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Destroy Erase Improve

 
Album Review: Destroy Erase Improve

  • Artist: Meshuggah
  • Rating: StarStarStarStar
  • Release Date: July 25, 1995
  • Type: Lyrics are included with the album
  • Genre: Rock

Review

With Destroy Erase Improve, Meshuggah shattered any preconceived notions about what death, thrash, and prog metal could be with one astoundingly accurate, calculated blow. The Swedish outfit managed to surpass their startlingly original, if relatively immature debut, Contradictions Collapse, with a record so pure in concept and execution, it borders on genius. Lyrical themes visualize the integration of machines with organisms as humanity's next logical evolutionary step, while the music backing it up is mind-bogglingly technical, polyrhythmic math metal -- the work of highly skilled men with powerful instruments. While the idea looks unwieldy on paper, Meshuggah handles it with a balance of raw guts and sheer brainpower, weaving hardcore-style shouts amongst deceptively (and deviously) simple staccato guitar riffs and insanely precise drumming -- often with all three components acting in different time signatures. Guitarist Fredrik Thordendal adds an element of weirdness with Allan Holdsworth-style neo-jazz fusion leads that serve as melodic oases amidst the jackhammer rhythms. While such bold, challenging arrangements could result in a wank-fest or, even worse, a chaotic mess, Meshuggah carefully synchronizes their bludgeoning instrumentation, embracing minimalism without excess and playing to the power of the song so the listener isn't neck-deep in over-composed indulgences. As a result, "Future Breed Machine," "Suffer in Truth," and "Soul Burn" are mind-bogglingly profound, integrating body, mind, and soul into a violently precise attack, the point being that change can be extraordinarily difficult -- if not maddening -- but the results are transcendent. While industrial metallers Fear Factory have attempted to tackle similar themes, Meshuggah outclasses them on all fronts, proved by the stunning brilliance of Destroy Erase Improve. The album is a bona fide '90s classic, a record boasting ideas so well-balanced -- natural yet clinical, guttural yet intelligent, twisted yet concise -- it muscled simplistic subgenres out of the way and confidently pointed toward the future of metal. ~ John Serba, All Music Guide

Tracks

Track TitleComposersPerformersTime
Future Breed Machine (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (5:48)
Beneath (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (5:38)
Soul Burn (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (5:17)
Transfixion (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal, Mårten Hagström Meshuggah (3:33)
Vanished (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (5:04)
Acrid Placidity Mårten Hagström Meshuggah (3:16)
Inside What's Within Behind (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Jens Kidman, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (4:30)
Terminal Illusions (Lyrics) Jens Kidman, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (3:47)
Suffer in Truth (Lyrics) Jens Kidman Meshuggah (4:20)
Sublevels (Lyrics) Tomas Haake, Fredrik Thordendal Meshuggah (5:14)

Credits

Meshuggah (Main Performer)
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Wikipedia: Destroy Erase Improve
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Destroy Erase Improve
Studio album by Meshuggah
Released July 25, 1995
Recorded Feb, 1995 Soundfront Studios, Uppsala, Sweden
Genre Extreme metal, groove metal, progressive metal, avant-garde metal
Length 46:31
Label Nuclear Blast
Producer Daniel Bergstrand
Meshuggah
Professional reviews
Meshuggah chronology
Selfcaged
(1995)
Destroy Erase Improve
(1995)
The True Human Design
(1997)

Destroy Erase Improve is the second full-length studio album by Swedish metal band, Meshuggah. It was released on July 25, 1995 by Nuclear Blast. There also is a European jewelcase version with its details unknown. There was also a promo version of the album in white cardboard casing, and the disc has a picture of a brain. It says "promo 121", as well as the regular production number.

Destroy Erase Improve was groundbreaking[citation needed] in its use of polyrhythm and off-time thrash beats, and established these elements as instantly recognizable trademarks[citation needed] of Meshuggah's music. Some jazz fusion elements are present in some songs such as "Future Breed Machine", "Acrid Placidity", "Vanished" and "Sublevels". Meshuggah would later develop these qualities, abandoning much melody on 1998's Chaosphere and introducing heavier, faster songs.

Contents

Track listing

# Title Lyrics Music Length
1. "Future Breed Machine"   Haake Thordendal 5:48
2. "Beneath"   Haake Thordendal 5:07
3. "Soul Burn"   Haake Thordendal, Haake 5:17
4. "Transfixion"   Haake Hagström, Thordendal 3:33
5. "Vanished"   Haake Thordendal 5:04
6. "Acrid Placidity"   (Instrumental) Hagström 3:15
7. "Inside What's Within Behind"   Haake Thordendal, Kidman 4:30
8. "Terminal Illusions"   Kidman Thordendal 3:47
9. "Suffer in Truth"   Kidman Kidman 4:19
10. "Sublevels"   Haake Thordendal 5:14
11. "Humiliative" (Japanese bonus track) Haake Kidman, Thordendal  
12. "Ritual" (Japanese bonus track) Kidman Kidman  
13. "Gods of Rapture" (live, Japanese bonus track) Haake Thordendal  

Personnel

Band

Other

  • Recorded and mixed at Soundfront Studios, Uppsala, Sweden, February 1995
  • Mixed by Danne Bergstrand and Fredrik Thordendal
  • Engineered by Danne Bergstrand
  • Produced by Meshuggah and Danne Bergstrand
  • Mastered at Cutting Room, Stockholm by Peter In De Betou
  • Cover design by Meshuggah
  • Cover artwork by Stefan Gillbald

 
 

 

Copyrights:

Album Review. Copyright © 2009 All Media Guide, LLC. Content provided by All Music Guide ®, a trademark of All Media Guide, LLC. All rights reserved.  Read more
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