Album
I've Seen All I Need To See
The Body
2021 · Rock
Rare pressing on Gatefold

I've Seen All I Need To See is a Metal album by The Body, originally released in 2021. On Gatefold: 4 pressings tracked.
About
Since the late ’90, The Body has been one of the most prolific forces in experimental heavy music. Specializing in exploration and collaboration—they’ve done collaborative releases with Uniform, Thou, Full of Hell, and many others—core duo Lee Buford (drum, programming) and Chip King (guitar, vocals) have stripped their sound back to sheer monolithic power on <i>I’ve Seen All I Need to See</i>. Described by their record label as an exploration of “the extremes and micro-tonality of distortion,” the album is as menacing as it is unsettling. “I think that’s just a fancy way of saying that we tried to focus more on the distortion and reverb, which is how we sound live,” Buford tells Apple Music. “We just tried to recreate that to the best of our ability.” Below, he comments on each track. <b>A Lament</b> “Our friend Seth [Manchester], who records u, that's actually his dad doing the voice-over. We get him to come in and read stuff for us every once in a while, which is always fun because he's a real regular dad and he'll be like, 'Okay, what are we doing today, guys?' And in this case, we got him to read a poem about a guy’s wife who was dying of cancer. It’s by this British poet Douglas Dunn, from a book he did called <i>Elegies</i>. I wanted Seth’s dad to read it because on the last song on our last record, he reads a passage from a Czech writer, so we wanted to have a continuation, with Seth’s dad ending the last record and starting this one.” <b>Tied Up and Locked In</b> “We recorded this before the pandemic, but the title seems pretty apropos now, especially with the claustrophobia of the record. I learned how to play drums by playing hip-hop beat, so I feel like that’s what I always go back to—this weird hip-hop groove—which is kind of the basis of the song. And then we have our friend Ben [Eberle] singing on it at the end, who is from this band Sandworm that we’ve done a split with. He’s on almost everything we do, and he’s one of the only guests on this record.” <b>Eschatological Imperative</b> “I think this was the first song we recorded, so it’s us getting used to this recording style. With all the distortion and reverb and stuff, we had to slow everything down and couldn’t play too many notes because then it gets really muddy. When I was playing drum, I couldn’t use cymbal, basically, because when I did, it would just blow everything out. So this is us learning how to play the songs in a way that would sound okay with all the crazy distortion.” <b>A Pain of Knowing</b> “Lyrically, most of our stuff is pretty grim. On this record—and especially this song—I think Chip went even more bleak than normal. Maybe he was feeling something a little different on this record—I don’t know. But this is a droney song, and it’s pretty sparse. It’s an example of us just laying back a little bit musically.” <b>The City Is Shelled</b> “Lyrically, I think this is about war. It also has our friend Chrissy [Wolpert] on it, who sings on a lot of our record. When we made the decision to make this record less melodic, we still wanted Chrissy on it, so she plays piano here. Then we just distorted it an insane amount and blew it out, probably much to her chagrin. She likes more melodic thing. This also has Ben singing on it, and I think it’s the only song with both of them.” <b>They Are Coming</b> “Lyrically and musically, I think we were shooting for a more paranoid thing here. I don’t know if we achieved it any more than on any other song, but that was definitely the intention—that feeling of gloom and paranoia. I think we probably have that in all our song, but we tried to amplify it in this one. Chip came up with the title—he came up with all the song titles and the album title for this one.” <b>The Handle / The Blade</b> “This one has a recording trick on the drums at the beginning. It’s this weird delay that makes the drums seem a lot crazier than they actually are. So it makes me look better, which I appreciate. And then we dubbed out Chip’s vocals at the end, with this weird delay and echo. It’s our little nod to that genre that we both love.” <b>Path of Failure</b> .
via Apple Music
The Clerk says
The Clerk knows this whole record — the pressing quirks, the credits, the take.
Tracklist
- 1A Lament5:54
- 2Tied Up and Locked In2:55
- 3Eschatological Imperative4:37
- 4A Pain of Knowing5:40
- 5The City Is Shelled5:38
- 6They Are Coming4:44
- 7The Handle / The Blade3:38
- 8Path of Failure5:08
Sound DNA
- Metal
- Doom Metal
- abrasive
- menacing
- occult
Credits
The people behind it.
Performers
- Seth ManchesterDRUM PROGRAMMING KEYBOARDS
- Max GoldmanDRUMS
- Lee BufordDRUMS
- Chip KingGUITAR VOCALS
- Chrissy WolpertPIANO VOCALS
- Ben EberleVOCALS
Rare pressing on Gatefold · 4 pressings tracked on Gatefold
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