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Front 242 - No Comment (CD)

No Comment
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5 out of 5.0 stars 1 Rating (1 Review)

Album Details: No Comment

Release Date:06/02/1992
Label:Wax Trax Record
UPC:017837001025

Track List: No Comment

  1. Commando [Mix]
  2. Deceit
  3. Lovely Day
  4. No Shuffle
  5. Special Forces
  6. S. Fr Nomenklatura, Pt. 1
  1. S. Fr Nomenklatura, Pt. 2
  2. Body to Body
  3. See the Future [Live]
  4. In November [Live]
  5. Special Forces [#][Demo Version]

Other Available Formats: No Comment

User Reviews: No Comment

  • Overall:

    Beat + Noise

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Sep 17, 2000

    That sums up the best songs like Commando, Special Forces, Body to Body, etc. The first 2 are (possibly) the 2 best 242 songs ever (along w/ Headhuner.)Minimalist, but powerful. And then there's Lovely Day & No Shuffle that are more traditional song...s... and good stuff. Read more Less

Pro Reviews: No Comment

  • All Music Guide

    With the recruitment of Richard 23 to fill out the classic line-up, Front 242 started consolidating its strengths with the No Comment EP. Kicking off with the full nine-minute hit of "Commando Mix," the quartet took the best parts of Geography for a starting point and whipped up a smart, tight selection of songs that start to have their own identity as Front 242, straight up. "No Shuffle," with its straightforward, brutal drum punch and heavy distortion, not to mention de Meyer's cold pronouncing of the lyrics, is particularly fine. "Special Forces," which appears in a "nomenklatura" instrumental remix as well, isn't much different but just as effective, de Meyer and 23 trading off in the manner that would characterize many of the band's later hits. A couple of cuts still seem almost too polite in comparison to later efforts, but while "Lovely Day" may have an actual romantic theme to it, the combination of the two vocalists' work and the screeching synth break make appropriately unset...tling results. The 1992 re-release, besides a fine remastering job, also includes four bonus cuts from various sources. A re-recorded version of "Body to Body" beats out the original take by a mile, while the two live cuts from a show in Ghent are reasonable enough if not particularly revelatory. Adding yet another run through of "Special Forces" (the demo session in this instance) was probably doing too much, however. - Ned Raggett, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Front 242

One of the most consistent industrial bands of the 1980s, even though they regularly pursued a more electronic variant of the sound that swept into vogue during the '90s, Front 242 was the premier exponent of European electronic body music. Initially, the group was just a duo when formed in October 1981 in Brussels; programmers Patrick Codenys and Dirk Bergen recorded "... Read more