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Human 2.0

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Download links and information about Human 2.0 by Nasum. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal genres. It contains 25 tracks with total duration of 38:18 minutes.

Artist: Nasum
Release date: 2000
Genre: Rock, Black Metal, Metal, Death Metal
Tracks: 25
Duration: 38:18
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on Songswave €1.08

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Mass Hypnosis 1:05
2. A Welcome Breeze of Stinking Air 1:40
3. Fatal Search 0:28
4. Shadows 2:24
5. Corrosion 2:08
6. Multinational Murderers Network 2:18
7. Parting Is Such Sweet Sorrow 0:41
8. The Black Swarm 1:23
9. Sixteen 1:51
10. Alarm 2:12
11. Detonator 1:37
12. Gargoyles and Grotesques 1:01
13. Nar Dagarna... 1:00
14. Resistance 2:33
15. The Idiot Parade 1:33
16. Den Svarta Fanan 0:59
17. We're Nothing But Pawns 0:51
18. Defragmentation 1:42
19. Sick System 0:19
20. The Professional League 2:38
21. Old and Tired? 1:12
22. Words to Die For 2:03
23. Riot 0:40
24. The Meaningless Trial 1:02
25. Sometimes Dead Is Better 2:58

Details

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Human 2.0 is Nasum's second album, and the one that really put the band on the map as a grindcore powerhouse. The title and cover art are meant to evoke a sort of man versus machine theme — or of man and machine becoming more and more closely intertwined — but the "2.0" aspect also applies to the music's place within the (by this point) maturing grindcore genre. For a genre based on extremity, it has still developed its traditions and norms like any other, many of which are present in Nasum's music: dual vocals (i.e., low growls versus higher screams), short songs lined up one after the next with little pause in between, etc. Nasum upgrades this old format, not based on any radical songwriting advances but by the sheer intensity of the band's performances and by the roaring, near-industrial sound the group creates as a whole, a sound brought to life by the chiseled, diamond-hard recording job on hand here (the work of guitarist/vocalist Miescko Talarczyk). When the bandmembers occasionally slow down from their usual full-throttle speed and settle into a half-timed groove, as on "The Idiot Parade" and "The Professional League," it is monstrously heavy. Is 38 minutes of this type of abrasive grindcore too much to digest in one sitting? That depends on the listener, but either way, this album is just about a must-hear for fans of no-frills grindcore, especially the more hardcore punk-leaning variety.