Killing Joke Album: «Inside Extremities Mixes Rehearsals & Live»

- Customers rating: (4.3 of 5)
- Title:Inside Extremities Mixes Rehearsals & Live
- Release date:2007-04-03
- Type:Audio CD
- Label:Candlelight
- UPC:803341227514
- 1 - 1Money (Instrumental)
- 1 - 2Money Is Not Our God (Hideous Remix)
- 1 - 3Intravenous, Pt 1
- 1 - 4 Money Is Not Our Godimg 5:17
- 1 - 5Slipstream (Intro & Vocal)
- 1 - 6Slipstream
- 1 - 7Struggle [Instrumental]
- 1 - 8Struggle (Vocal 2)
- 1 - 9Struggle (Vocal 3)
- 1 - 10Struggle (Vocal 3)
- 1 - 11Intravenous, Pt 2
- 1 - 12The Fanatic
- 2 - 1Inside the Terminate Mound
- 2 - 2 Money Is Not Our Godimg 5:17
- 2 - 3Extremities
- 2 - 4 Complicationsimg 3:10
- 2 - 5The Beautiful Dead
- 2 - 6 Changeimg 3:58
- 2 - 7Frenzy
- 2 - 8 Age of Greedimg 7:43
- 2 - 9 Requiemimg 3:54
- 2 - 10 The Waitimg 4:35
- 2 - 11Intravenous
- 2 - 12 Wardanceimg 3:37
- 2 - 13 Love Like Bloodimg 6:26
- 2 - 14 Pssycheimg 4:52
Killing Joke's 1991 "Extremities, Dirt & Various Repressed Emotions", out of print for years with little likelihood of coming back, has always been a fan favorite. Pretty much doomed from the start, "Extremities..." paired Killing Joke's core of vocalist Jaz Coleman and guitarist Geordie with industrial legend Martin Atkins. Another strong personality alongside Coleman did pretty much result in disaster, with Coleman disbanding Killing Joke (for a few years at least) and Atkins taking the rest to form his short-lived Murder, Inc. project. "Inside Extremities: Mixes, Rehearsals and Live" chronicles this band at their beginning and their end.
The first disc is drawn primarily from the sessions for "Extremities...", with one live track (previously unreleased "The Fanatic") tacked on the end. This disc is something only a fan could love-- from false starts ("Struggle") and warbled demos ("Slipstream") to instrumental demos, this is really not something your casual fan is going to enjoy. Hearing these songs embryonic can occasionally be revealing, but by and large it's nothing I can see myself returning to. The previously unreleased song, "The Fanatic", is a sludgy, gloomy sort of piece that would not have been out of place on the "Extremities" record. It's decent enough, but nothing I'm jumping out of my seat about.
The second disc is a live show from 1991 towards the end of the "Extremities..." touring. The material is about half from that record and about half from the rest of the band's catalog, with a particular emphasis on their first album (six songs are either from there or b-sides). And this is where the real value in this set is-- the performance is tense and energetic, starting with the slow grind of "Inside the Termite Mound" before kicking into overdrive and climaxing without a powerful reading of "Frenzy". Along the way, "Change", "Money Is Not Our God", "Age of Greed" and others get fantastic readings culiminating with encore "Pssyche"-- full of bouncing, screaming energy, with Coleman a man possessed (the sound of the Earth vomiting, even).
Bottom line, the demos and the like are interesting, but not something you'll come back, the live set, however is a blast. Recommended for fans of the band.
I saw them live in Dallas in Jan of 1991 and this brings back memories. I like buying live music and bootleg CD's and even though it is released under KJ's approval, its basically a bootleg and a very good one at that.
The recording is excellent and the sound mix is very good as well, so the live side gets A+
the studio side is also excellent as far as recording goes and if you are a fan of KJ, this is certainly fun tho hear how the songs evolved to what they were on the official release
this is a must have for all Killing Joke fans
the contents, too, make it worth the money and time and emotions spent: an investment actually.
a poetic, emotional investment to incindiary art that doesn't TALK (about) politics, but is (IS) such...
the fall of because?
'the extinction of about.....'


