
Finally the day we've all waited for. Skinny Puppy's first release in nearly a decade came out yesterday. We're anxious to learn of the first week sales totals. You buy a copy here in our online store at the MK discount.
What follows is the official MK Magazine review that will appear in the issue coming out in early June
Skinny Puppy
The Greater Wrong of the Right
SPV
It’s hardly worth mentioning that electronic/industrial music fans the world over have nothing but disdain in their hearts for the day that Skinny Puppy first went away. It’s also hardly worth mentioning that The Greater Wrong of the Right has GOT to be the most highly anticipated album of the year. Well, the most anticipated album for those mislaid souls who have floundered for 8 miserable years in a sea of second-rate industrial records that seem to assure us that they are the “next thing” but seldom if ever deliver. In all actuality it’s difficult to understand just how the hell this genre has even sustained itself as long as it has without a flagship. So, where does one begin to describe a new Puppy record? What gives me or anyone else the right to judge the latest output of the seminal Skinny Puppy? Who even has the ability to absorb all that Puppy has to offer? I can’t answer any of that; just know that your flagship is back. The dark brooding beacon that is Skinny Puppy has finally returned to show the world just exactly how electronic/industrial music is supposed to be.
The Greater Wrong of the Right is 48 minutes of SP’s strengths and none of its weaknesses. cEvin Key and Ogre have allowed Mark Walk to step into the late Dwayne Goettels’ position, so it should come as no surprise that a couple of these tracks, most notably I’mmortal and Pro-test, sound somewhat in the vein of the ohGr project. Around track 4 the album takes a turn and spins irretrievably down into the atypical world of Skinny Puppy. Neuwerld, Ghostman, d0wnsizer and Goneja all harbor the nuances that have made SP the toughest act in the genre to follow. For the DJs we have track 7, Past Present, the token dance number that clocks in at nearly 7 minutes. Slap this baby on and watch the lil’ gothies stomp and swirl about. There is not one dire moment on this album, which is to say that it is Puppy’s most user-friendly release, even more so than The Process. This new direction may put off some older fans of the noisier days but if I were to pick on any one thing it would be the cold digital feel of the production. Dave Ogilvie was not at the helm this time around and the analog warmth of previous Puppy records is markedly absent; but otherwise…
In closing I’d like to mention that this material in the hands of a lesser band would simply be unlistenable. Skinny Puppy has and always will be a musical anomaly that should never be copied. To be influenced by them is one thing but to attempt emulating them is outright silly. You can’t win. The battle is lost before it begins. Skinny Puppy wrote the book on this stuff and The Greater Wrong of the Right is the latest entry in a trip I hope will never end. - C. Curry MK Magazine
The tour begins in 2 weeks with 2-SOLD OUT stops in Chicago.
June 11, 2004 Portland, OR Roseland Theater
June 12, 2004 Seattle, WA Showbox
June 15, 2004 Chicago, IL Vic Theater
June 16, 2004 Chicago, IL Vic Theater
June 17, 2004 Detroit, MI Majestic Theatre
June 19, 2004 Boston, MA Avalon Ballroom
June 20, 2004 New York, NY Irving Plaza
June 21, 2004 New York, NY Irving Plaza
June 22, 2004 Washington, DC 9:30 Club
June 23, 2004 Philadelphia, PA Electric Factory
June 25, 2004 Atlanta, GA Masquerade
June 26, 2004 New Orleans, LA House of Blues
June 27, 2004 Houston, TX Club V
June 29, 2004 Denver, CO Ogden Theatre
July 1, 2004 San Francisco, CA Grand Ballroom
July 2, 2004 Los Angeles, CA Henry Fonda Theatre
July 3, 2004 Los Angeles, CA Henry Fonda Theatre
July 4, 2004 Anaheim, CA The Grove of Anaheim
July 11, 2004 Paris, FR La Locomotive
July 13, 2004 Amsterdam, NL Paradiso
July 15, 2004 Sweden Arvika Festival
July 17, 2004 Germany Zillo Festival
July 18, 2004 Belgium Dour Festival
July 19, 2004 London, UK The Forum