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Metal Rhythm : ウィキペディア英語版
Metal Rhythm


''Metal Rhythm'' is the eleventh studio album, and ninth under his own name, by musician Gary Numan, released in 1988.
== Overview ==
Numan's previous three albums had been released on his own record label, Numa Records. However, the disappointing sales of those albums led to Numan closing down the label and signing to IRS Records. Most of the album had, in fact, been recorded before Numan signed with the record label. IRS therefore had little opportunity to make changes to the recorded material, but the label was still able to exert influence on the album's release. Numan wanted to call the album ''Cold Metal Rhythm'' after its song of the same name, but IRS believed that the shortened title sounded less negative and more commercial.
Musically, ''Metal Rhythm'' represented a move by Numan into a more commercial sound, although it preserved continuity with Numan's previous albums. ''Metal Rhythm'' made liberal use of female backing vocals, which Numan had incorporated into his four previous albums; also, the futuristic funk that characterised Numan's previous albums remained on ''Metal Rhythm'', but the programmed beats, hustling vocals and rock power chords gave the album an edgier, more psyched-up vibe. The album's sense of aggression is present lyrically as well as musically; on the liner notes for the album's 1999 re-release, Steve Malins writes that "like Trent Reznor's NIN debut, the persona projected on ''Metal Rhythm'' is restless, emotionally unstable, scathing about human frailties and flaws, self loathing about his own." In the songs "This is Emotion", "New Anger" and "Devious", Numan lashes out at the emotional desolation and manipulative personalities he had encountered throughout his career, and "Respect" is rumoured to be about Numan's falling out with Hohokam, a band signed to Numa Records and Numan's support act during the 1984 ''Berserker'' tour.〔(HOHOKAM Harlequin Tears )〕 Numan himself remarked:
''Metal Rhythm'' was released in September 1988 and although its edgy, industrial-funk sound met with favour from fans and some positive reviews in the UK music press, it sold poorly. The album charted at #48, while its singles, "New Anger" and "America", charted at #46 and #49 respectively. The album's sales were arguably confounded by the lack of strong promotion and IRS's inappropriate choices of singles. Of the latter, Numan later recalled:
For its American release, and against Numan's wishes, the record label changed the album's title to ''New Anger'', changed the artwork colour shade from black to blue, remixed several of its tracks and even replaced two tracks ("Respect" and "Young Heart") with tracks originally recorded for Numan's 1984 album ''Berserker''.
Numan would only release two more albums with IRS - ''The Skin Mechanic'' (1989), a live album from the ''Metal Rhythm'' tour, and the studio album ''Outland'' (1991) - before quitting the label and reactivating Numa Records.
Numan supported ''Metal Rhythm'' with an 18-date UK live tour (September–October 1988) from which the live album ''The Skin Mechanic'' was released in 1989. Culled from two shows at the Dominion Theatre, London in September 1988, ''The Skin Mechanic'' charted at UK#55, and was followed by a 1990 video release of the tour.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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