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Random Insults - Songs For Robots download mp3 flac


Performer: Random Insults
Genre: Electronic
Album: Songs For Robots
Released: 2005
Style: Industrial, Noise
MP3 version ZIP size: 1749 mb
FLAC version RAR size: 1603 mb
WMA version ZIP size: 1107 mb
Rating: 4.9
Votes: 183
Other Formats: MMF AAC MIDI AA AU MP1 AUD

Free Download Random Insults - Songs For Robots

Random Insults - Songs For Robots
MP3 version .RAR archive

1749 downloads at 17 mb/s
Random Insults - Songs For Robots
FLAC version .RAR archive

1603 downloads at 13 mb/s
Random Insults - Songs For Robots
WMA version .RAR archive

1107 downloads at 14 mb/s

Tracklist

1 Assembly - Birth Of A Squirrel Class Robot 3:40
2 Robot Nursery - My Pacifier Is A Screw 4:48
3 Screwy Years - Teenage Riot 3:14
4 Pleasing One Big Screw - Robot Playing With Itself 3:38
5 I Am Such A Shiny Can - Consequences Of Screw Awareness 3:52
6 Screw Insertion In Socket - Reproduction Factory 3:38
7 Work - Nuclear Distaster Cleanup Unit 4:04
8 Broken Servodreams - Oilpan Blues 2:45
9 I Have A Screw Loose - Failing Parts 3:38
10 Robots Funeral - Disassembly 3:09

Credits

  • Artwork By – Adrian Dimond
  • Mastered By – Allerian

Notes

Originally released as a MP3 release on the label's website.
Kefrannan
Songs For Robots is a journey. When listening to this CD in one sitting one gets the feeling that these tracks are trying to tell a story, and with track titles like “Work – Nuclear Disaster Cleanup Unit”. Like it is stated in the Roil Noise Web Page “RI is emotion made into music.” And it is very clear in this CD. The tracks all carry heavy bass synth that move each track along without the listener getting tired and wondering off whilst the track moves. The drums are very industrial sounding, and not something you’d hear from the MET label, these are drums that make industrial what it is, scratchy and focused. You can’t dance to this! There are no vocals in any of the tracks either, which is not something I don’t like. If a CD can pull off 40 minutes without any vocals and still sound good, hell I’m all for it. Like I said in the beginning too, this CD tells a story too, and you don't always need vocals. In some ways you could classify this as a noise/industrial CD too. A few tracks contain sections of pure static rhythms and loops of fuzzy bass lines. Another note is that this CD sounds like Autechre run threw a “robot destruction from hell” compressor. The beats are very unpredictable at times and the have that same feel as some late 90’s Autechre tracks did (tracks 1 and 10 to note), except for the fact that this is industrial music, and there’s a story to tell here; Assemble to Disassemble. Art work is great too and is done by Adrian Dimond, the front man behind Xdugef, who has done many art projects.