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Fear Factory
Fear Factory's 'Digimortal' a chip off the band's experiences
Friday, June 8, 2001
By Kristi Singer, Morning Star Correspondent
Wilmington Morning Star
Copyright 2001 Wilmington Star-News
Digimortal, Fear Factory's follow-up to the gold-certified 1998 album Obsolete, is a concept album about "digital mortality."
This band thinks beyond music -- way beyond.
On the disc, Dino Cazares, lead vocalist Burton C. Bell, drummer Raymon Herrera and bassist Christian Olde Wolbers predict the possible future of man and machine: Think The Matrix meets The Sixth Day.
The song predicts that in the future, the human memory may be able to be downloaded directly from the brain with something called an "Eternachip." Before death, the "Eternachip" would be installed to download human memory and experiences to be saved. The human would be clones at the time of death and the memory of the client downloaded into the "Eternachip" of the clone.
According to the song, life could go on forever, as long as this procedure is followed.
"In the future that we're talking about, humanity and technology have been fused together.
"And through technology, humanity has learned the secret of mortality," Mr. Bell said in a Roadrunner Records press release.
And Mr. Bell believes the idea of "digital mortality" is a potential reality.
"This is how it could possibly happen. There are a million possibilities," he said.
Many of them are included in the song synopsis included with the album.
"Everyone seems to believe that this was a true, working procedure, valuable in ethics and morals, but what seemed to be forgotten was the soul. Is it something that is part of our memories, or is it something intangible, out of reach from technology. This is the concept of Digimortal."
Digimortal, released April, debuted at No. 32 on Billboard's Top 200 Albums Chart.
The first single, Linchpin, went to No. 1 on Radio & Record's Metal charts.
According to Mr. Bell, the single is about how man and technology have become one.
"It (Linchpin) came to me as a word... and I looked it up and found it to be 'a part that holds together the idea of the complex.' To me it means if you take man or technology out of the future equation the world would fail/fall apart. We are all part of the same machine," Mr. Bell said.
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