Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild: The Video Album | ||||
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Video by CKY | ||||
Released | November 18, 2003 | |||
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Length | 4:27:59 | |||
Label | Island | |||
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CKY video chronology | ||||
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Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild: The Video Album is the first video album by American heavy metal band CKY. Directed by Bam Margera and produced by Joe Frantz, it was released on November 18, 2003 by Island Records. The album features music videos for all ten tracks from the band's second studio album Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild, as well as behind the scenes features, older music videos and a documentary.
Disc one of Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild: The Video Album features music videos and behind the scenes videos for all ten songs on Infiltrate•Destroy•Rebuild, CKY's 2002 second studio album. Additionally, it also features music videos for two older songs, Volume 1 tracks "96 Quite Bitter Beings" and "Disengage the Simulator", as well as a photo gallery.
Disc two features a documentary entitled "CKY: Chopped & Sliced". Running at almost three hours long, the documentary features footage filmed by various people associated with the band, including guitarist Chad I Ginsburg, drummer Jess Margera's brother Bam and photographer Ryan Gee, and is made up of what Jess Margera describes as "tons of behind-the-scenes footage and backstage and tour stuff". Some of the footage is said to have been filmed on the 2003 Out on the Noose Again tour.
All ten music videos were directed by Bam Margera and produced by CKY Crew member Joe Frantz, with the exception of "Inhuman Creation Station", which was directed by Dave Denenn (with animation by Rob Shaw). "CKY: Chopped & Sliced" was directed by Ginsburg, with assistance from then-bassist Vernon Zaborowski, and produced by Erin Alexander.
Speaking about the album in a 2003 interview with music reviewer Mark Prindle, Jess Margera explained that the videos on the album were recorded "over about the course of a year and a half", praising his brother's work as director and describing the videos as "insane". He also praised Denenn for his work on "Inhuman Creation Station", claiming that the animation on the video "looks better than [The] Nightmare Before Christmas". Speaking about the production of the video, Margera noted that Denenn produced the video in return for a low rate as he "just [wanted] to make a name for himself", and claimed that he "worked on it every day for 17 hours a day, with him and a crew of about four or five people, for a month and a half straight".