The Last Dubber

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (35 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 64:06

Write a Review4 Member Reviews

Please log in before you review a release. Log in

user avatar

Good record....

AcidRock23

I love to work out to Ministry and like the more DJ/ disco-ey oriented stuff here like 7 miles into a 1/2 marathon, when the bats are chasing you and the Dick Cheney samples are echoing in your head and all that. Maybe there's a 'mixed bag' (*ouch*) element to this but for that kind of situation this is perfect for me. The last two are sort of 'meh' but I like the rest of it. I did the whole live shows in the late 80s thing too.

user avatar

a dj's record.

Jamadagni

I perhaps never forget hearing Ministry's Land of Rape and Honey back in '88 or '89. It took my skull off. Their first album Twitch, which I have only heard a couple of times, has a softer sound. The roots of Ministry's sounds are similar to those of big beat hip-hop. It is such an eclectic blend of culture and human experience it reflects what might be called a meta-personal exploration in sound. Mr. Jourgensen is here to smash your skull, and get intimate with your mind and his friends have his back. Industrial tribal music. Raw, fresh. I can barely keep up.

user avatar

"Nope!!!"

EMUSIC-01E98372

This remix stuff IS garbage, & I am a HUGE Ministry fan. Well -maybe it's not that horrid but it dosen't have the balls or guitars I love most about them. Might as well listen to Skinny Puppy(not that that's a bad thing)...but see for yourself ~

user avatar

Yup!!!

EMUSIC-00DA7B15

An absolute must for ministry fans! Most remix stuff is garbage, but this is icing on the cake!

Recommended Albums

eMusic Features

Who Are…Pop. 1280

By Matthew Fritch

Getting under your skin has been Pop. 1280's business since 2009, when the Brooklyn-based industrial/noise outfit issued the appropriately titled "Bedbugs" 7-inh. Led by singer Chris Bug and guitarist Ivan Lip, the band's commitment to provocation knows no bounds: We suppose you could do worse than open your debut album by shouting "Two dogs fucking!" but we'd have to comb through some pretty dark corners of eMusic's catalog in order to suggest something more foul.… more »

They Say All Media Guide

By the time The Last Dubber arrived, loyal Ministry fans had already experienced two years’ worth of fringe releases, all coming after the “band” “retired” in 2007. This remix effort is the least desirable of all the live albums and other ephemera Al Jourgensen has released since laying his Ministry project to rest, but it’s not a complete washout and serves a purpose for fanatics who thought The Last Sucker was just too tight. Here, that album gets chopped and stretched into a sprawling landscape of scrapes and thuds, none of it hitting as hard as the source material. A good example is how the opening “Clocks Strike Thirteen” mix of “Watch Yourself” doesn’t catch fire until its last 41 seconds, although the crawl to get there is textured, interesting, and as druggy as the spliff-toking George W. on the cover implies. Just like on Ministry’s Rio Grande Dub, Clayton Worbeck handles most of the remixing with John Bechdel and DJ Hardware getting one track each. With his hands mostly off the project, Jourgensen gets to stick by his retirement promise. Fans get that lone Ministry album which doesn’t demand much attention and can actually slink into the background. – David Jeffries

more »

Activity

  • 02.13.12: Monday, February 13 at 9:00am, tickets go on sale for Academy - Manchester, I2