They claim to’ve “transcended” Big Beat, the style they helped invent: Layered funk and rock beats, tweaked noise howls, and an overwhelming bass sound.
They know enough to keep things simple. Evolution, containing half new tracks and half remixes, is more like their first album, but worth checking out.
Too little, too late. A good album, Dirty And Divine songs remixed by the likes of Lucid, Robin Guthrie, and MAIN, but the original album was released in 1996.
Among those involved in improving the songs are KMFDM, Critter, Chris Vrenna (ex-NIN), God Lives Underwater, and Frankie Bones. Not an essential album.
KMFDM’s 10th and final album is a fine farewell to a band that created and defined a style called “hard electronic dance music.” Like I need to tell you that.