Adios | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 20, 1999 | |||
Recorded | 1998 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 49:54 | |||
Label | Wax Trax!/TVT | |||
Producer | Sascha Konietzko, Tim Skold, Chris Shepard | |||
KMFDM chronology | ||||
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Adios is the tenth studio album released by German industrial band KMFDM. The album was originally conceived as the group's parting shot to its longtime record label, Wax Trax! Records, [2] but it ended up also signaling the break-up of KMFDM itself until the band reformed in 2002. Recorded in Seattle, Washington, this was the last album to feature En Esch and Günter Schulz, who both went on to form Slick Idiot. Following the break-up, founding member Sascha Konietzko created the band MDFMK, before reforming KMFDM in 2002 without Esch or Schulz.
The album was released on April 20, 1999, the same date the Columbine High School massacre took place. Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold, the two perpetrators of the massacre, were both avid KMFDM fans. Eric Harris noted the coincidence of the album's title and release date in his journal. [3]
A digitally remastered reissue of Adios was released on May 8, 2007, along with the digitally remastered reissue of Symbols .
The 1990s core of KMFDM (Sascha Konietzko, En Esch, and Günter Schulz) had reunited for the previous album, Symbols , and toured together along with fellow German industrial metal band Rammstein in 1997. [4] The core line-up was joined on tour by John DeSalvo, Nivek Ogre, and Tim Sköld. [4] Adios was written almost entirely by Konietzko and Sköld, who became an official member for the band's final release with Wax Trax! Records. Schulz, who had done significant writing for the previous five albums, acted only as a studio musician, while Esch helped write only a pair of songs. It was originally intended to be released in 1998 but was pushed back by the record label as the "rarities" compilation album AGOGO was offered up instead. KMFDM had already disbanded by the time of its eventual release.
Adios was released on April 20, 1999, which coincided with the Columbine High School massacre and Adolf Hitler's birthday. [5] Although Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold were big fans of the group, KMFDM released an official statement denouncing the violence, sympathizing with the victims and their families, and explaining that the band had no Nazi affiliations whatsoever. [6]
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [1] |
CMJ New Music Report | positive [7] |
PopMatters | [8] |
Release | [9] |
Adios received positive reviews. Gina Boldman of AllMusic said of the album: "KMFDM sound smoother yet maintain their emotive mayhem in all its glory." [1] The staff of PopMatters called Adios a "superb mix of the anarchaic fueled fury of the 80’s and a full awareness of what their genre has become." [8] Remarking on the band's then-disbandment, they further stated that KMFDM "left us with something to remember them by." [8] Amy Sciarretto of CMJ New Music Report said that Adios "continues in the group's grand tradition of techno-informed, industrial-fueled beat manipulation". She said the beats, guitars, and female vocals formed "an electrifying chemistry", concluding, "Adios is a satisfying sendoff for KMFDM and its legion of fans." [7]
All tracks are written by Sascha Konietzko and Tim Skold, unless otherwise noted
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Adios" | 3:56 |
2. | "Sycophant" | 5:13 |
3. | "D.I.Y." | 4:51 |
4. | "Today" | 4:57 |
5. | "Witness" (Konietzko, Skold, Nina Hagen) | 7:23 |
6. | "R.U.OK?" | 4:46 |
7. | "That's All" (Konietzko, Skold, Nivek Ogre, En Esch) | 5:08 |
8. | "Full Worm Garden" (Konietzko, Skold, Ogre, William Rieflin) | 5:03 |
9. | "Rubicon" | 3:44 |
10. | "Bereit" (Konietzko, Skold, Esch) | 4:53 |
Total length: | 49:54 |
KMFDM is a multinational industrial rock band from Hamburg led by Sascha Konietzko, who founded the band in 1984 as a performance art project.
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Nicklaus Schandelmaier, is a German musician, better known by his stage name En Esch, and has been a member of the bands KMFDM, Pigface, Slick Idiot, and <PIG>.
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Money is the fifth studio album by German industrial band KMFDM, released in February 1992 by Wax Trax! Records. It was originally intended to be titled Apart, with each of the two core members, Sascha Konietzko and En Esch, recording half an album and combining their work. The album ended up using only Konietzko's half, along with additional songs. It received mixed reviews, but spawned a number of club hits. It went out of print in the late 1990s and was re-released in 2006.
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Günter Schulz is a German musician, songwriter and former member of the industrial band KMFDM.
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Sin Sex & Salvation (1994), is an EP released by KMFDM and Raymond Watts. The artist for it is usually listed as KMFDM vs. PIG. It was recently re-released in 2024. Prior to then, none of the songs had ever been re-released in any other format since its initial release, except for "Fuck Me" which appears on a bonus disc entitled 'The Year of the Pig Collection' accompanying the Canadian release of the "Juke Joint Jezebel" Giorgio Moroder mixes maxi-single, and "Secret Skin" which appears on the 'Year of the Pig' 12" four song vinyl pressing containing "Juke Joint Jezebel" as the caveat. Both were released in 1995 and are OOP as well.
"Juke Joint Jezebel" is a song by industrial rock group KMFDM from their 1995 album Nihil. It is KMFDM's most widely known song to date, with around three million copies of the song sold across various releases.
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