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Miss Machine
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by Mike Diver
  • Type: Album
  • Release date: 02/08/2004
  • Label: Relapse
Please, you keep your punk rock. I don't want it. I'm different now, I've advanced, progressed, grown into something I never thought I'd be. I'm the butterfly from the pupae, the swan from the ugly duckling; I'm The Dillinger Escape Plan and you didn't see this coming...

Songs.

That's right you old-school knuckle-draggers, DEP have got songs; there's singing and everything on 'Miss Machine', and chances are you're gonna hate it. Take your windmills someplace else.

Okay, so I fibbed, a bit: the pulse of DEP's past - 'Calculating Infinity' emerged five years ago - still beats here, albeit reluctantly. 'Van Damsel' should see a smile spread over the faces of vest-clad tub-thumpers, likewise 'We Are The Storm'; the rest, well, will have them scratching their scalps like the apes they are. The loss of original vocalist Dimitri Minakakis barely registers thanks to the incredible presence of (not so) new (anymore) frontman Greg Puciato. He must've been tearing strips off the studio walls if his performance is anything to go by. Shrieks and screams and wails and howls, many of which stem from the man's 'do-I-or-don't-I split from my girl' dilemma (he didn't), are puncuated by - wait for it - proper singing. Do you think lessons have been learnt from the band's collaboration with Mike Patton? Does Puciato like shitting on stages? Exactly: 'Highway Robbery' and 'Phone Home' could easily have featured on Tomahawk's 'Mit Gas'. The former in particular showcases a whole new facet to the DEP sound - a sing-along chorus. Kind of. Put it this way:

It should be released as a single.
It should be bought by every kid with even a passing interest in rock music, be it hardcore, punk or whatever.
It should go to number one.
And stay there.

It's a song, basically. It's not inaccessible to all but guitar tech-heads and slam-dancing science geeks still trying to calculate infinity (don't be stupid, it's impossible); it's a bloody song. And Jesus, does it rock.

And it's in good company.

I could bang on about the ballsack-grabbing opener 'Panasonic Youth' and the already out-there track 'Baby's First Coffin' (it featured on the Underworld soundtrack), as well as the compulsive desire I have to play this over and over again at home when my girlfriend is trying to watch Eastenders, but I needn't - you're already buying this, right? It's the (insert made-up genre here, including the word 'progressive' and/or suffix '-core') album of the year - madder than a sack full of pro-Gordon Brown civil servants but more addictive than smack-flavoured Pringles. Pop and pop and pop and pop and pop and pop...

Let them keep their punk rock. You don't want it.

  • The Dillinger Escape Plan 10 / 10
Words: Mike Diver

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Sweet.........

Can't wait for it!

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

skimming over that made it look like Guy Picciotto had joined the band.
sick.
also: miss machine = pretty bad gordon raphael produced garage rock band that i played bass in for a few seconds.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

The Dillinger Escape Plan are right fuckin' good! Calculating Infinity was great!

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Calculating Infinity was a bit of a headfuck. I have to say I prefer Irony is a Dead Scene. I quite like the fact that they've now started writing things a bit more like songs without compromising the insanity too much.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

'Baby's First Coffin' featuring on the 'Underworld' soundtrack is one of the best bits of that film, which isn't saying much.

Intriguing review, in any case.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Already album of the year. Nothing will come close. They kick the shit like no other.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

I swear this gets better with every listen.
Well, I find a new favourite song on it each time, anyway.
Currently Sunshine The Werewolf - EVIL strings.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

got 2 of the tracks free with rocksound this month - panasonic youth and baby's first coffin. just makes me think how good converge would be if they were fronted by mike patton, really.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

I am worried about the new Converge rekkid.
Yet to hear it.
But live shows... hmmm... not convinced about it.
Jane Doe rocks though, somewhat obviously.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

yay! i love dep, any one know if theyre playing reading?

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Yes, they are.
Saturday.
Concrete Jungle stage.
Should separate the men from the boys.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Your reviews on DiS are soooo much better (and i mean SOOOO much better) than the ones you do for rocksound, Mike. Pourquoi?

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

They're not better or worse, per se, it's just that rock sound reviews have to be written a certain way, and to a specified word count. DiS allows for individuality. I like doing both - sometimes I prefer writing to pre-determined constraints as it makes for a more focused, albeit less in-depth, review. Other times it's fun to ramble and see where you end up.

Many other DiS writers do the same (i.e. write for other magazines where word counts are imposed). I've read many a good review by Mr Shooman in The Fly. Indeed, his ramblings are often the only good thing about the magazine. I think.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

How come I have just got round to reading this review??

Firstly, yes you're (obviously?) right about the album not finding favour with hardcore purists - it doesn't in the slightest. In fact, looking at various HC forums many just won't acknowledge its existence because (and they may not admit this) it won't fit in with their idea of what is hardcore, what is COOL. It was the same when Iamn Mackaye formed Minor Threat, all the older 'PROPER' punks still into The Clash / Sex Pistols-esque fashion-punk while he was upping the ante and playing hyper-speed punk ROCK like his life depended on it (sic).

Now, here we are in 2004 and Dillinger are (shock!horror!) structuring their songs, improving their song-writing and generally getting amazingly, BED-WETTINGLY good! But because it doesn't sound like what a lot of hc kids are used to they'll refuse to even listen to it, esp if Kerrap like em. But then, who cares - DEP play this style to please no one other than those who understand what they're trying to do, which is constantly challenge notions about what is or isn't possible within music, heavy or otherwise.

S'all about the progression, which is what punk is all about.

Secondly, yes I also write for an American magazine which imposes word counts and restricts creativity in terms of coinages (is THAT a coinage??), improvised grammar etc... and yes, it can be a right ballache at times..

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Ahhh, figures....obvious question I guess. Having said that, rocksound is, IMO, easily the best rock music-styled magazine. However, in recent times, it seems to be promoting the whole hardcore/post-emo-rock thing a bit too much. Still....I'll type more when I can think a bit straighter...lol.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

quality review.

they are going to level the concrete jungle stage to the ground come Reading.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

" <I>'Phone Home'</i> could easily have featured on Tomahawk's 'Mit Gas'"...

More like something from Nine Inch Nails. It doesn't sound anything like Tomahawk.

I really liked <i>Calculating Infinity</i>. It was fresh, new, had such a strength to it, contained no self-consciousness. This, however, is a disappointment. It just sounds like they've lost their voice.

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Yeah, I got the NIN thing t'other week.
You're right.

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

Miss Machine comes across to me much as an album made by a band that delights in pissing off those attempting to define or pidgeon hole them. DEP have always been a band of outsiders, and Miss Machine seems in many ways to be kicking sand into the faces of millionaire label constructs, hardcore purists and doomsayers alike.
"Unretrofied" confused me at first. Here's a tune that would fit fairly snugly onto some new Lincoln Park release, and yet here's a tune with far more finely hones pop/musical sensibilities than anything that LP and their big label "advisers" could pull out of their characterless arses. Sounds to me like a band proving they can play and embarrass the limo-rock boys at their own game.
Given the support bands that they have chosen of late (I recently saw them in Manchester, supported by the sublime Japanese instrumental post-rockers "Mono"), Dillinger seem to be pushing their dynamic considerations further and further. By bringing a main tour support that craft cast sweeping soundscapes, intense but often incredibly quiet, Mono complimented rather than competed with Dillinger's dynamic. Similarly, the dynamically low points in MM, the uncharacteristically melodious tracts, serve only to intensify the brutality and chaos when it reemerges.

Genius.

Although I do go along with the NIN crit...

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

The more commercial (shock!) aspects of Miss Machine are light years ahead of what normally produces music like this and it's just an example of DEP fucking with convention and expanding their boundaries. End. Of. Story.

Hardcore enthusiasts refusing to acknowledge this albums' existence are roughly akin to the cardinals who denounced Galileo. To my mind, it's album of the year so far - accessible to anyone who's never even heard of hardcore. By the way, who decides what genre to classify bands? RealPlayer has DEP classified as "metalcore".

Re: The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

My sentiments exactly sah... Music shouldn't be about fashion. DEP know this, but sadly, much of the self obsessed "scene" that now appears to be turning their backs on DEP, don't have a clue. The hardcore scene was surely supposed to be about autonomy of thought, individuality, about having the imagination and courage of conviction to stand up and do (and listen to) something a little different. And now the expectation seems to be that DEP reel out the same old formula.

Instead, The Plan have done exactly what their convictions have told them to do, and confounded reactionary expectations of them. By the way, talking genre, DEP refer to themselves as "A creation merging new-school hardcore, progressive metal, and free-jazz", so the metalcore thing probably stands as good as any...

The Dillinger Escape Plan - Miss Machine

My sentiments exactly sah... Music shouldn't be about fashion. DEP know this, but sadly, much of the self obsessed "scene" that now appears to be turning their backs on DEP, don't have a clue. The hardcore scene was surely supposed to be about autonomy of thought, individuality, about having the imagination and courage of conviction to stand up and do (and listen to) something a little different. And now the expectation seems to be that DEP reel out the same old formula.

Instead, The Plan have done exactly what their convictions have told them to do, and confounded reactionary expectations of them. By the way, talking genre, DEP refer to themselves as "A creation merging new-school hardcore, progressive metal, and free-jazz", so the metalcore thing probably stands as good as any...




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