Meat Beat Manifesto - Subliminal Sandwich

Barcode: 5400863142827
Regular price $39.99
Format
Product details
  • Barcode 5400863142827
  • Genre Leftfield, Techno, Industrial
  • Label [pias]
  • Condition
    • New

Jack Dangers' magnum opus, and one of the most fully realized and genuinely strange records to emerge from the mid-1990s electronic underground. Originally conceived during Meat Beat Manifesto's 1993 tour supporting Satyricon, the album was delayed by legal tangles with Belgian label Play It Again Sam before finally arriving on Interscope Records in June 1996, clocking in at over two hours across two discs and immediately establishing itself as a landmark of the era.

Where Satyricon had dealt in harder, more defined rhythmic structures, Subliminal Sandwich pushed deeper into ambient texture, dub, and drone, drawing links between trip-hop, industrial, and psychedelia that few of Dangers' contemporaries were mapping at the time. Fact Magazine ranked it among the 50 best trip-hop albums of all time, citing precisely that quality, its ability to inhabit multiple sonic worlds simultaneously without ever fully settling in any of them. The result has the organic sense of a system developing its own internal logic, drum breaks and dubby basslines and walls of echo and weird, disorienting sound effects building into something that sounds like, as one listener put it, a perfect OST for a science fiction film.

Highlights span both discs with equal generosity. "Nuclear Bomb," "Long Periods of Time," and "Phone Calls From The Dead" anchor the first disc with focused, hypnotic energy. The second disc opens up further, with "Stereophrenic," "Plexus," "Electric People," and the closing "Simulacra" pushing the ambient and dub elements into increasingly exploratory territory. Singles "Transmission" and a ferocious cover of World Domination Enterprises' "Asbestos Lead Asbestos" provide moments of more immediate impact within a record that rewards the full, unhurried listen it demands.