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Cerebral Noize : Process
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A fast, hard, elaborate metal/punk hybrid, abrasive enough to leave large, ugly bruises, but with just enough melody not to break the skin.
Genre: Metal/Punk: Thrash/Speed Metal
Release Date: 2002
Process Record Label: Mental Music
  • Download Album (MP3) - $7.00
  • Buy CD - $9.00
SPECIAL: 50% discount if you buy more than one copy of it today!
Preview Song Name Time Format Price Select
Stake Through The Head 3:38 $0.99
Computer Art Geek 4:02 $0.99
Processed Sound 3:53 $0.99
Nature of Evil 2:53 $0.99
Wept 1:55 $0.99
Non Contradiction 4:17 $0.99
About Love 5:20 $0.99
ABC 0:25 $0.99
Don't Give Up 7:02 $0.99
Doc 4:32 $0.99
Metal I 2:00 $0.99
Rehoboam 4:56 $0.99
Sibling Gibberish 0:30 $0.99

Album Notes

Fast, hard and abrasive enough to leave large ugly bruises, but with just enough melody not to break the skin. The elaborate music of Cerebral Noize is a seemingly ridiculous, yet somehow tasty hybrid of heavy metal and punk rock mixed with sprinklings of other eclectic influences. Crossing over the traditional bounds of various forms of hard music, the debut release, Process, is both sophisticated and furious, yet lighthearted with moments of slower melodic sections to soothe listeners from the onslaught of noize. The entire CD can be heard at www.caleburr.com/cerebralnoize.

The inspiration to record the debut Cerebral Noize CD, Process, began in early 1995 with Cale Burr's vision to make an aggressive metal / punk hybrid musical curiousity that would intertwine and expand the creative boundries of both genres. After hundreds of hours of painstaking attention to every minute detail of the music and packaging, Process was finally finished and released in November 2002. Cale is also a professional graphic artist, responsible for all of the artwork and design of Cerebral Noize. See www.caleburr.com for his art portfolio.

Cale Burr: guitar, vocals, percussion, keyboard and various other noizes
Steve Egan: bass

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REVIEWS

Front Line Assembly covering Black Flag?
author: the Jax
A fusion not quite like anything I've heard before. The vocals are mainly incoherent shouting punk-style, backed up by pleasant melodic singing. Is it punk or metal? With loads of electronics and samples, the end result is very dense, a bombardment of different sounds all at once. If you peruse the top-quality CD booklet to see what the heck Mr. Noize is singing, you'll be surprised to find a biblical bent--did you know Rehoboam had 18 wives and 60 concubines? Try it out if you want a fast & furious aural assault but aren't into evil-death-growl metal.
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