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- Summary: This is the second full-length release since the industrial/post-punk duo of Justin Broadrick and G.C. Green reunited after disbanding in 2002.
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- Record Label: Shellshock
- Genre(s): Pop/Rock, Alternative Metal, Heavy Metal, Industrial Metal, Post-Metal
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Positive: 8 out of 8
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Mixed: 0 out of 8
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Negative: 0 out of 8
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Dec 4, 2017Even though Post Self isn't exactly what was expected, it's a masterful release from two musicians who seem to be incapable of creating anything short of exquisite.
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Dec 4, 2017Brisk, 47-minute runtime aside, Post Self is a daunting listen, as well as an essential one, even by Godflesh’s sterling standards.
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Dec 4, 2017Post Self is more moody than direct, and isn't the most hard-hitting, immediate album in the Godflesh catalog, but for anyone who equally appreciates Broadrick's metal and electronic sides, the album is as stunning as one would expect.
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Dec 4, 2017On their eighth album, the breadth of Godflesh’s influences are wider than ever, and their capacity for psychological excavation runs deeper.
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Dec 11, 2017Simply put, Post Self is another stunning addition to Godflesh’s uncompromising thirty-year run.
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Jan 18, 2018Because of its occasional bursts of rhythm and melody, Post Self is one of the more accessible Godflesh albums.
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Dec 7, 2017Post Self settles to balance between Jesu's shoegaze wasteland and Godflesh's constraining rhythms and doom-laden riffs. The balance between the two bands permits Broadrick to explore inward while still allowing for his visceral criticism of a world gone mad.
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