Tags
Language
Tags
April 2024
Su Mo Tu We Th Fr Sa
31 1 2 3 4 5 6
7 8 9 10 11 12 13
14 15 16 17 18 19 20
21 22 23 24 25 26 27
28 29 30 1 2 3 4

Napalm Death - Scum + From Enslavement to Obliteration (1987/88) [Japan 1st Press - Toy's Factory # TFCK-88516]

Posted By: Shar'EmAll
Napalm Death - Scum + From Enslavement to Obliteration (1987/88) [Japan 1st Press - Toy's Factory # TFCK-88516]

Napalm Death - From Enslavement to Obliteration + Scum
FLAC-IMG+CUE+LOG | 67:10 min | Covers included | 505 MB
1987/1988 | Japan 1st Press - Toy's Factory # TFCK-88516

Napalm Death are a grindcore band formed in Birmingham, England in 1981. Their early works was associated with defining the grindcore genre by incorporating elements of hardcore punk and thrash metal, short songs, fast tempos, deep guttural vocals and sociopolitical lyrics. The band's debut album Scum, released in 1987 by Earache Records, proved substantially influential throughout the global metal community.


Scum:
As a rallying call for what seemed like millions of bands to follow, not to mention the launching point for the varying careers of Justin Broadrick, Nick Bullen, Mitch Harris, Lee Dorrian, and Bill Steer, Scum deserves its reputation alone. But it's also fun to listen to – a strange word to use, but no doubt about it, the album has its own brand of rock & roll kicks taken to an almost ridiculous extreme. Split between the original lineup, with Broadrick and Bullen, and the next one, with Dorrian, Steer, and Shane Embury, Scum is a portrait of a place, time, and state of mind. Opener "Multinational Corporations" is the deep breath taken before the plunge: skittering cymbals, low-key feedback squalls, Bullen's rasped hatred – and then all hell breaks loose. The riffs by both the Broadrick/Bullen and Steer/Embury teams use hyperconcentrated Black Sabbath-via-Motörhead-and-Metallica approaches as starting points, but the moorings are cut loose when everyone concentrates on nothing but speed itself. The combination of hyperspeed drums, crazed but still just clear enough guitar and bass blurs, and utterly unintelligible vocals takes the "loud hard fast rules" conclusion to a logical extreme that the band's followers could only try to equal instead of better. Interspersed throughout all this on various songs are more obviously deliberate constructions – parts of the title track, say, or the focused chug-and-stomp start of "Siege of Power." They act as just enough pacing for the rampages elsewhere, where unrelenting, intense sound becomes its own part of weird ambient music, textures above all else. It's little surprise the free jazz/noise wing latched onto Scum as much as wound-up-as-hell headbangers did worldwide. That practically no song survives past two minutes – much less one – is all part of brusque do-the-job-and-do-no-more appeal. The most legendary number as a result: "You Suffer (But Why?)," running at a mere two seconds.

From Enslavement to Obliteration:
Napalm Death's second full effort, From Enslavement to Obliteration in ways put the seal on what the band had done, with most of its members going off to pursue their own individual efforts soon thereafter, and as such is the perfect complement to Scum, showing the quartet both straining at the bit and honing its original approach to a T. Like Scum, it starts on a more deliberate pace, with "Evolved as One" hitting a slow, careful trudge – everything is quite discernible, even Lee Dorrian's sore-throat roar style of singing – which is all the better to build up the listener for whatever happens next. That combination of just enough variety with nuclear-strength ultimate velocity feedback, clatter, and barking once again does the trick; if it wasn't quite as thrillingly new as before, it's still unquestionably grand, making this album the Leave Home to the original's Ramones, if one likes. The song titles once again make it clear that fluffy bunnies aren't the band's subject du jour: "Unchallenged Hate," "Mentally Murdered," "Retreat to Nowhere," "Make Way!" There's a little bit of wry humor starting to surface at points, though – thus "Cock-Rock Alienation," which somehow manages to be a critique of the modern music business' interest in sheep-like consumers even while blurring along in the expected fashion. Those moments where the band finds a more straightforward thrash-stomp once again show that the quartet could nail that when they desired, but as always it's when the group completely goes beyond the conventions that things just completely hit a new hit. Crazy high point: the four-second solo on "Uncertainty Blurs the Vision," which compacts a feedback shriek of ecstasy into the smallest possible space. [Early CD versions of the album included Scum and other extra tracks, though the two are now usually found separately.]

– Reviews by Ned Raggett, allmusic.com

Tracklist:

01. Multinational Corporations
02. Instinct Of Survival
03. The Kill
04. Scum
05. Caught In A Dream
06. Polluted Minds
07. Sacrificed
08. Siege Of Power
09. Control
10. Born On Your Knees
11. Human Garbage
12. You Suffer
13. Life?
14. Prison Without Walls
15. Point Of No Return
16. Negative Approach
17. Success?
18. Deceiver
19. C.S.
20. Parasites
21. Pseudo Youth
22. Divine Death
23. As The Machine Rolls On
24. Common Enemy
25. Moral Crusade
26. Stigmatized
27. M.A.D.
28. Dragnet
29. Evolved As One
30. It's A M.A.N.S. World!
31. Lucid Fairytale
32. Private Death
33. Impressions
34. Unchallenged Hate
35. Uncertainty Blurs The Vision
36. Cock-Rock Alienation
37. Retreat To Nowhere
38. Think For A Minute
39. Display To Me…
40. From Enslavement To Obliteration
41. Blind To The Truth
42. Social Sterility
43. Emotional Suffocation
44. Practice What You Preach
45. Inconceivable
46. Worlds Apart
47. Obstinate Direction
48. Mentally Murdered
49. Sometimes
50. Make Way!
51. Musclehead *
52. Your Achievement? *
53. Dead *
54. Morbid Deceiver *
55. The Missing Link *

Tracks 01-28 taken from 'Scum' LP (Earache '1987)
Tracks 29-50 taken from 'From Enslavement to Obliteration' LP (Earache '1988)
Tracks 51-55 taken from 'The Curse' 7" (Earache '1988) - marked as CD bonus tracks.

All Tracks Produced by Digby Pearson and Napalm Death.

1987 - SCUM
Side One:
- Nik Napalm – Vocals, Bass
- Justin Broadrick – Guitar, Vocals
- Mick Harris – Drums
Side Two
- Lee Dorrian – Vocals
- Jim Whitely – Bass
- Bill Steer – Guitar
- Mick Harris – Drums, vocals

1988
Lee Dorrian – Vocals
Shane Embury – Bass guitar
Bill Steer – Guitar
Mick Harris – Drums

Original non-remastered Japanese 1st pressed CD.
Pressed in Japan by Toy's Factory Records, in November 1990.
All thanks goes to the original ripper!

Exact Audio Copy V0.99 prebeta 4 from 23. January 2008

EAC extraction logfile from 7. May 2009, 18:55

Napalm Death / From Enslavement to Obliteration + Scum

Used drive : PLEXTOR DVDR PX-716A Adapter: 3 ID: 0

Read mode : Secure
Utilize accurate stream : Yes
Defeat audio cache : Yes
Make use of C2 pointers : No

Read offset correction : 30
Overread into Lead-In and Lead-Out : Yes
Fill up missing offset samples with silence : Yes
Delete leading and trailing silent blocks : No
Null samples used in CRC calculations : Yes
Used interface : Native Win32 interface for Win NT & 2000

Used output format : User Defined Encoder
Selected bitrate : 32 kBit/s
Quality : High
Add ID3 tag : No
Command line compressor : C:\Program Files\FLAC\flac.exe
Additional command line options : -8 -V -T "ARTIST=%a" -T "TITLE=%t" -T "ALBUM=%g" -T "DATE=%y" -T "TRACKNUMBER=%n" -T "GENRE=%m" -T "COMMENT=%e" %s -o %d


TOC of the extracted CD

Track | Start | Length | Start sector | End sector
––––––––––––––––––––––––––––-
1 | 0:00.00 | 1:04.35 | 0 | 4834
2 | 1:04.35 | 2:27.45 | 4835 | 15904
3 | 3:32.05 | 0:24.15 | 15905 | 17719
4 | 3:56.20 | 2:40.68 | 17720 | 29787
5 | 6:37.13 | 1:47.07 | 29788 | 37819
6 | 8:24.20 | 1:01.73 | 37820 | 42467
7 | 9:26.18 | 1:07.70 | 42468 | 47562
8 | 10:34.13 | 4:03.12 | 47563 | 65799
9 | 14:37.25 | 1:31.33 | 65800 | 72657
10 | 16:08.58 | 1:50.42 | 72658 | 80949
11 | 17:59.25 | 1:34.15 | 80950 | 88014
12 | 19:33.40 | 0:06.60 | 88015 | 88524
13 | 19:40.25 | 0:41.50 | 88525 | 91649
14 | 20:22.00 | 0:36.10 | 91650 | 94359
15 | 20:58.10 | 0:33.48 | 94360 | 96882
16 | 21:31.58 | 0:31.02 | 96883 | 99209
17 | 22:02.60 | 1:07.15 | 99210 | 104249
18 | 23:10.00 | 0:28.25 | 104250 | 106374
19 | 23:38.25 | 1:13.25 | 106375 | 111874
20 | 24:51.50 | 0:22.20 | 111875 | 113544
21 | 25:13.70 | 0:40.30 | 113545 | 116574
22 | 25:54.25 | 1:21.18 | 116575 | 122667
23 | 27:15.43 | 0:41.35 | 122668 | 125777
24 | 27:57.03 | 0:15.30 | 125778 | 126932
25 | 28:12.33 | 1:30.60 | 126933 | 133742
26 | 29:43.18 | 1:00.57 | 133743 | 138299
27 | 30:44.00 | 1:33.53 | 138300 | 145327
28 | 32:17.53 | 1:00.57 | 145328 | 149884
29 | 33:18.35 | 3:13.18 | 149885 | 164377
30 | 36:31.53 | 0:55.15 | 164378 | 168517
31 | 37:26.68 | 1:04.22 | 168518 | 173339
32 | 38:31.15 | 0:35.70 | 173340 | 176034
33 | 39:07.10 | 0:35.50 | 176035 | 178709
34 | 39:42.60 | 2:07.48 | 178710 | 188282
35 | 41:50.33 | 0:39.57 | 188283 | 191264
36 | 42:30.15 | 1:22.03 | 191265 | 197417
37 | 43:52.18 | 0:30.50 | 197418 | 199717
38 | 44:22.68 | 1:44.00 | 199718 | 207517
39 | 46:06.68 | 2:43.10 | 207518 | 219752
40 | 48:50.03 | 1:37.45 | 219753 | 227072
41 | 50:27.48 | 0:22.55 | 227073 | 228777
42 | 50:50.28 | 1:03.72 | 228778 | 233574
43 | 51:54.25 | 1:07.73 | 233575 | 238672
44 | 53:02.23 | 1:24.50 | 238673 | 245022
45 | 54:26.73 | 1:06.70 | 245023 | 250042
46 | 55:33.68 | 1:25.40 | 250043 | 256457
47 | 56:59.33 | 1:03.37 | 256458 | 261219
48 | 58:02.70 | 2:16.00 | 261220 | 271419
49 | 60:18.70 | 1:08.20 | 271420 | 276539
50 | 61:27.15 | 1:37.15 | 276540 | 283829
51 | 63:04.30 | 0:51.65 | 283830 | 287719
52 | 63:56.20 | 0:06.13 | 287720 | 288182
53 | 64:02.33 | 0:05.05 | 288183 | 288562
54 | 64:07.38 | 0:46.50 | 288563 | 292062
55 | 64:54.13 | 2:15.62 | 292063 | 302249


Range status and errors

Selected range

Filename D:\[FLAC] Napalm Death - From Enslavement to Obliteration + Scum (TFCK-88516) [Japan]\Napalm Death - From Enslavement to Obliteration + Scum.wav

Peak level 100.0 %
Range quality 100.0 %
Copy CRC 8BD6A5C2
Copy OK

No errors occurred


AccurateRip summary

Track 1 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [89629DA3]
Track 2 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [DD75A630]
Track 3 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [04D82437]
Track 4 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [41843357]
Track 5 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [15115BCD]
Track 6 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [2DBB879E]
Track 7 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5B8DB7D6]
Track 8 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [444BEA95]
Track 9 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [BA23CF4B]
Track 10 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [42571C0F]
Track 11 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [BB20A758]
Track 12 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [80F009F4]
Track 13 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D734DEF9]
Track 14 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [AAC26E5C]
Track 15 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [E278588B]
Track 16 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [6A381147]
Track 17 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [149F559F]
Track 18 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [30E91A13]
Track 19 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [B601E6EB]
Track 20 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [68DD7D89]
Track 21 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [82F329C4]
Track 22 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [6BD6CF1F]
Track 23 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [A2F49ED8]
Track 24 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [8A2024E3]
Track 25 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [A10C4E00]
Track 26 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [4CD118DA]
Track 27 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [00DE92FE]
Track 28 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [7EF7FA4C]
Track 29 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [5445CE0B]
Track 30 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [B39CF1FF]
Track 31 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [B169AE26]
Track 32 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [70B9B554]
Track 33 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [ABF678F5]
Track 34 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [FBF9B9AD]
Track 35 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [928737C5]
Track 36 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [58EDBDA6]
Track 37 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [37DCEBA6]
Track 38 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [D83A4082]
Track 39 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [ECA84E97]
Track 40 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [FD31454E]
Track 41 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [C2401177]
Track 42 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [30D5F252]
Track 43 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [0AF25F6E]
Track 44 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [38E03F1A]
Track 45 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [C7F65A5E]
Track 46 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [FC3DFC79]
Track 47 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [BA3FF860]
Track 48 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [1B4B7BF0]
Track 49 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [F2892F26]
Track 50 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [BB397D5E]
Track 51 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [7C1EE22B]
Track 52 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [8EEF7C7B]
Track 53 not present in database
Track 54 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [3343A3FC]
Track 55 accurately ripped (confidence 1) [6FA8B647]

54 track(s) accurately ripped
1 track(s) not present in the AccurateRip database

Some tracks could not be verified as accurate

End of status report

DOWNLOAD: Napalm Death - From Enslavement to Obliteration + Scum [Japan 1st Press]

SharingMatrix

http://www.sharingmatrix.com/file/13776299/NAPDT8788JP.part1.rar
http://www.sharingmatrix.com/file/13776301/NAPDT8788JP.part2.rar
http://www.sharingmatrix.com/file/13776303/NAPDT8788JP.part3.rar
http://www.sharingmatrix.com/file/13776305/NAPDT8788JP.part4.rar
http://www.sharingmatrix.com/file/13776307/NAPDT8788JP.part5.rar

Mirror
http://hotfile.com/dl/55845726/2682212/NAPDT8788JP.part1.rar
http://hotfile.com/dl/55845734/ca31d4c/NAPDT8788JP.part2.rar
http://hotfile.com/dl/55845740/8feea9d/NAPDT8788JP.part3.rar
http://hotfile.com/dl/55845744/ceb21eb/NAPDT8788JP.part4.rar
http://hotfile.com/dl/55845753/f439d45/NAPDT8788JP.part5.rar

The files are interchangeable. Recovery info has included.