Transgression (album)

Last updated

We had some really heavy shit on Transgression that never made it to the album because Burt didn't wanna sing on fast blast beat songs. We had over 20 songs. Burt picked the songs he wanted to write too. I helped create and helped write at least 60% of the vocal hooks and melodies on Archetype. I held his hand during the writing and demo process. I wrote the verse in "Cyberwaste", chorus melodies in Archetype, etc... Only "Bonescraper" was done on the spot in the studio. On Transgression I wasn't allowed to interfere with Burt's writing process. It was Burt and Toby. When I heard the first takes I cringed and thought it was demo stage to still find the melodies etc. They told me it was a done deal and to stay out of it. Transgression, I am NOT proud of at all. It's crap. I produced Archetype. Burt produced Transgression with Toby Wright. That is the truth.

In 2016, Metal Hammer named Transgression as Fear Factory's worst album. [10]

Track listing

All lyrics are written by Burton C. Bell, except where noted; all music is composed by Christian Olde Wolbers and Raymond Herrera, except where noted

Transgression
Fear Factory - Transgression.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedAugust 22, 2005
Recorded2005
Genre
Length56:42
Label Calvin Records
Producer
Fear Factory chronology
Live on the Sunset Strip
(2005)
Transgression
(2005)
Mechanize
(2010)
Alternative cover
Tranzgression.jpg
No.TitleLength
1."540,000 Degrees Fahrenheit"4:28
2."Transgression"4:50
3."Spinal Compression"4:12
4."Contagion"4:39
5."Empty Vision"4:55
6."Echo of My Scream"6:58
7."Supernova"4:32
8."New Promise" (music: Wolbers, Herrera, Mark Morton)5:13
9."I Will Follow" (U2 cover) (lyrics: Bono; music: U2)3:42
10."Millennium" (Killing Joke cover) (lyrics and music: Jaz Coleman, Martin "Youth" Glover, Kevin "Geordie" Walker)5:26
11."Moment of Impact"4:03
Total length:56:45
Exclusive download
No.TitleLength
12."My Grave"5:36
Bonus tracks for Japan
No.TitleLength
12."Empire"3:47
13."Slave Labor" (live)4:05
14."Cyberwaste" (live)3:40
15."Drones" (live)4:57
DVD track listing
No.TitleLength
1."540,000 Degrees Fahrenheit"4:28
2."Transgression"4:50
3."Spinal Compression"4:10
4."Contagion"4:37
5."Empty Vision"4:52
6."Echo of My Scream"6:57
7."Supernova"4:30
8."New Promise"5:12
9."I Will Follow" (U2 cover)3:40
10."Millennium" (Killing Joke cover)5:24
11."Moment of Impact"4:02
12."Transgression" (music video)4:51
13."Spinal Compression" (music video)4:13
14."Moment of Impact" (music video)4:06
15."The Making of Transgression: Violation"5:44
16."The Making of Transgression: Corruption"7:23
17."The Making of Transgression: Contention"7:36

Song meanings

The title "540,000 Degrees Fahrenheit" refers to the heat in the middle of a Thermonuclear weapon explosion. The lyrics go into detail about the destruction wrought upon the body brought about by such an explosion, with the chorus lamenting the potential loss of life that may be caused by one of these devices if it was ever to be used. The title is actually a conversion of 300 000 °C.

Credits

Fear Factory

Additional personnel

Charts

Chart (2005)Position
US 45 [12]
US Indie 6 [13]
ARIA Charts 26 [14]
AUT 44 [15]
BEL 74 [16]
FIN 38 [17]
FRA 87 [18]
GER 37 [19]
NLD 54 [20]
SWE 56 [21]
UK 77 [22]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fear Factory</span> American industrial metal band

Fear Factory is an American industrial metal band formed in Los Angeles in 1989. Throughout the band's career, they have released ten full-length albums and have evolved through a succession of sounds, all in their main style of industrial metal. Over the years, Fear Factory has seen frequent changes in its lineup, with lead vocalist Burton C. Bell being the only consistent member for 31 years until his departure in 2020. Guitarist Dino Cazares is the only original member still in the band. The band went on hiatus in March 2002 following some internal disputes, but resumed activity a year later without founding member Cazares. Previous bassist Christian Olde Wolbers replaced him on guitar, while Byron Stroud handled bass duties. After a second hiatus in 2006, Fear Factory reunited in April 2009 with a new lineup that featured a returning Cazares, Gene Hoglan as the replacement of original drummer Raymond Herrera, and Bell and Stroud reprising their respective roles; this lineup recorded the band's seventh studio album titled Mechanize (2010). Wolbers and Herrera — together comprising 50% of the band's legal ownership — disputed the legitimacy of the reunited band, and a legal battle from both parties had begun. Despite this, Fear Factory has since released three more albums: The Industrialist (2012), Genexus (2015) and Aggression Continuum (2021).

<i>Archetype</i> (Fear Factory album) 2004 studio album by Fear Factory

Archetype is the fifth studio album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory. It was the first album by the band not to feature Dino Cazares, with Christian Olde Wolbers handling both bass and guitar duties. It was released on April 20, 2004, through Liquid 8. It debuted at No. 30 on the Billboard 200 chart and is their highest charting album to date.

<i>Soul of a New Machine</i> 1992 studio album by Fear Factory

Soul of a New Machine is the debut studio album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory, released on August 25, 1992, by Roadrunner Records. Although this record was Fear Factory's first studio album to be released, it was actually their second album to be recorded, after Concrete, which was recorded in 1991 but not released until 11 years later. German magazine Rock Hard described it as death metal with many other elements such as industrial metal.

<i>Demanufacture</i> (album) 1995 studio album by Fear Factory

Demanufacture is the second studio album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory, released on March 3, 1995, by Roadrunner Records. It is the band's first album with their classic line-up, adding new bassist Christian Olde Wolbers, who performed on close to half of the album's tracks, with guitarist Dino Cazares handling the rest. Many regard it as the band's best album and a heavy metal classic. The album was certified Gold in Australia by ARIA and Silver in the UK by the BPI.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Byron Stroud</span> Canadian musician

Byron Stroud is a Canadian bassist. He is the former bassist for metal bands Fear Factory, Imonolith and Strapping Young Lad, current bassist for metal bands City of Fire and Zimmers Hole, and studio bassist for 3 Inches of Blood.

<i>Digimortal</i> (album) 2001 studio album by Fear Factory

Digimortal is the fourth studio album by American industrial 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.

<i>Obsolete</i> (album) 1998 studio album by Fear Factory

Obsolete is the third studio album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory, released on July 28, 1998, through Roadrunner Records. It was produced by Fear Factory, Greg Reely and Rhys Fulber, the latter of whom wrote, arranged and performed all of the album's keyboard parts, and was the band's first full album to feature bassist Christian Olde Wolbers, who performed on around half of the tracks of the band's previous album Demanufacture (1995).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Raymond Herrera</span> American drummer

Raymond Herrera is an American musician, best known as the former drummer and founding member of the industrial metal band Fear Factory. He is the former drummer for his previous band Brujeria and for industrial metal band Arkaea. He is a composer and producer of music for video games, television, feature films, and transmedia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christian Olde Wolbers</span> Belgian musician

Christian Francis Olde Wolbers is a Belgian musician, songwriter and producer. He is the bassist and backing vocalist of the rap metal/nu metal band Powerflo and the bass player of the thrash metal band Vio-lence. He is also a former bassist, guitarist and backing vocalist of the industrial metal band Fear Factory, and the hardcore punk/crossover thrash band Beowülf.

<i>Roadrunner United</i> 2005 project by Roadrunner Records

Roadrunner United was a project organized by American heavy metal record label Roadrunner Records to celebrate its 25th anniversary. It culminated in an album released worldwide on October 11, 2005, entitled The All-Star Sessions. Four "team captains" were chosen to lead 57 artists from 45 past and present Roadrunner bands, and produce and oversee the album's 18 tracks: then-Slipknot drummer Joey Jordison, Trivium frontman and guitarist Matt Heafy, Fear Factory guitarist Dino Cazares, and Machine Head frontman and guitarist Robb Flynn. The project was the brainchild of Roadrunner UK general manager Mark Palmer and Roadrunner USA VP of A&R Monte Conner. The album project was coordinated by Lora Richardson and was mixed by Colin Richardson and Andy Sneap. The All-Star Sessions spawned one single and music video. The DVD included with the CD purchase is a documentary of the "Making Of" the songs. It features the sessions of the four team captains making their songs.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Fear Factory discography</span>

The discography of Fear Factory, an American industrial metal band, consists of ten studio albums, three compilation albums, two remix albums, one demo album, one video album, five extended plays, twenty-one singles and thirteen music videos. Fear Factory formed in 1989, signing to Roadrunner Records three years later. The band's debut studio album, Soul of a New Machine, was released in 1992. The following year, Fear Is the Mindkiller was released as an EP, featuring remixes by Rhys Fulber and Bill Leeb of Front Line Assembly. In 1995, Fear Factory released their second studio album, Demanufacture, which peaked at number 27 on the UK Albums Chart, and was later certified silver by the British Phonographic Industry (BPI); it was followed two years later by another remix project, Remanufacture , which this time featured contributions from a number of different remixers, including many techno-oriented artists, as well as the band themselves.

<i>The Best of Fear Factory</i> 2006 greatest hits album by Fear Factory

The Best of Fear Factory is the third compilation album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory, released on Roadrunner Records, featuring a collection of the band's music with the label. The record was released without Fear Factory's involvement, so it's unlikely that the album is officially recognized by the band themselves. Songs from Concrete, as well as their various compilation, live and remix albums, are not included.

Kush was an American rap metal band formed in 2000 by rapper B-Real, Deftones guitarist Stephen Carpenter, and former Fear Factory members Raymond Herrera and Christian Olde Wolbers.

<i>Resurrection</i> (Fear Factory EP) 1998 EP by Fear Factory

Resurrection is the fourth EP by American industrial metal band Fear Factory. It was released on September 14, 1998.

Beowülf is an American crossover thrash metal band formed in Venice Beach, California, in 1981 by Michael Alvarado, Dale Henderson, Mike Jensen and Paul Yamada. The group never gained a large mainstream success, but is considered one of the first bands that defined the "Venice Scene" in the 1980s, along with Suicidal Tendencies, Los Cycos, Neighborhood Watch, No Mercy, Excel and Uncle Slam, who all played a mix of skate punk, hardcore, heavy metal and thrash.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Shock (Fear Factory song)</span> 1998 single by Fear Factory

"Shock" is a song by American industrial metal band Fear Factory. It was released as the lead single from their third album Obsolete (1998) and is the first track on the album. Its music was composed by guitarist Dino Cazares and drummer Raymond Herrera. The lyrics were written by vocalist Burton C. Bell. The introduction of a concept album, "Shock" introduces its protagonist, a political prisoner known only as Edgecrusher, who declares his personal mission to destroy the totalitarian society in which he lives.

Arkaea was a metal band formed in 2008 featuring members from Fear Factory and Threat Signal.

<i>Mechanize</i> 2010 studio album by Fear Factory

Mechanize is the seventh studio album by American industrial metal band Fear Factory, released on February 5, 2010 in Germany and February 9, 2010 in United States. It is the only album to feature Gene Hoglan on drums and the first since 2001's Digimortal to include original guitarist and founding member Dino Cazares, who rejoined the band after a reconciliation with lead vocalist Burton C. Bell, in April 2009. The album was produced by Rhys Fulber, who had not produced or been involved with a Fear Factory album since Archetype. The album has received mostly positive reviews from fans and music critics, being praised for its very aggressive and heavy sound. In its first week of release, the album sold 10,000 copies.

Our Last Enemy is an Australian industrial metal band. The band was formed in 2006 by Oliver Fogwell, Jeff Ritchie and Matt Heywood. The band would go through several guitarists and keyboardists from 2007 before being joined by Bizz and Zot on guitars and drums respectively.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Powerflo</span> American metal band

Powerflo is an American rap metal/nu metal band from Los Angeles, formed in 2016. The band's current lineup consists of lead vocalist Senen Reyes, lead guitarist and backing vocalist Rogelio "Roy" Lozano, rhythm guitarist and vocalist Billy Graziadei, and bassist and backing vocalist Christian Olde Wolbers.

References

  1. "Fear Factory - Super Nova (CD) at Discogs". Discogs . Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  2. "Fear Factory - Moment Of Impact (CDr) at Discogs". Discogs . Retrieved August 17, 2014.
  3. Transgression (track listing). Fear Factory. Roadrunner Records. 2006.{{cite AV media notes}}: CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)
  4. "FEAR FACTORY: New Song Available for Download". July 21, 2005.
  5. AllMusic review
  6. Blabbermouth.net review
  7. Mike SOS (April 2006). "Ear Candy Mag - Interview with Fear Factory". Ear Candy Mag. Retrieved April 20, 2007.
  8. Rod Yates (February 9, 2006). "Utopia Records - Interview with Fear Factory". Utopia Records. Archived from the original on August 30, 2007. Retrieved April 20, 2007.
  9. "Fear Factory - Transgression - Encyclopaedia Metallum: The Metal Archives".
  10. Boyd, William (August 19, 2016). "Every Fear Factory album, ranked from worst to best". Metal Hammer . Louder Sound . Retrieved January 3, 2020.
  11. "Fear Factory – Transgression (2005, CD)". Discogs .
  12. "Fear Factory – Chart History: Billboard 200". Billboard . Prometheus Global Media . Retrieved March 25, 2013.
  13. "Fear Factory - Chart History: Top Independent Albums". Billboard . Prometheus Global Media . Retrieved September 22, 2014.
  14. "Discography Fear Factory". australian-charts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 18, 2008.
  15. "Discographie Fear Factory". austriancharts.at. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  16. "Discografie Fear Factory". ultratop.be. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  17. "Discography Fear Factory". finnishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  18. "Discographie Fear Factory". lescharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  19. "Chartverfolgung / Fear Factory / Longplay". musicline.de (in German). Media Control Charts . Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  20. "Discografie Fear Factory". dutchcharts.nl. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  21. "Discography Fear Factory". swedishcharts.com. Hung Medien. Retrieved December 19, 2008.
  22. Zywietz, Tobias. "Chart Log UK: Adam F – FYA". zobbel.de. Tobias Zywietz. Retrieved March 25, 2013.