Mdfmk – Christopher Thelen

Mdfmk
Republic / Universal Records, 2000
Reviewed by Christopher Thelen
Published on May 12, 2000

The diehard fans of KMFDM had to be crying in their Red Bull
energy drinks last year when Sascha Konietzko and crew announced
they were calling it a day… only to return shortly thereafter as
MDFMK.

Confused yet? I don’t think you should be. The, aah, “new”
band’s debut release
MDFMK still stays loyal to its industrial roots, while
daring to focus on actual songwriting. While I never was into
KMFDM, I will say this much about MDFMK: If all their work is this
good, I’ll be hitting the used CD store post haste.

The band – Konietzko, Lucia Cifarelli and Tim Skold – still dare
to sing about darker subjects, but they do so in a way that they
make the listener think for themselves, which isn’t a bad thing at
all. Wrap this around a powerful industrial music core that dares
to get you up and moving while blowing out the bass cones of your
speakers, and you have an album that is absolutely enjoyable.

Cifarelli is an excellent addition to the lineup, proven by her
vocals on “Get Out Of My Head,” a track that should damn well be
added to every “alternative” station around. You’ll still probably
have someone trying to psychoanalyze the lyrics of this one – but
why can’t the listener just enjoy the song for what it is and take
what they want to away from it?

The same goes for “Witch Hunt,” a song which seemingly answers
the critics who slammed the late KMFDM after their ties to a
nationwide tragedy. If this isn’t a stinging damnation of those who
slammed Konietzko and crew, I don’t know what is. Sample lyric: “It
doesn’t matter what you say or do / There is no justice – no future
for you / Because you’re the scapegoat, you are to blame / This is
your life – 15 minutes of shame.” Ka-pow.

MDFMK contains plenty of industrial power to convince the
band’s longtime fans that they haven’t abandoned the roots that
made them so popular. Tracks like “Torpedoes,” “Transmutation,”
“Rabblerouser” and “Now” all show that MDFMK isn’t going anywhere
for the forseeable future – and that’s absolutely fine with me.

The only negative thing I can say about
MDFMK is that the formula starts to wear a little thin at
the end, but it’s not so frayed as to take away from the overall
enjoyment of the album. Tracks like “Hydroelectric” are still good,
but they don’t quite measure up to the masterworks at the front end
of the disc. Still, I’m not complaining.

No matter what name they go by,
MDFMK is an album that proves that the worlds of industrial
and alternative can merge together to create actual songs that are
more than enjoyable. There’s enough on this album that should make
everyone happy – and will undoubtedly be one of the discs that will
be hard to get out of your CD changer.

Rating: B+

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