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Mindless Self Indulgence

Mindless Self Indulgence Album: “You'll Rebel To Anything (Expanded & Remixed) [PA]”

Mindless Self Indulgence Album: “You'll Rebel To Anything (Expanded & Remixed) [PA]”
Description :
This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. <p>Mindless Self Indulgence: Steve, Righ? (guitar); Lyn-Z (bass instrument); Kitty (drums); Jimmy Urine (programming). <p>On YOU'LL REBEL TO ANYTHING, Mindless Self Indulgence serves up a bracing, kitchen-sink mix of speed metal, industrial, New Wave, rap, and punk, embracing a host of extreme styles while retaining just enough pop structure and melody to hook the uninitiated. "1989" sounds like a dark, futuristic version of Erasure or Depeche Mode, while "Tom Sawyer" is the 1981 Rush classic seemingly played by crazed robots. "2 Hookers and an Eightball" covers more stylistic territory in one song than some bands encompass in an entire career, deftly jumping between scary Klaus Nomi-esque art-pop and early-'90s-style dance funk with nary a thought. Not for the faint of heart or head, YOU'LL REBEL TO ANYTHING should appeal to listeners with a taste for heavy music that gleefully indulges in a wild variety of sounds.
Customers Rating :
Average (4.1) :(72 votes)
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39 votes
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7 votes
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4 votes
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6 votes
Track Listing :
1 Shut Me Up Video
2 Stupid MF Video
3 Straight to Video Video
4 What Do They Know? Video
5 2 Hookers and an Eightball
6 Prom Video
7 Bullshit Video
8 Tom Sawyer Video
9 1989 Video
10 You'll Rebel To Anything Video
11 Mic Commander - (Bonus Track)
12 La-di da-Di - (Bonus Track)
13 Make Me Cum - (previously unreleased, Bonus Track Demo)
14 Wack - (previously unreleased, live, Bonus Track Live Webster Hall NYC July 2005)
Album Information :
Title: You'll Rebel To Anything (Expanded & Remixed) [PA]
UPC:782388052528
Format:CD
Type:Performer
Genre:Rock & Pop - Punk Rock
Artist:Mindless Self Indulgence
Producer:Machine; James Galus; Jimmy Urine
Label:Metropolis Records
Distributed:Alternative Dis. Alliance
Release Date:2008/01/22
Original Release Year:2005
Discs:1
Length:31:10
Mono / Stereo:Stereo
Studio / Live:Studio
Chris Ochman "The Eclectic Listener" (Fredericksburg, VA) - April 21, 2005
20 of 24 people found the following review helpful:
- Another great album from MSI!

This is probably the best so far, at least for me. This album absolutely rocks!

A lot of the songs are longer than the normal minute and some odd seconds of song, that we are all used to. Those were good, but now we have songs from MSI, that can go on for 3 minutes! This is the greatest thing ever!

The music is more or less the same, though I find it a teensy bit more tame than the previous albums. The lyrics are still pretty hardcore and the music is still in your face, guitars, screeching and such, but not AS much as in previous albums.

Key trakcs for me are "Bulls***", "Prom", 'Shut Me Up" and "You'll Rebel to Anything".

Great lyrics, great music, and what more could you expect from a great band like MSI?? If you know them you'll know what to expect, just not as much, but still awesome.

For you new people, this is pretty intense stuff.....listen to it first, before you buy it. I find that it's an acquired taste with MSI.

Mr. Tangent (Mount Vernon, Missouri United States) - March 11, 2006
8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
- Great album but very poor and underhanded marketing!

I'll break this review in to three parts. First, the review of the album itself. Second, the review of the tactics used by MSI and Metropolis Records to sell this album. Lastly, my advice on getting everything that should have been included on one album.

1. The review of the album:

Simply put, if you like previous MSI albums, Babyland or stuff like Korn you'll eat this up. It's another top notch hybrid electronic, punk/metal, lofi quasi-hip hop, quasi-post-industrial genre-bending album. I suppose this would have fallen in to the label "coldwave" circa mid-90's post-industrial labeling. It's not exactly coldwave, not exactly anything other than the sum of its influences, which seem to be mainly hip-hop, post-industrial and punk/metal. The highlights of the album are definitely "Shut Me Up" and "Stupid MF", although there isn't really a weak track here. Another bonus is a positively weird cover of Rush's "Tom Sawyer". Be sure to put the CD in your computer as there is a video for "You'll Rebel To Anything" (it's a neat collage of old 50's propaganda footage mixed with weird cartoons, vintage stock film interspersed with just general weirdness.)

2. Commentary about questionable gouging of consumer by label/band:

There is absolutely no reason for there to be three different versions of this album except to rip off the consumer. Period. In an interview Jimmy Urine said they released a clean version for people who couldn't buy the album in places like Wal-Mart. Who cares about Wal-Mart? For someone so outspoken and inspired by punk, it bothers me that he'd cave to pressures to release an edited version of anything, let alone an entire album. That leads me to believe it wasn't an effort to cater to the imbeciles who buy music at Wal-Mart but rather a flimsy excuse to release a different version of the album, with different artwork and different bonus tracks.

When I used to buy a lot of electro/industrial (circa mid-90's) I remember this type of crap burning the hell out of me. I'd buy the import of a particular artist (say, someone like Haujobb) and then a year or so later a domestic version would come out with bonus tracks. And it'd cost LESS to boot! So all the "early adopters" and people on the cutting edge would get burned over and over. I can't tell you how many CDs I bought like that when I used to buy a lot of obscure electro/industrial music. It's a trick in order to separate you from your money, nothing more. If they cared only about exposing underground music to a new audience then they'd simply license the album and release it exactly as it was originally in Europe. But I digress.

3. My advice:

Buy this explicit version, then download the bonus tracks "La-Di Da-Di" (bonus track on vinyl) and "Mic Commander" (bonus track on clean version) off teh intarweb and say fsck you to Metropolis Records/MSI for forcing us to buy three versions of the same album in order to get two extra tracks, different artwork and a bonus video (the clean version of this album has a "bonus rehearsal video for 'Diabolical'"). Alternately, if you feel like giving MSI more of your hard-earned money, you can at least get the track "Mic Commander" on iTunes Music Store by itself.

In summation, MSI are a great band and if you like punk, electro-industrial, metal with electronic influences (Fear Factory), hip-hop, nu-metal, coldwave/aggro-industrial (Ministry) then you'll probably totally dig this album.

Also, check out Jhonen Vasquez's video for "Shut Me Up" on myspace (or just do a google search for it). The ex-Johnny the Homicidal Maniac/Squee/Invader Zim/etc. mastermind pulls off one of the funniest videos in a long time.

G. Dinan "systmltdn" (columbus, oh) - April 23, 2005
5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
- quit your complaining

this is a great album!!!!!!! this is what happens when a band progresses, if bands wouldn't try new things then their sound would always be the same, and all their songs would sound the same. this album is soooo great, and like everything else MSI it is an aquired taste! and takes a while to get used too.

pancake_repairman "pancake_repairman" (gfjdhgfjhgj) - May 06, 2005
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
- title of review

This is a pretty good ep but it's such an anticlimax. Are they ever going to release a real follow-up to Frankenstein Girls? First they teased us with the The Left Rights album, which was more skits than songs, then the live ep Alienating Our Audience which had like 7? new songs on it, then with the Despierta Los Ninos ep, which showed a progression in songwriting, but wasn't available in stores. So I figured they'd eventually release an album with studio versions of the new live songs, the new songs from the Despierta ep, and a bunch of other new songs, but no, all we get is this, another ep, released in multiple formats in a blatant attempt to get more of your money. So obviously they don't have much respect for their fans, which is lame, but I still bought this cd and I like most of the tunes. Straight To Video is a bit too conventional and boring. They're obviously better at writing more upbeat songs with erratic rhythms, which Shut Me Up is the best example of here, although I think the first 3 songs on the Despierta ep are still better than anything on this cd. This cd is still worth buying, and the booklet art layout is nice, it's just a pity they didn't make a proper album. I guess there's still hope.

3V0L1NT3NT (Cali) - June 09, 2008
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
- La-Di-Da-Di

If you were like me you got "You'll Rebel to Anything" when it first came out in 2005. So is it really worth buying the album again for the new tracks?...Yes! All the bonus tracks are good. And also the albums original tracks are in a different order. So even if you have the original "You'll Rebel to Anything" When listening to it, it almost seems...new again cause the songs are not in the order you use to + you get the bonus tracks. And for the cheap price why not get it?

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