Danzig 6:66 Satan's Child | ||||
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Cover to the standard edition of the album
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Studio album by Danzig | ||||
Released | November 2, 1999 | |||
Recorded | September 15, 1998–January 1999 | |||
Studio | NRG Studios, A&M Recording Studios, Big Love Studios | |||
Genre | Heavy metal, doom metal, industrial metal | |||
Length | 53:10 | |||
Label | Evilive/E-Magine | |||
Producer | Glenn Danzig, Pete Lorimer | |||
Danzig chronology | ||||
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Limited Edition cover by Martin Emond
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Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Blistering | favorable |
Canoe.ca | mixed |
College Music Journal | favorable |
Exclaim! | favorable |
Rock Hard (de) | 10/10 |
6:66 Satan's Child is the sixth studio album from the American heavy metal band Danzig. It was released in 1999 on E-Magine Records.
6:66 Satan's Child has a mostly industrial metal sound. As with its predecessor Blackacidevil, several songs include effects-treated vocals. It was the first Danzig album to be produced using digital recording methods, as Glenn Danzig explained: “This record is the first time I've ever recorded my vocals digitally. I recorded with a mic and in a booth, but through a computer, and that's how the overdubs were done on this record as well. What I tried to do with this record is take all my favorite elements from Danzig 1 through 5, and the Thrall EP, put it all together and add a couple of new flavors.”
The lyrical themes on the album include pain, evil and death. "East Indian Devil (Kali's Song)" was written about the goddess Kali.
Glenn Danzig originally wrote "Thirteen" for Johnny Cash, whose acoustic version appears in an edited form on his 1994 American Recordings album, and in its full-length on Disc 5 of Cash's posthumous 2003 Unearthed Box Set. Danzig recalled writing the song: "Suddenly one day in 1993 I was called and asked if I wanted to write a song for Johnny Cash. Of course! The original Man in Black! It was an honor. It took me about twenty minutes to write "Thirteen", which is my understanding of Cash and his career. Then I actually went down to him on his farm in Tennessee to teach him the song. He turned out to be a really nice man". The song is a mournful dialogue of a life blighted by bad luck and misery. Danzig's own version of "Thirteen" is gothic blues in style, and is featured as the opening song in the 2009 film The Hangover. "Thirteen" was covered by Mark Kozelek on his 2013 covers album Like Rats.
A remixed version of "Belly of the Beast", called "underBelly of the Beast", appeared on the soundtrack to The Crow: Salvation in 2000. A remix of "Unspeakable" appeared on the soundtrack to the Grub Girl pornographic movie.