Rating:
Genre:
Latin
Release Date: 09/15/1998
Run Time: 36:35
A concept album by Brazilian experimentalist
Tom Zé, 1998's
Com Defecto de Fabricacao (Fabrication Defect) is strikingly akin to some early
Funkadelic albums philosophically, although not at all musically. (The bold, cartoony graphics are more than a little like
Funkadelic's early sleeves as well, come to think of it.) The album's overall theme is that creativity, art, love, and music are "defects" that those in charge (in
Zé's case, the often-oppressive Brazilian government) would love to suppress, an idea that's not all that far removed from
Free Your Mind...and Your Ass Will Follow. Lyrically,
Zé makes his points both directly and through sly, witty metaphors like
"Defect 6: Esteticar," a cockeyed defense of plagiarism as an artistic tool puckishly set to the most blandly commercial example of '60s vintage
bossa nova imaginable. Musically, the album is a fragmented blend of skittish acoustic guitars, booming electronic rhythms, shouted slogans, bizarre found-sound tape loops, and near-
psychedelic production tricks, resulting in songs as varied as the almost tribal vocal and hand-percussion grooves of
"Defect 4: Emere" and the percolating closer,
"Defect 14: Xiquexique." Those who discovered
Tom Zé through his earlier U.S. compilation releases may find this album a more satisfying and solid listen.
~Stewart Mason, All Music Guide