Digital Resistance | ||||
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Studio album by Slough Feg | ||||
Released | February 17, 2014 | |||
Genre | Heavy metal, folk metal | |||
Length | 40:41 | |||
Label | Metal Blade Records | |||
Producer | Mike Scalzi and Justin Weis | |||
Slough Feg chronology | ||||
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Professional ratings | |
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Aggregate scores | |
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 81/100 |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | |
Pitchfork | 8.1/10 |
Digital Resistance is the ninth studio album released by the American heavy metal band Slough Feg. Released on February 17, 2014 by Metal Blade Records, the album has received universal acclaim and has been praised for its creative use of traditional metal themes inspired by Iron Maiden and Thin Lizzy.
The album took approximately nine months to record, although the recording itself occurred "sporadically". Frontman Mike Scalzi suggested that the recording "was not different from any other album" except for his use of the organ, with all of the songs "written with the band in the rehearsal space just like our other albums". However, he admitted that "the singing took forever because my voice is getting old and decrepit, and was never really suited for metal in the first place. I have a crooners voice, or if I’d worked at it a little maybe a choir voice, but not a high pitched metal voice...but I love metal, so I try to sing like Freddie Mercury and fail...and end up sounding like Neil Diamond on steroids. What can I say?"
The album cover features a statue of Romulus and Remus, the mythological founders of Rome, suckling a she-wolf set against a dystopian background. As Mike Scalzi explained, the cover places "Romulus and Remus in some destroyed civilization. It's a very vague reference to what the album is about. It's sort of mysterious...I wanted a civilization in ruins much like the Kiss cover of Destroyer". Scalzi said that the cover is illustrative of the album's technophobic concerns with impact of digital technology upon society, which were informed by his experiences as a philosophy teacher.
While the album's anti-technology orientation, according to Grayson Currin of Pitchfork, "seems almost painfully obvious for Slough Feg", he praised how Scalzi "spin[s] his rant toward a surprisingly broad" critique of "how electronics have turned well-meaning and intelligent people into facile consumers coldly following the orders of a screen". Scalzi suggested that technology has changed how people learn: