Friday, February 13, 2026

KMFDM : "ENEMY"






Their mission statement is 40 years of conceptual continuity, but the concept expands in recent years, aside from the more rock n roll vibes the title track opens the album with, there does seem to be a similar vibe that checks off all the boxes you expect from the long-running electro-industrial band. They have a new guitarist that knows what the job descripstion call for, and Sascha continues to steer the ship in the right direction. There is a more ominous stomp that fulfills the dystopian obligations when it comes to "L'ETAT". It casts a darker mood over things, while the Lucia crooned "VAMPYR," finds them conscious of their goth-leaning fan base. Her delivery is aggressive as needed when it comes to an anthemic chorus. 

Annabella Konietzko takes the mic for "YOU" which is a great deal poppier than what we expect from this band, but it works pretty well for what it is. In fact, even with the small sonic shifts into perhaps more accessible terrority the songs flow pretty well. Better than I expected. Perhaps their strongest work in a decade. Lyrically, it does not feel as overtly political as some of their more recent efforts. Though the first hints creep in on "OUTERNATIONAL INTERVENTION," which might be about aliens stepping in to sort through things on Earth. There is a more Gary Numan-like synth pulse to "A OKAY" when coupled with the vocal melody here, it almost soundsl ike k-pop. 

They bring the dub back with "Stray Bullet 2.0."  Not the first time they have flirted with this sound.  Given the title "Catch & Kill" was not what I expected, which would have been more along of a "Light' style thrashing, there is very little on this album, but the melodic direction they go here works well enough. The highest doses of heavier guitar might be found on the instrumental."GUN QUARTER SUE".  I listened to the last song through headphones, and the production sounded not only much better, but actually stellar, so high volumes with headphones is the recommendation for this album. it sounded much better . I will give this album a 9.5, and see how it grows on me, but it stacks up pretty well against their other stuff and is less poppy than the last album.Out on Metropolis  


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