Songs of Love and Hate (Godflesh album)

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Songs of Love and Hate
J. K. Broadrick
  • G. C. Green
  • Godflesh chronology
    Selfless
    (1994)
    Songs of Love and Hate
    (1996)
    Love and Hate in Dub
    (1997)

    Songs of Love and Hate is the fourth studio album by English

    hip-hop influence, toning down the industrial and mechanical elements of previous releases. The cover is a photograph of Cancer Alley, Louisiana.[2]

    An accompanying dub-inspired remix album, Love and Hate in Dub, was released in 1997. Both records were reissued by Earache in 2009.[3]

    Music and composition

    The choice to replace Godflesh's signature

    Bryan Mantia stemmed from Justin Broadrick's growing dissatisfaction with the limitation of mechanical percussion.[4] After initially making Songs of Love and Hate exclusively with machines, Broadrick decided that there was a lack of dynamic range and groove.[4] About the search for the proper drummer, Broadrick said, "The aim was to get a drummer who plays like a machine, but we wanted a feeling of movement and motion as opposed to a machine where it’s very, very static."[4]

    Mantia said in 2018 that he was approached by his cousin, who was managing Mr. Bungle at the time, to join the band. Initially, he felt intimidated by Broadrick, calling him "scary," but soon found a common ground for their love of jungle music. A few months after the album's release, Mantia was unable to commit his time in Europe and left the band. He has not been in contact with Broadrock ever since but would love to someday.[5]

    According to

    verse-chorus-verse form.[6][1] On the album's sound, Meier further commented, "The monolithic riffs grind harmoniously as they never have before, with Broadrick's gigantic guitar tone bulging through the speakers with rude, distorted salience while Green's bass guitar grinds with more prominence than one can nearly handle. To make the sounds even more extreme, B. Mantia smashes and hammers his drums with rabid aggression, instilling the sense of anger than no machine can possibly accomplish."[6] Peter Buckley, the author of The Rough Guide to Rock, considered Mantia's drumming as "occasionally funky".[7]

    In 2018, on the tour supporting Godflesh's 2017 album Post Self, the band performed "Gift from Heaven" live.[8] It was quickly dropped from the set for, according to Broadrick, not working in a live setting.[8]

    Critical reception

    Professional ratings
    Review scores
    SourceRating
    AllMusic[6]
    Alternative Press[9]
    Chronicles of Chaos7/10[10]
    Collector's Guide to Heavy Metal5/10[11]
    Vox7/10[12]

    AllMusic critic Jason Birchmeier said that "never before has the group rocked so hard, sounding tighter as a unit and more human than ever before."[6] Alternative Press wrote, "Imagine a confluence between Black Sabbath and Wu-Tang Clan's rhythms."[9] Valerie Potter of Vox called the album "challenging and savagely satisfying".[12] In his Reissue Review, The Quietus' Mark Eglinton, who viewed the album as "accessible", described it as "a fulcrum for Godflesh", further writing that it "stands resolute as a unique snapshot of a shift in the Godflesh trajectory, as well as being their most multi-faceted release."[1] In reviewing a compilation including Songs of Love and Hate, Eric Schneider of AllMusic said the album was arguably Godflesh's most straightforward release.[13]

    Accolades

    Year Publication Country Accolade Rank Ref.
    1996 Terrorizer United Kingdom "Albums of the Year" 2 [14]
    The Wire "Records of the Year" 39 [15]

    Track listing

    No.TitleLength
    1."Wake"4:19
    2."Sterile Prophet"4:18
    3."Circle of Shit"4:53
    4."Hunter"4:39
    5."Gift from Heaven"7:45
    6."Amoral"4:56
    7."Angel Domain"3:55
    8."Kingdom Come"5:34
    9."Time, Death and Wastefulness"6:12
    10."Frail"5:24
    Total length:51:55
    CD-only track
    No.TitleLength
    11."Almost Heaven"5:41
    Total length:57:36

    Personnel

    References

    1. ^ a b c Eglinton, Mark (19 February 2009). "Godflesh – Songs of Love and Hate reissue review". The Quietus. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
    2. ^ Babcock, Jay W. (December 1996). "In Godflesh We Trust". RIP Magazine. Retrieved 8 June 2018.
    3. ^ "Godflesh: 'Songs of Love and Hate'/'Love and Hate in Dub' Out Now in Europe". Blabbermouth.net. 10 February 2009. Retrieved 13 July 2017.
    4. ^ a b c Christopher, Roy. "Godflesh: Uneasy Listening". roychristopher.com. Retrieved 10 February 2018.
    5. ^ NatterNet. "Brain talks about Buckethead, Axl Rose, Primus". YouTube. Retrieved 13 April 2023.
    6. ^ a b c d e Birchmeier, Jason. "Godflesh – Songs of Love and Hate". AllMusic. Retrieved 4 July 2018.
    7. ^ Buckley, Peter (2003). The Rough Guide to Rock. Rough Guides. p. 433.
    8. ^ a b Mudrian, Albert. "Godflesh's Justin Broadrick: 'I Never Feel Comfortable at Any Festival'". Decibel. Retrieved 18 October 2018.
    9. ^
      Alternative Press
      . November 1996. p. 67, cited 19 March 2010
    10. ^ Wasylyk, Adam. "Godflesh – Songs of Love and Hate". Chronicles of Chaos. Retrieved 15 December 2017.
    11. .
    12. ^ a b Potter, Valerie (1 September 1996). "Godflesh – Songs of Love and Hate (Earache)". Vox (71): 101.
    13. ^ Schneider, Eric. "Godflesh – Songs of Love and Hate/Love and Hate in Dub/In All Languages". AllMusic. Retrieved 15 February 2018.
    14. ^ "Terrorizer – Albums of the Year 1996". Terrorizer. Retrieved 16 April 2008.
    15. ^ "The Wire – 1996 Records of the Year". The Wire. Archived from the original on 10 April 2008. Retrieved 16 April 2008.

    External links