Rating:
Genre:
Rock
Release Date: 06/15/1989
Run Time: 54:58
Starting with the careening
"From Out of Nowhere," driven by
Bottum's doomy, energetic keyboards,
Faith No More rebounded excellently on
The Real Thing after
Mosley's firing. Given that the band had nearly finished recording the music and
Patton was a last minute recruit, he adjusts to the proceedings well. His insane, wide-ranging musical interests would have to wait for the next album for their proper integration, but the band already showed enough of that to make it an inspired combination.
Bottum, in particular, remains the wild card, coloring
Martin's nuclear-strength riffs and the
Gould/
Bordin rhythm slams with everything from quirky hooks to pristine synth sheen. It's not quite early
Brian Eno joins
Led Zeppelin and
Funkadelic, but it's closer than might be thought, based on the nutty lounge vibes of
"Edge of the World" and the Arabic melodies and feedback of
"Woodpeckers From Mars." "Falling to Pieces," a fractured anthem with a delicious delivery from
Patton, should have been a bigger single that it was, while
"Surprise! You're Dead!" and the title track stuff riffs down the listener's throat. The best-known song remains the appropriately titled
"Epic," which lives up to its name from the bombastic opening to the concluding piano and the crunching, stomping funk metal in between. The inclusion of a cover of
Black Sabbath's
"War Pigs" amusingly backfired on the band -- at the time,
Sabbath's hipness level was nonexistent, making it a great screw-you to the supposed cutting edge types. However, all the metalheads took the band to their hearts so much that, as a result, the quintet dropped it from their sets to play
"Easy" by the
Commodores instead!
~Ned Raggett, All Music Guide