Scum (Album)

align="center" bgcolor="orange" style="color:black;" colspan="3"|Scum
lign="center" colspan="3"|
lign="center" bgcolor="orange" colspan="3"|Album by Napalm Death
eleased colspan=2|July, 1987
ecorded colspan=2|August, 1986 - May, 1987
a href="/encyclopedia/Musical-genre" title="Musical genre">Genre colspan=2|Grindcore
ength colspan=2|33 min 04 sec
a href="/encyclopedia/Record-label" title="Record label">Label colspan=2|Earache Records
a href="/encyclopedia/Record-producer" title="Record producer">Producer colspan=2|Napalm Death
gcolor="orange" colspan="3" align="center" style="color:black;"|Professional reviews
small>Allmusic.com 5 stars out of 5 link
gcolor="orange" colspan="3" align="center" style="color:black;"|Napalm Death Chronology
olspan=2|Scum
(1987)
From Enslavement To Obliteration
(1988)
Scum is an album by the grindcore band Napalm Death. Originally a punk band formed by Nicholas Bullen, Napalm Death were influenced by Metallica, Venom and Celtic Frost, which lead to their grindcore sound. Replacing their original drummer Rat with Mick Harris, who was more up to the task of playing as fast as humanly possible, the band recorded a demo, which would later become Side A of Scum. Recorded for 50 in August 1986, the band had intended on releasing the demo as a split album through the fledgeling record lable, Earache, but fell apart before this could happen. Nick Bullen was first to leave, followed by Justin Broadrick, the band continued with a new line-up, including Carcass guitarist Bill Steer, who helped to add a metal edge to what was still primarily a punk-influenced band. The new Napalm Death recorded the second half of Scum in May 1987 at Rich Bitch Studios, where the first half had been recorded, and released both halves through Earache in July 1987. Despite being described by one critic as "the end of music", the record became a success, thanks to John Peel's interest; though bass player Jim Whiteley didn't appreciate this success, and quit the band. He was replaced by Shane Embury, who is still a member of Napalm Death. This new line-up recorded a second album, From Enslavement to Obliteration, but vocalist Lee Dorrian left soon after the release of the album, to form Cathedral; and Bill Steer left to focus on Carcass. The song "You Suffer" was listed in the Guinness Book of Records as the world's shortest song; though the track is four seconds long, the song itself is a mere three quarters of a second (The length of the track is due to the CD specification requiring a minimum track length of 4 seconds). The album cover was designed by Bill Steer's Carcass bandmate, Jeff Walker.

Track listing

Side A

  1. "Multinational Corporations" - 1:06
  2. "Instinct of Survival" - 2:26
  3. "The Kill" - :23
  4. "Scum" - 2:38
  5. "Caught... In a Dream" - 1:47
  6. "Polluted Minds" - :58
  7. "Sacrificed" - 1:06
  8. "Siege of Power" - 3:59
  9. "Control" - 1:23
  10. "Born on Your Knees" - 1:48
  11. "Human Garbage" - 1:32
  12. "You Suffer" - :04

Side B

  1. "Life?" - :43
  2. "Prison Without Walls" - :38
  3. "Point of No Return" - :35
  4. "Negative Approach" - :32
  5. "Success?" - 1:09
  6. "Deceiver" - :29
  7. "C.S." - 1:14
  8. "Parasites" - :23
  9. "Pseudo Youth" - :42
  10. "Divine Death" - 1:21
  11. "As the Machine Rolls On" - :42
  12. "Common Enemy" - :16
  13. "Moral Crusade" - 1:32
  14. "Stigmatized" - 1:03
  15. "M.A.D." - 1:34
  16. "Dragnet" - 1:01

Personnel

Side A

Side B

References

  • "The Story Behind Scum", Metal Hammer issue 120, December 2003.

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
alexandrian wicca
a46 road
kasumori station
(yerzoplazistonian) civil war civil war
potters bar
energy drink
epic
london commuter belt
daddy long legs spider
bruneau river
kintetsu hatta station
corporation of london
four point speech
m69 motorway
nike hercules missile
squirt gun
trace fossil
drottningholm palace theatre
pseudofossil
concretion
the dead zone
simone melchior
prey (novel)
prey
idle race
nemo me impune lacessit
norbert jokl
frank (magazine)
zaire province
kebnekaise
michael mcdowell
pleasley
wild canid survival and research center
roy wood
john gould
dennis skinner
tyson research area
bank of america plaza
the tin woodman of oz
john holmes
antipodal point
wizzard
bank of america plaza (dallas)
amelita galli curci