Merciless is the fourth
EP by English
industrial metal band
Godflesh, released in 1994 through
Earache
and
Columbia. In 1996, the EP was reissued along with the Selfless (1994) album as the compilation Selfless/Merciless.[1]
Content
Recorded from 1991 to 1993, Merciless comprises one rerecorded song, two previously unreleased songs, and a remixed song.[2] The EP's title track, recorded in December 1993, is an updated version of a 1986
Fall of Because song.[3] "Blind" and "Unworthy", tracks 2 and 3 respectively, are both labeled as "Biomechanical Mix" in the EP's liner notes, though no original versions are publicly available.[4] This is the same tag that Godflesh frontman
Justin Broadrick applied to the
remixes he made for
Pantera in 1993. Track 4, "Flowers", is a stripped-down remix, or "demix", of the song "Don't Bring Me Flowers" from Godflesh's 1992 studio album, Pure.[4] After the EP was mastered and completed, Columbia brought in
Bob Ludwig to refine the release. Broadrick said Ludwig's changes improved the sound.[5]
AllMusic reviewer Daniel Gioffre wrote that the EP "displays clearly that there is method in Godflesh's madness, that their peculiar brand of discord is carefully calculated, in the full knowledge that there is consonance lurking inside every dissonance."[2]
Merciless is the fourth
EP by English
industrial metal band
Godflesh, released in 1994 through
Earache
and
Columbia. In 1996, the EP was reissued along with the Selfless (1994) album as the compilation Selfless/Merciless.[1]
Content
Recorded from 1991 to 1993, Merciless comprises one rerecorded song, two previously unreleased songs, and a remixed song.[2] The EP's title track, recorded in December 1993, is an updated version of a 1986
Fall of Because song.[3] "Blind" and "Unworthy", tracks 2 and 3 respectively, are both labeled as "Biomechanical Mix" in the EP's liner notes, though no original versions are publicly available.[4] This is the same tag that Godflesh frontman
Justin Broadrick applied to the
remixes he made for
Pantera in 1993. Track 4, "Flowers", is a stripped-down remix, or "demix", of the song "Don't Bring Me Flowers" from Godflesh's 1992 studio album, Pure.[4] After the EP was mastered and completed, Columbia brought in
Bob Ludwig to refine the release. Broadrick said Ludwig's changes improved the sound.[5]
AllMusic reviewer Daniel Gioffre wrote that the EP "displays clearly that there is method in Godflesh's madness, that their peculiar brand of discord is carefully calculated, in the full knowledge that there is consonance lurking inside every dissonance."[2]