A clever alternate spelling of their namesake and bass player, this metal outfit forcefully demonstrates that the greatest metal recordings of all time owe much of their heaviness to
Geezer Butler. G//Z/R even appears to target
Tony Iommi -- whose contribution to
Black Sabbath is often described in more significant terms than that of
Butler -- on the vicious "Giving Up the Ghost." With more than enough power to eclipse any sans-
Butler Black Sabbath or
Iommi project, this 1995 release proves its creative point. Engineer
Paul Northfield deserves special credit for fusing the punishing sounds of guitarist
Pedro Howse and drummer
Deen Castronovo with
Butler's famous low end.
Fear Factory vocalist
Burton C. Bell's holler wears a little thin at times, but he never crowds G//Z/R's super-heavy riffs. With its historic membership and rock-solid execution,
Plastic Planet reaches rarely achieved metal heights.
| | 1 | | Catatonic Eclipse | Butler, Howse | 7:10 |
| | 2 | | Drive Boy, Shooting | Butler, Howse | 4:17 |
| | 3 | | Giving Up the Ghost | Butler, Howse | 5:12 |
| | 4 | | Plastic Planet | Butler, Howse | 3:19 |
| | 5 | | The Invisible | Butler, Howse | 3:43 |
| | 6 | | Seance Fiction | Butler, Howse | 5:55 |
| | 7 | | House of Clouds | Butler, Howse | 3:43 |
| | 8 | | Detective 27 | Butler, Howse | 3:09 |
| | 9 | | X13 | Butler, Howse | 4:05 |
| | 10 | | Sci-Clone | Butler, Howse | 3:43 |
| | 11 | | Cycle of Sixty | Butler, Howse | 3:02 |
¡Aquí!
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