Angel Dust (Album)

For other things with the same name see Angel Dust.
align="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Angel Dust
lign="center" colspan="3"|Album Cover
lign="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|CD by Faith No More
lign="left" valign="top"|Released colspan="2" valign="top"|June 16, 1992
lign="left" valign="top"|Recorded colspan="2" valign="top"|Coast Recorders in Brilliant Studios, San Francisco, California, 1991
lign="left" valign="top"|Genre colspan="2" valign="top"|Alternative metal
lign="left" valign="top"|Record label colspan="2" valign="top"|Slash Records
lign="left" valign="top"|Length colspan="2" valign="top"|58 min 18 sec
lign="left" valign="top"|Producer colspan="2" valign="top"|Matt Wallace
gcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Professional reviews
lign="left" valign="top"|Allmusic.com valign="top"|4 1/2 out of 5 valign="top"|Link
lign="left" valign="top"|Q valign="top"|4 stars out of 5 valign="top"|May 1992
lign="left" valign="top"|RollingStone review valign="top"|NR valign="top"|link
lign="left" valign="top"|ARTISTdirect review valign="top"|4.5 stars out of 5 valign="top"|link
gcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Faith No More Chronology
align="top"|The Real Thing
(1989)
valign="top"|Angel Dust
(1992)
valign="top"|King For A Day... Fool For a Lifetime
(1995)
Angel Dust, released in 1992 (see 1992 in music), was the fourth album by US rock band Faith No More, and the second to feature vocalist Mike Patton. After the commercial success of the previous album The Real Thing, Angel Dust is a very complex and at times hard to approach album. Although much of the material retains the straightforward pop-rock sound which made them famous ("Midlife Crisis", "A Small Victory", "Everything's Ruined"), elsewhere the band begin to drift into less familiar and more experimental territory, often indulging Patton's penchant for screaming and being deliberately offensive ("Jizzlobber", "Malpractice", "Be Aggressive"). These unusual moments arguably make the album unique amongst the band's output, at a time when they were beginning to lose out to Grunge in the commercial stakes. Other notable features of the album include the white trash-baiting monologue of "RV" (a truly odd song; piano-driven and in waltz-time), and the band's version of the theme from "Midnight Cowboy".

Track listing

  1. "Land of Sunshine"
  2. "Caffeine"
  3. "MidLife Crisis"
  4. "RV"
  5. "Smaller and Smaller"
  6. "Everything's Ruined"
  7. "Malpractice"
  8. "Kindergarten"
  9. "Be Aggressive"
  10. "A Small Victory"
  11. "Crack Hitler"
  12. "Jizzlobber"
  13. "Midnight Cowboy"
"Malpractice" contains a sample of String Quartet No. 8 (Shostakovich), as performed by the Kronos Quartet. Later versions of the album feature a cover of the Commodores' 'Easy' as the final track, which in some parts of the world was Faith No More's most successful single.

 

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