Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Apr 23, 2001 · Theories of operation and pre-production enabled by Fear Factory and Rhys Fulber on site at "The Fear Factory Divison", central Los Angeles. Independent pre-production engineered at Studio Dee, Glendale, CA. Identifiers: Barcode: 0 16861 85615 1 Matrix / Runout (Variant 1 to 3): manufactured by optimal media production A145990-01

  2. Digimortal is the fourth studio album by American heavy metal band Fear Factory, released on April 24, 2001, by Roadrunner Records. It is a concept album and the final part of a trilogy that started with Demanufacture and continued with Obsolete. It was the band's last album before officially breaking up in March 2002, though they reformed in 2003.

  3. Dec 16, 2006 · Fear Factory's fourth album, Digimortal, finds the hirsute Los Angeles industrial-metal band happening on a theme that they've been alluding to throughout their existence. Digimortal is a concept album about the synthesis of man and machine, its 11 tracks serving up a mish-mash of screaming electronics and punishing low-end death-metal dynamics.

    • (212)
  4. Listen to your favorite songs from Digimortal (Special Edition) by Fear Factory Now. ... Back the Fuck Up (feat. B-Real) E. Fear Factory feat. B-Real. 03:09. 9. Byte ...

  5. music.youtube.com › browse › MPREb_ZroDtqAlAaJDigimortal - YouTube Music

    Digimortal is the fourth studio album by American heavy metal band Fear Factory, released on April 24, 2001, by Roadrunner Records. It is a concept album and the final part of a trilogy that started with Demanufacture and continued with Obsolete. It was the band's last album before officially breaking up in March 2002, though they reformed in 2003.

  6. The production is the best of Fear Factory’s career, minus the half-assed delivery of both Bell and Cazares. The tracks are crisp and full of futuristic ambience. Yes, Back the Fuck Up does feature B-Real of Cypress Hill as well as awkward rap vocals by Bell, but thankfully Digimortal doesn’t drag on too long.

  7. Horrible lyrics, Burt sounds ridiculous. I'm not a fan of bad, out of tune/time double track vocals, which B Real is king of. The verses of Burt wouldn't have been so bad if he was more chill and rappy, like on the remix of Body Hammer. The music isn't bad though.