SPK
Machine Age Voodoo


3.5
great

Review

by Meatplow USER (111 Reviews)
July 10th, 2011 | 9 replies


Release Date: 1984 | Tracklist

Review Summary: "Feel the magic of the dance. Let your mind slip in a trance. Everybody everybody get together. In ritual celebration."

Australian first wave industrial group SPK's Machine Age Voodoo was a radical departure from their earlier music, enough to earn the pioneering noise group accusations of selling out from ardent fans. This much is fact, but if you look at industrial music in context in the middle to late 80's patterns start to emerge. Hell, out of who is who just about everybody went synthpop. Let's take a gander.

Throbbing Gristle, the originals pioneers of this big ol' mess. Chris Carter & Cosey Fanni Tutti went off to to start their own synthpop project, Chris & Cosey. Peter "Sleazy" Christopherson's post-industrial vehicle Coil dabbled with it, as did Genesis P-Orridge's Psychic TV. Cabaret Voltaire soon moved from errant post-punk to New Wave territory, before ultimately settling into a jarring direction to pump out otherwise defining minimal techno releases in the 90's. Boyd Rice collaborated with artists such as Fad Gadget and Death In June who whilst rather dissimilar had their roots in post-punk/new wave, and was an influence over guys like Marc Almond of Soft Cell (you know, that group who popularised Tainted Love). Which brings us to SPK, who were perhaps the noisiest and most inaccessible of all the first wave industrial artists. Hell, even Aussie contemporaries Severed Heads moved from experiments in dissonant industrial music to synthpop. What chance did Graeme Revell and co. have?

The thing is this is SPK's attempt at a commercial album. For anyone familiar with Information Overload Unit, and Leichenschrei, two defining industrial/noise albums if there ever were any, Machine Age Voodoo may come as a bit of a shock. Hiring a female vocalist in the form of Sinan Leong (who later went on to become Revell's wife), gone is the harsh sound frequencies, mechanical dark ambience and disturbing samples of old. In is 80's dance pop, and damn, is it upbeat and energetic. Hell, the opening title track may be one of the best New Wave songs i've ever heard with it's tribal beats, horns and vocals. Machine Age Voodoo, the song, sets a high standard for industrialised synthpop. Flesh & Steel is what I would consider another essential cut on here. With it's infectious bassline and percussion, and sensual vocals it rivals the title track on a whole different level.

Unfortunately whilst not quite as good, the rest of the album is no slouch either. High Tension, Metal Dance, Seduction and One World are highly energetic and could have been minor club hits back in the day. With Love From China sticks out like a sore thumb almost, for one it's much slower than anything else on here and feels more like a New Wave ballad, even if it wouldn't be correct to label it as such. It is still good though. The two mid-paced songs on here, Metropolis and Crime of Passion, provide a nice break, the latter predominantly featuring bluesy guitar licks completely unlike anything else on the album. All these songs are a mixed bag of stuff that kind of blends into one another, but as a whole it sort of works.

Overall, Machine Age Voodoo is just kind of patchy. It's a refreshing listen for anyone who enjoys new wave and 80's dance pop, but may find itself at odds with anyone who is seeking more of the soul-crushing noise which was predominant on Information Overload Unit and Leichenschrei. Hell, this album is all about the hooks. To me, along with other seminal 80's releases by industrial artists who went synthpop (such as Cabaret Voltaire's Micro-Phonies and Chris & Cosey's Heartbeat), I find Machine Age Voodoo a slight, but worthwhile listen for gauging the direction of industrial music at the time. The title track and Flesh & Steel are essential, though.



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user ratings (26)
3.3
great

Comments:Add a Comment 
Meatplow
July 10th 2011


5523 Comments


Machine Age Voodoo - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALSKm0b42Mc
Flesh & Steel - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6RD3Bxv5WAQ

insomniac15
Staff Reviewer
July 10th 2011


6171 Comments


First album I listen to from these guys and they sound good, especially Crime Of Passion, Seduction, and the tracks you've posted. They're better than the plethora of New Wave bands at that time. I should check out other albums. I agree with the review. pos

Meatplow
July 11th 2011


5523 Comments


I suggest you check out that recommended Cabaret Voltaire album, insomniac

Meatplow
July 11th 2011


5523 Comments


http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZRDpP5zFvt4

also this

should really have put these guys in the recommended albums i'll do it now

Acanthus
July 11th 2011


9812 Comments


This looks good, pos'd sir.

somnolence
July 14th 2013


446 Comments


sellouts

GiaNXGX
September 3rd 2013


5277 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

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Necromaniac
April 6th 2016


4 Comments


This album is a dissapointment and pretty terrible
Sound Generator keeps talking about how much he will never frogive them for what they did after he left
And not just the album is a change in style
They threw away their art like appearance and just are like "We are KMFDM.....Just from Australia instead"





Demon of the Fall
November 1st 2023


33620 Comments

Album Rating: 1.5

This is confusingly bizarre, in a 'how did the people responsible for the genius of Leichenschrei write a song as horrifically bad as High Tension' - bloody hell it's irritating...



A lot of this is passably dull at least



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