Pop Will Eat Itself
Dos dedos mis amigos

Interscope Records    92393-2  (1994)

Rock/Pop
CD, 11   Tracks, 46:36  Length
01 Ich Bin Ein Auslander Pop Will Eat Itself 03:59
02 Kick To Kill Pop Will Eat Itself 03:24
03 Familus Horribilus Pop Will Eat Itself 04:03
04 Underbelly Pop Will Eat Itself 03:58
05 Fatman Pop Will Eat Itself 03:17
06 Home Pop Will Eat Itself 03:36
07 Cape Connection Pop Will Eat Itself 04:59
08 Menofearthereaper Pop Will Eat Itself 06:27
09 Everyhing's Cool Pop Will Eat Itself 04:17
10 R.S.V.P. Pop Will Eat Itself 03:32
11 Babylon Pop Will Eat Itself 05:04
Music Details
Product Details
Packaging Jewel Case
Spars DDD
Sound Stereo
Musicians  &  Credits
Vocals Clint Mansell
Vocals Graham Crabb
Guitar Adam Mole
Guitar Richard March
Drums Fuzz Townshend
Musician Pop Will Eat Itself
Producer Pop Will Eat Itself; Brian New
Engineer Brian New
Personal Details
Index # 2626
Owner Dave
Tags Industrial, Alternative Rock, Trip Hop
User Defined
Purchased New
Notes
The final Pop Will Eat Itself album as such, not counting the remix version of this release that followed some months later, Dos Dedos Mis Amigos is the most serious album the band ever attempted, both lyrically and, given the heavier music, sonically. The giddy rush of albums like This Is the Day and Cure for Sanity had always been punctuated by darker, often surprisingly accomplished songs, but on Dos Dedos the ratio was reversed and the stridency pumped up to even louder levels. Opening track "Ich Bin Ein Auslander," with its references to anti-immigrant sentiment in England and the grinding collapse of Yugoslavia set to a pounding "Kashmir"-derived riff, sets the tone and pretty well keeps it throughout the album. Other previously released singles like "R.S.V.P." and "Familus Horribilus," a blackly humorous but musically lighter rip on the Royal Family, nestle up with fine new songs like the slow descending doom crawl "Underbelly" and the part-dreamy part-propulsive pound of "Cape Connection." The band's self-production is much more direct in general than the swirl of Flood's earlier efforts with the group, but there's the same sense of deep texture in the use of samples. More than once there are hints of Clint Mansell's future career as a film soundtrack arranger for Darren Aronofsky and others as much as there is Richard March's own further playing around with beats and mixing in Bentley Rhythm Ace. In ways it's no surprise that the album ended up on Trent Reznor's label in the U.S., seeing as the sound is more defiantly industrial-rock than ever before, but about the only direct connection might be the doom-laden "Everything's Cool," as good a piece of tech-metal from its time as any. -- Ned Raggett (allmusic.com)