Faith No More "The Real Thing" (1989) - got it
Anyone who knows me well, knows that I am a big fan of Mike Patton and
of Faith No More, so I have listened to this album more times than I can
remember... but as usual, for completism I listened to it again today.
It is slightly disappointing to me that this is the only FNM or Patton
album in the 1001 albums, especially considering the breadth of Patton's
oeuvre, and the fact that FNM's somewhat weirder "Angel Dust" album has
been cited as an influence by many bands, named as album of the year by
a few magazines, and was even cited as "the most influential album of
all time" by Kerang magazine. That's not to take anything away from
TRT, I'm just saying that it makes me wonder what other great albums from other artists might
have been omitted from the list because they weren't quite as
commercially successful.
FNM had parted company with vocalist Chuck Mosley after 2 albums, due to
his volatile personality, limited vocal ability and his various addictions. They recruited
fresh-faced 20 year old Mike Patton from the eclectic band Mr Bungle.
Patton came with a multi-octave vocal range, and a demented, yet
somewhat literary approach to his lyric-writing.
The first two albums with Mosely had been a mix of funky post-punk, new
wavey synths, metal riffs, rap, punky vocals, and pop hooks (largely
thanks to keyboardist Roddy Bottum). "The Real Thing" seemed to be a
case of the band looking to redefine themselves after Mosely's departure
by narrowing their focus. The album still has its pop hooks in songs
such as "Falling to Pieces" or "Underwater Love", but the album had much
more of a funk/metal focus, via the collision of Bill Gould's
percussive funky bass, Mike Bordin's tribal beats, and Jim Martin's
chugging metal guitar riffs.
The album goes into propulsive pop-metal territory with opener "From out
of nowhere", and straight-ahead metal with "Surprise! You're dead" and "The morning after". Most of the other songs mix things up a bit
more, with the title track features an almost dub-reggae drum beat interspersed with rock explosions, and
"Zombie Eaters" starts with a series of very pretty acoustic guitar
parts. "Woodpecker from Mars" is a 'middle-eastern-meets-metal'
instrumental track that shows that FNM could have easily been a force to
be reckoned with without Patton or Mosely (or Courtney Love, who was
their vocalist at some early shows).
"Epic" was the big hit from the album, with its combination of metal,
funk and rap unfortunately inspiring the nu-metal craze that would
follow. The album ends with a further venture into metal territory in the shape of a cover of Black
Sabbath's "War Pigs" and then the musical left turn of sleazy loungey jazz-pop track "Edge of the
World".
This is probably my least favourite album that FNM did with Patton, but it's still one hell of an album.
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