldron (Rap Band, 2000s)
Shopping Carts Crashing (2001 Album by Antipop Consortium)
The Ends Against the Middle (2001 Album by Antipop Consortium)