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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Not their greatest album, but one of the most important, August 21, 2004
This review is from: Money (Audio CD)
Before I get to the review, I'd like to give some background info on this album and why it's a very important album in the history of the band. When KMFDM started working on this album, it was called Splits, because half of the album was being made by Sascha Konietzko, and the other half was being made by En Esch and Gunter Shulz. Wax Trax(their record company at the time) liked Sascha's half, but rejected the other half, saying it sounded nothing like KMFDM. This explains why there's really only 6 completely new songs on this album. En Esch and Gunter were pretty angry, but their work was eventually released as the En Esch solo album, "Cheesy". This event is also what caused all of the tensions between the two sides, and it eventually led to the break up of the band in 1999.
Now for the review. This album is a huge departure from Naive and it almost feels like a side project from KMFDM. Unlike most of their albums around this time, it's mostly keyboards with little guitar. It's still pretty good, though, and the first six songs are all classics and some of the best songs the band has released.
Money(one of the album's singles) is a very catchy song, and it's one of my favorite songs by them. It opens with an orchestration, but then switches to a more Godlike track. Vogue(the other single), Help Us Save Us Take Us Away, Bargeld(which is German for Cash), and Spiritual House are dance/house tracks which don't sound much like KMFDM, but are still very solid. The remix of Sex on the Flag is a bit more guitar oriented, though, and with it's catchy chorus, it could be the best song on the album.
I'm not particularly fond of the rest of the album. I guess Sascha didn't have any more new material, because the rest of the songs are either remixes or sample-fests. I Will Pray is a remix of Godlike which doesn't hold a candle to any of the other versions. We Must Awaken is a religious satire which features many samples. Under Satan is just recycled KMFDM lyrics(there's even some that were already used on this album) which are resung over a remix of More and Faster. The Vogue remix is actually pretty good, but I'd rather see a new song, and the same goes for the instrumental version of Money. These songs aren't necessarily bad, but they feel out of place here, and probably would've been better off on the singles for the album.
So overall, I'd say you should get this if you want some Techno-ish KMFDM or if you just want anything by the band. You'll probably be disappointed by the second half, but the first half makes it worth buying. It's also getting to be kind of rare, so if you see it for very cheap you should definitely get it.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Classic Album, March 5, 2004
This review is from: Money (Audio CD)
This is one of KMFDM's best albums, next to Naive and Angst. Money finds the band having a lot of fun while making a point, namely on the song "Money," with dancy beats, metal-slick guitars (but not the fast death metal types found on NIHIL or ATTAK), and Sascha rapping about "selling drugs on the street/cause that's what pays/I make a coupla hundred/in just one day." The band had really honed its synth/electronic capabilities at this point, which is also evident on their previous album Naive. Songs like "Vogue" and the classic club fave "Sex on the Flag" rely heavily on synth-driven structures, pulling from both Techno and House-dance influences. And the wonderful "Help Us, Save Us, Take Us Away," which takes a slide guitar over a slow funky beat, makes industrial blues a reality. The other songs are good as well, but some of the remixes are a little much. Also, "I Will Pray" and "Under Satan" are decent remixes or revamps of "Godlike" and "Die Now, Live Later" from Naive. On Money, the band did what it still does very well: Taking current styles and blending them into the KMFDM sound. This would be their last real dance-friendly album, as Angst would lead the charge for the more aggressive sounds we know today. Not that this is a bad thing (or that you still can't dance to it). Fans of Naive or UAIOE will definitely get a kick out of Money. But if you're a fan of the heavy sounds of NIHIL, Angst or XTORT, you might want to approach this release with caution.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
great album!, June 16, 2006
This review is from: Money (Audio CD)
this album seems to be the most underrated kmfdm album by most of the fans of kmfdm. i think the main misconception people have about kmfdm is that they are a "heavy metal" band. i mean i can understand if you have only heard WWIII, Nihil, Angst, Xtort, and Hau Ruck, but they are soo much more! me, i would consider kmfdm a whole genre by themselves. i mean maybe "hardcore techno" will do, but they cover so much ground that it is nearly impossible to consider them one.
anyways, money is a great addition to any collection. this is a grand follow-up to Naive, but i wish they would have replaced the second half with the songs that en esch made(Cheesy) instead of those boring remixes. the remixes are the reason why they release a whole bunch of Ep's with their albums!
also, they could still have en esch and gunter schulz in the band. the story is that this is the album that started the whole downfall between the sascha, en esch, and schulz.
still, i say this ig good, but make sure you get en esch's cheesy with it to see what it should have been.
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