THREAT:
Music That Inspired The Movie
Various Artists
HARDCORE TRANSFORMED INTO BREAKCORE
The indie film THREAT is notorious for its brutal methods of sending
a positive message. This is not the film soundtrack; this is a supplementary
album full of further adventures in musical fusion. Breakcore mixmasters
take hold of songs by the likes of Minor Threat, Terror,
and Youth Of Today, and play Dr. Frankenstein to produce a monster
of intense, unusual, and at times very impressive character. So there's
no confusion over this breakcore style, this release is more a showcase
for skilled DJs to dismember and reassemble an uncanny marriage of techno
and metallic hardcore.
A
beast that becomes a beauty, this musical creation carries substance,
maintaining continuity with the film's concept of hope - to join diametrically
opposed elements in harmony. Of the 15 mixes, some are truly wonders
of electronic possibility. Enduser's retooling of Terror's
"Overcome" retains genuine brutality, and Killswitch Engage's
"World Ablaze" is put into surreal industrial disco beats
by Edgey. In touch with THREAT's message, all tracks are listed
in a confrontational manner (e.g. Agnostic Front vs. Alec
Empire and Bleeding Through vs. Hecate). Considering
that resolution often follows revolution, the antagonistic manner is
appropriate. [7]
-Christian Cipollini, OUTBURN Magazine #34
THREAT:
Original Motion Picture Soundtrack
Various Artists
RIOT
MUSIC
Alec
Empire of Atari Teenage Riot is at the helm of THREAT's soundtrack,
the accompaniment to the movie about social unrest in New York's Lower
East Side. Empire's omnipresent influence is felt on the majority of
the 18 tracks that litter the album with hardcore techno and industrial
anthems. Empire's "Night Of Violence" is one of the paramount
tracks with its thick guitars and blurry vocals that sets the stage
for the album's volatile atmosphere. Half of Atari Teenage Riot's noteworthy
contributions stem from Delete Yourself, such as "Start
The Riot" and "Into The Death." Midway, Bleeding Through
cuts the fog of digital music to send the album into a hardcore tailspin
with "Number Seven With A Bullet." Most Precious Blood
and Eighteen Visions keep the industrial riot at bay with lashings
of metalcore on "The Great Red Shift" and "One Hell Of
A Prize Fighter." The closing half of the album falters with Queque's
two offerings and Eyes Like Knives' "Drone" - four
minutes of dead air that put the breaks on the album's intensity. "The
Kids Are United" closes the disc on an upbeat and positive note.
Empire has crafted a score that is overcast with Atari Teenage Riot
work that incites the intense, riot inspiring environment that the movie
demands. [6]
-Tracy D'Arcy, OUTBURN Magazine #34
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