Disco de White Zombie: «Astro Creep: 2000 -- Songs of Love, Destruction, and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head»

- Valoración de usuarios: (4.7 de 5)
- Título:Astro Creep: 2000 -- Songs of Love, Destruction, and Other Synthetic Delusions of the Electric Head
- Fecha de publicación:1995-04-11
- Tipo:Audio CD
- Sello discográfico:Geffen Records
- UPC:720642480625
- 1 Electric Head Pt. 1 (The Agony)img 4:55
- 2 Super-Charger Heavenimg 3:41
- 3 Real Solution #9img 5:19
- 4 Creature Of The Wheelimg 3:26
- 5Electric Head Pt. 2 (The Ecstasy)
- 6 Grease Paint And Monkey Brainsimg 3:50
- 7 I, Zombieimg 3:27
- 8 More Human Than Humanimg 4:16
- 9 El Phantasmo And The Chicken-Run Blast-O-Ramaimg 4:14
- 10 Blur The Technicolorimg 3:49
- 11 Blood, Milk And Skyimg 11:21
Anyone in the 19-24 age group will definitely remember a time when you couldn't walk down the Middle School/High school without at least seeing someone wearing an Asto Creep 2000 t-shirt with one of Rob Zombie's twisted artwork on it...It almost brings a tear to my eye remembering the days of memories past.
White Zombie had everything going for them. They were a band that pretty much threw the whole Horror Movie/50's Dragster magazine/tattoo-parlor-come-to-life image in everyone's face, and guess what? Everyone loved it! "More Human than Human" did not help drive "Astro Creep:2000" to double platinum status (I'm pretty sure it's gone at least triple since then) all on its own. White Zombie was just a kooky camp of kids that lived for cheap thrills, horror movies(you're going to hear a lot of this in the review), and whatnots. Their music was a genius combo of Sludge Metal, Doom, some semi-Thrash influences with a flavor of Disco's up-beat Pop sensibilities. Add into the factor of the most brilliant(and sometimes heavy) usage of Sci-Fi and Horror movie audio samples and you definitely have a new Frankenstein-like monster brings a new definition to the saying 'WHAM! BAM! Thank-you mam!'
Rob Zombie was at the top of his game as far as writing lyrics and arranging the music to fit his voice(he lost this with his sub-par solo material, which disappointed me as a long-time WZ fan). He knows his limits and doesn't see the usage to over-step those boundaries. Next to Rob's genius is bassist Sean Yseult. Any male fan of White Zombie knows how much of a mythical goddess Sean Yseult, golden curly locks and all, was in our early days of puberty, but none the less a rather excellent bassist and laying down a thick wall of extra 'crunch' to WZ's sound. Drummer John Tempesta(of ex-Testament fame for us Metal heads) and guitarist Jay Noel Yuenger also in turn throw in their bit of the help in helping "Astro Creep:2000" become one helluva album. Must I not forget the Horror/Sci-Fi movie samples? If I did I would be missing-out on a huge part of "AC2K". The samples were just brilliant in giving is that fun edges to it, in that you can easily take this as a good party album and nobody would notice the difference.
"Astro Creep:2000"'s track list is like a Halloween mixed bag of treats for us. Few of them the average music fan knows, or has heard on the radio, the instant classic that is adored by everyone. Some are our personal favorites, and then there are the couples that stick-out but later grow on us over time.
1. Electric Head Prt.1 (The Agony) - Starts out with a warped old movie sample, going into some reverse organ piano playing and then some doomy-sounds before hitting that main sludge-like verse riff that just gets you into the head banging spirit.
2. Super-Charger Heaven - OH YES! This is definitely a Hot Rod racing anthem. I can just imagine racing a rust-covered, Army olive green 69' GTO with 450 HP engine, pumping-out green flames from the exhaust. Definitely faster in the sense of adding a dash of 50's Rockabilly tones to it. The little Latin rite of excommunication-sample before the last verse is a little tweak that will have you screaming "Devil Man running in my head!" all day long.
3. Real Solution #9 - "And I remember her saying I'm already dead!" Ooooooo! How creepy! Definitely laying-down the mood for this track in a slowed down mid-tempo song. It's almost on automatic and the lyric "Who will survive and what will be left of them?" taken from the infamous Texas Chainsaw Massacre movie poster.
4. Creature of the Wheel - Ugh! Sludge, and more sludge! More or less a continuation of "Real Solution #9" but even ten times more heavily. Adding even more weirdness is another scary Hellfire & Brimstone preaching sample that has 'And oh brothers and sisters, I ask you to look at him.' There's also some weird orchestration noise in the background, but that may be due to guitar feedback.
5. Electric Head Pt. 2 (The Ecstasy) - "I just said 'Up yours baby". With an intro like that, it brings up into the stomp-heavy riff fest of the second part of the 'Electric Head' duo. Not as fast as the first, but still does the job in making one want to head bang.
6. Grease Paint And Monkey Brains - Oh man. I don't care what was creepier before this song, but that twisted Circus carnival noise just does it for me. Nothing is as scary sounding as Carnival noise. This one is a snoozer with Rob's whispering
7. I Zombie - Starts off with a church choir quickly turned into horrifying female screaming then BAM! Downward-spiraling chainsaw guitars and Rob's voice even more downward descending. A great wake-up after the snooze-fest of 'Grease Paint and Monkey Brains'
8. More Human Than Human - As I said previously "Astro Creep:2000" did not exactly go double-platinum on its own. The infamous MTV Buzz Clip(god I'm really showing my age now) helped make this song probably the most recognizable singles from the 90's, amidst the rest of the mainstream crud (remember, this was released a year after Kurt Cobain bit the bullet) that was going on. A funky-little bass line by Sean Yseult, some techno influence and Rob's rap-like Disco edge made this song a fun anthem for the Replicants from the movie 'Blade Runner'(Watch the movie and you'll find out what I mean)...A lot better than most of the
9. El Phantasmo & the Chicken-Run Blast-O-Rama - What a killer song title! I must admit whenever I bought my first copy back in '95, I just remember looking at that particular song title and thinking "Now that's the key to selling albums...great songs titles". This song while having a good riff at the beginning quickly turns into one of the more groove-style down tuning (probably a drop-C)...the song continues with really creepy Horror Movie samples that sound like they came from the 'Night of The Living Dead' or a really obscure 70's Grind house flick.
10. Blur the Technicolor - Oh yes! Definitely my favorite. The intro has some interesting tribal samples(could have easily came from 'Cannibal Holocaust'...Rob has expressed quite a love that that movie). The groove riffs really exceed where they sounded limited in the previous song, plus with a more warped sound to them and not to forget Rob's excellent showcase of quasi-hard rhyming.
11. Blood Milk and Sky - Back into the sludge we are! Starts off with an Indian chant played backwards, this song is given a dream-like atmosphere. Rob just gargles, mutters, and deeply moans the lyrics...really brooding and drone-like. There are some really nice female sing-along vocals during the chorus that just make it even more mysterious.
And there you have it. For those who missed out on it whenever it was first released...shame on you. Shame, shame, FOR SHAME on you poor pitiful souls. You have not lived, until you have experienced 'Astro Creep:2000'. By far one of the most entertaining and original Mainstream Metal albums of the 90's. This album deserves to be in every music collection.
Recently, while going over some records i havent listened to in quite some time i gave spin to "Astro Creep" again. Not that i expected it to be otherwise but i loved it just as I did almost a decade ago when i first heard it. White Zombie really reached their peak with this album and in doing so they created one of the top-10 metal albums of all time.
Sure, a lot of water has flown in the river since then, loads of crossover bands released their music and even more metal bands tried, most unsuccessfully, to copy Zombie's music. Even when Rob Zombie went solo he didn't come close to reaching the stunning metal assault of this album.
White Zombie were incredibly daft when they released Astro Creep. Incorporating electronic beats and effects, some of which were downright techno was not exactly what the average metalhead was willing to swallow. But the blending of all the elements in a masterful way produced a mix that was instantaneously addictive. It got you banging along without a second thought. Actually, if this album wont get you moving i hardly see what will.
The reason i consider this to be among the very best metal releases of all time is because of its boldness, its ferocity and its surreal grooviness. It's no accident that ten years later it sounds as fresh as ever and were it to be released today it would still make for a massive and a very influential rock album.
Sometimes i think that White Zombie's masterpiece was in a way "lost" in the wave of grunge releases back then, especially when i consider that yes it didnt sell bad, but at the same time it still remains undiscovered -mysteriously so- by quite some music buffs even among the metal scene itself.
A friend of mine claims about this album that it is the definitive album to listen to while driving. She's probably right, allthough i could think many instances where Astro CReep would be a perfect fit.
An adrenaline charge of the highest order if i ever heard one.
Boy, if the only "metal" you kiddies have been exposed to is that whiny HIM junk, I pity you.
THIS is a REAL industrial-metal album. If that's what you want, this is one you're gonna want.
The pounding, heart-pumping drive of "Supercharger Heaven". (DEVILMAN, DEVILMAN!)
The riff-driven "Creature Of The Wheel".
The ominous-sounding opener, "Electric Head: The Agony (Pt. 1)".
The hit, "More Human Than Human".
And so many more.
Also, the fun, B-movie horror theme (artwork, samples, lyrics) that has come to be associated with Rob Zombie's work is clearly present, and it's campy and really adds to the album.
This is a loud, proud 90's staple. Check it out if you wanna scare all the Yellowcard fans.
When I first heard White Zombie I think the first words that came to my lips were "what the f*** is this?" because honestly I was scared, and kinda creeped out by the first track on this album, "Electric Head Pt. 1 (The Agony)." At first you think "OK, I'm getting some kinda weird-ass, nonsensical band. But what you will discover is that White Zombie is kinda like metal's "The Jesus Lizard," in a strange, slightly more normal way. But whatever you think, White Zombie's "Astro Creep: 2000" is an extremely refreshing and wonderfully disturbing trip into insanity...
The title of the album is actually alot more obtuse (as you probably know), but that kinda reflects White Zombie's attitude towards excess and material wealth in modern society. Basically, they don't agree with it at all. Of course it goes further than that, even to absurd lengths with song names like "Grease Paint and Monkey Brains," which is well, a pretty odd, creepy song that'll have you wondering if you're OK in the head. Despite White Zombie's over-the-top and weird-ass covering, they are a really interesting band capable of diverse, original material, which is revealed through this unique, incredible album.
If this is your first White Zombie album, you are guaranteed to be creeped out and confused after track 1. But then "Super-Charger Heaven," kicks in, which is one amazingly killer song! It starts off with a brief, weird voiceover, and then kicks into some awesome rocking metal riffs! It's undoubtedly the best song on the album: the guitars crunch and whine and the drums smash through the blazing riffs. And Rob sounds great, almost "sing-mumbling" his words during the verses and going into all out Metal shouting during the choruses. But that isn't all. "Creature Of The Wheel," is the heaviest song with a pounding riff and is basically the Zombie doing all out Metal. And Rob comes through very strongly on this song, giving it a heavy/creepy sound. "El Phantasmo and the Chicken-Run Blast-o-Rama," while having the weirdest title, is a pretty heavy, well constructed song that has nothing to do with chicken blasting whatsoever (sorry for those of you who expected it). Possibly the most dynamic vocal arrangements are on this song, where Rob's voice are both the vocals as well as a backing instrument in certain areas.
The philosophy behind White Zombie seems to be this: to create mixed emotions and keeping the listener intrigued with its creepy songs and interpolating them with funky/metal/techno songs. A really clever system if you think about it 'cos you'll NEVER get bored or fail to be surprised. The album is an emotional cauldron really and by the end of it you'll feel like you've been to, well, hell and back I guess. It's creepy, freaky, heavy, disturbing, complex, insane, interesting - no doubt about that!
So all in all if you're looking for an album that's WAY out there but still stays safely within the confines of Metal, White Zombie's "Astro Creep: 2000" will definitely be your slice of cake. Or maybe monkey brains?
AstroCreep 2000 is by far the best White Zombie album and even for that matter one of the best cds of all time. It is great for guys (and girls for that matter) who like bands such as the new Rob Zombie (break off from White Zombie), HED PE, KoRn, Metallica, and anything else that is on the edge of hardcore. With a sense of heavy music and lyrics yet a touch quiet in recording, this cd provides for a worthy album. It contains some of White Zombies best songs including More Human Than Human and more. 5 stars is a definate!

