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Miss Machine

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Recorded
  
2004

Miss Machine (2004)
  
Plagiarism (2006)

Release date
  
20 July 2004

Length
  
39:54

Artist
  
The Dillinger Escape Plan

Label
  
Relapse Records

Miss Machine httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaeneeeDil

Released
  
July 20, 2004 (US) November 5, 2007 (Europe)

Genres
  
Mathcore, Experimental rock, Post-hardcore

Producers
  
Steve Evetts, Ben Weinman, Chris Pennie

Similar
  
The Dillinger Escape Plan albums, Mathcore albums, Other albums

The dillinger escape plan miss machine full album stream


Miss Machine is the second studio album by American mathcore band The Dillinger Escape Plan released in July 2004 through Relapse Records. It is the first release by the band to feature vocalist Greg Puciato. Miss Machine marks a change to a more experimental style by the band; it is less aggressive than their previous album Calculating Infinity.

Contents

The album is The Dillinger Escape Plan's first album since 1999, the gap between albums being accredited to a number of bad fortunes, and a short EP release with lead vocals being performed by Mike Patton. There were three music videos made for the album ("Panasonic Youth", "Unretrofied", and "Setting Fire to Sleeping Giants") directed by Neurosis' Josh Graham. The band decided to feature metalcore producer Steve Evetts to produce the album. Also, "Unretrofied" was featured in WWE SmackDown! vs. Raw 2006 video game.

The dillinger escape plan sunshine the werewolf


Musical direction

Until the band's 2007 release of the further groundbreaking Ire Works, Miss Machine was considerably the band's most experimental release to date, as the band drew from the experience of working with Mike Patton and the industrial influence of bands such as Nine Inch Nails. It is also arguably their most accessible due to the band toning down the musical complexity and adding new elements like slower song tempos, singing vocals, and more straightforward song structures.

Due to Mike Patton collaborating with the band, his experimental influences began to rub off on The Dillinger Escape Plan. In addition, Greg Puciato was involved with Error, an industrial band, around the same time as the release of Miss Machine, all of which would form their sound on Miss Machine. The album turned out to be much more experimental, and include many more jazz-fusion elements and electronics. Weinman's guitars were not as prominent in the mix, and Pennie's drumming was not as demanding.

Critical reception

The critical reception for Miss Machine was relatively favorable, with Allmusic going so far as to say, "There's nothing more to say — the next true image of rock & roll has crawled out of the swamps of Jersey." Despite being positive in their review, Pitchfork noticed "Though Miss Machine displays DEP in top musical form, the band seems to have lost its confidence and direction." Rolling Stone, however, was negative, noticing "unless you're trying to drive a third world dictator out of his barricaded palace, you'll be hard pressed to listen to Miss Machine in its entirety." Miss Machine has earned a metascore of 80 on review aggregate site Metacritic indicating favorable reviews.

Public reception

Miss Machine was very well received by the public. On Rate Your Music the album has an average rating of 3.56 of 5, based on more than 2,450 ratings, and on Sputnikmusic the album has an "excellent" average rating of 4.0 of 5, based on more than 2,300 ratings.

Track listing

All tracks written by Ben Weinman and Greg Puciato except where noted.

Songs

1Panasonic Youth2:27
2Sunshine the Werewolf4:18
3Highway Robbery3:31

References

Miss Machine Wikipedia