Helmet - Strap It On (Full Album Vinyl) - Video
PUBLISHED:  Nov 22, 2012
DESCRIPTION:
Helmet - Strap It On (Full Vinyl Rip)
Producer Wharton Tiers, Helmet
Amphetamine Records/Interscope
Personnel

Band
Henry Bogdan -- Bass
Page Hamilton -- Guitar, Vocals
Peter Mengede -- Guitar
John Stanier -- Drums

Engineering
Wharton Tiers -- engineer

Track listing

"Repetition" 0:00
"Rude" 3:00
"Bad Mood" 7:14
"Sinatra" 9:30
"FBLA" 13:54
"Blacktop" 16:40
"Distracted" 20:01
"Make Room" 23:13
"Murder" 26:42

Strap It On is the debut album by American alternative metal band Helmet. Originally released in 1990 through Amphetamine Reptile Records, it was subsequently rereleased by Interscope in November 1991.
Critics considered the album innovative for its explosive, propulsive, and often staccato riff style which greatly exploited drop D tuning. It has since become a cult classic in the post-hardcore genre and even influential on the metal scene. The moody, atmospheric "Sinatra" differed from most of the fast-paced, metal-influenced songs on the album; its lyrics featured a paraphrasing of Dean Martin's famous line about the crooner, "It's Sinatra's world/ We just live in it."

Reception and legacy

The album received positive reviews, with critics praising the band's fresh, raw and innovative sound. Allmusic's Jason Birchmeier wrote in his review "The nine-song album is a brief one, clocking in around a half-hour, but even such brevity proves wonderfully exhausting by the time you near the last couple songs. In fact, by the time you make it past "Sinatra," one of the album's highlights and also the halfway point, slow fatigue threatens as the riffs continue to hammer away unrelentingly and vocalist Page Hamilton's sometimes-tuneful, oftentimes-bellowing shouting grows seemingly further agonized. The overall relentlessness should be a sheer pleasure to those who enjoy the intensity of metal without the clownish clichés yet, at the same time, enjoy the originality of alt-rock without the pansy passivity."[1]
Future guitarist Chris Traynor was a fan of the album, and considered it to be "`one of the most important rock records ever."[5]
The Sacramento based alternative metal group Deftones covered the song Sinatra, with it appearing on their 2005 compilation album B-Sides & Rarities.[6][7]

Early pressings of the album incorrectly listed the title of the third song as "Bad Moon". The Japanese release has one extra track, "Impressionable", which also appears on the Amphetamine Reptile compilation 7" EP Dope, Guns 'n' Fucking in the Streets Vol. 5. The song title FBLA stands for Future Business Leaders of America.
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