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Rot


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1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars The insanity of normality, January 1, 2010
This review is from: Rot (Audio CD)
I am fairly new to SITD (aka Shadows in the Dark). Their new album is the first one I have bought. I first saw heard of them in 2008 when they toured as one of the opening acts for Imperative Reaction. The band sounded amazing live. I finally got around to buying one of their albums recently. I have to admit Rot didn't grab me from the initial listen but after a few more listens, I have come to appreciate the songs. For me, the songs weren't as catchy as by some of my favorite electro bands like VNV Nation and Unter Null but the songs still have a good melody especially on "Rot V10" and "Destination". I'm glad I finally got around to buying SITD's music. It was high time that I did. Rot is a very good album to start off for this new fan.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Something Old, Something New, Something Borrowed, Nothing Blue..., December 17, 2009
This review is from: Rot (Audio CD)
My other half has been a fan of SITD ("Shadows In The Dark" for those of you who don't know to what the acronym pertains) for a number of years now, but in all fairness I could never see what she was raving about. A lot of what she played just sounded like your generic European EBM/Trance to me. However, "Rot" ("Red") has made me appreciate the band in a whole new light.

I'll be honest, I'd grown increasingly bored by the majority of EBM that has risen to prominence in the last ten years; I'd pretty much written off the genre as it just seemed to be descending further and further into a morass of generic trance presets, lumpen, whiny ballads about ex-girlfriends and incestuous scene posturing.

Decent albums capable of holding my interest beyond one or two songs seemed to be in increasingly short supply...

Thank the Gods of 'big stompy industrial' (as my other half refers to it) for "Rot" then, as it marries the euphoric trance sensibilities of contemporary EBM with the good, old-fashioned abrasiveness of nineties industrial - and what's more it's got some absolutely cracking hooks and choruses into the bargain as well. Some songs put me in mind of classic "FLA", "Nitzer Ebb" and "Die Krupps" ("MK Ultra", "Zodiac"), others of Ultra-era "Depeche Mode" ("Destination") and others yet still of directions not taken by once great EBM bands (the largely instrumental "Pride" is a tantalising glimpse of where "VNV Nation" might have gone after Praise the Fallen if they hadn't sacrificed the abrasiveness of their earlier works for a more formulaic, mainstream, crowd-pleasing sound) and some - such as the morbidly atmospheric "Stigmata Of Jesus" - are just their own enigmatic entities.

Lyrically, the band for the most part eschew the modern sensibilities of aforementioned Reznoresque "whiny ex-girlfriend ballads" in favour of some old-fashioned industrial blood and thunder: there are songs apparently sung from the perspective of serial snipers who terrorized San Francisco in the late sixties ("Zodiac" - see Robert Greysmith's book, Zodiac, for further insight), songs concerning covert CIA interrogation research programs ("MK Ultra"), masochistic religious iconography ("Stigmata..."), drug addiction ("Pharmakon") and all points in between. Grim stuff perhaps, but then I've always been of the opinion that listening to a good industrial album should be an experience akin to that of watching a good horror/dark sci-fi/action film.

And if there's one thing that this album has, its a compulsive, pummelling, energetic intensity - which is why it gets a resounding four-point-five stars out of a possible five from me.

...Though I warn you now that you stand a very good chance of alarming passers-by should they hear you growling the insanely catchy chorus of "MK Ultra" ("LSD, Mescaline, Mind Control, Heroin...") as you're pounding down the street listening to it on your MP3 player.
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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Rot, December 5, 2009
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This review is from: Rot (Audio CD)
SITD has been one of my favorite Industrial/EBM groups for years. Rot doesn't disappoint. It's constantly played in my car everyday.
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Rot
Rot by SITD (Audio CD - 2009)
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