The Real Thing Review
Band | |
---|---|
Album | The Real Thing |
Type | Album (Studio full-length) |
Released | June 20, 1989 |
Genres | Funk Metal, Alternative Metal |
Labels | Slash, Reprise Records |
Length | 55:26 |
Ranked | #32 for 1989 , #1,119 all-time |
Album rating : 89.5 / 100
Votes : 17 (2 reviews)
Votes : 17 (2 reviews)
November 1, 2020
Faith No More make a bit of a leap on this one. They keep their weirdo funky Alt Metal sound and knack for variety and experimentation, and slap a heavy dose of consistency on top. Before, Faith No More produced about as many good songs as total duds in their search for a sound. Here they continue changing things up, but the quality remains very good across the entire album. The keys do a fantastic job of adding some grandeur to the otherwise very generic instrumentation. The vocals are hit or miss, not really my thing, but pretty unique at the time and employ a wide variety of techniques. Overall a great improvement without straying from their roots.
1 like
Track listing (Songs)
title | rating | votes | ||
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | From Out of Nowhere | 3:22 | 92 | 5 |
2. | Epic | 4:54 | 95 | 6 |
3. | Falling to Pieces | 5:16 | 90 | 5 |
4. | Surprise! You're Dead! | 2:28 | 85 | 4 |
5. | Zombie Eaters | 6:00 | 87 | 5 |
6. | The Real Thing | 8:14 | 88.8 | 4 |
7. | Underwater Love | 3:52 | 86.3 | 4 |
8. | The Morning After | 3:44 | 87.5 | 4 |
9. | Woodpecker from Mars | 5:40 | 88 | 5 |
10. | War Pigs (Black Sabbath cover) | 7:45 | 92.5 | 4 |
11. | Edge of the World | 4:10 | 85 | 4 |
Line-up (members)
- Mike Patton : Vocals
- Jim Martin : Guitar
- Billy Gould : Bass
- Roddy Bottum : Keyboards
- Mike Bordin : Drums
4 reviews
cover art | Artist | Album review | Reviewer | Rating | Date | Likes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
65 | Oct 16, 2022 | 0 | |||||
▶ The Real Thing Review (1989) | 75 | Nov 1, 2020 | 1 | ||||
74 | Jan 6, 2010 | 0 | |||||
The Real Thing Review (1989) | 96 | Sep 24, 2008 | 4 |
1
▶ The Real Thing Review (1989)
SilentScream213 75/100
Nov 1, 2020 Likes : 1
Faith No More make a bit of a leap on this one. They keep their weirdo funky Alt Metal sound and knack for variety and experimentation, and slap a heavy dose of consistency on top. Before, Faith No More produced about as many good songs as total duds in their search for a sound. Here they continue changing things up, but the quality remains very good across the entire album. Th...