Front Line Assembled

Tom Johnson's fine review of the new Front Line Assembly album inspired me to dig up a '98 profile of the band that included a few quotes from Bill Leeb:


Bill Leeb and ofttime partner Rhys Fulber have been remarkably consistent innovators with electronic music of every hue: from tribal ambient music in the guise of Delerium, to the traditional techno of Intermix, to the bone-crunching industrial of Front Line Assembly and Noise Unit, Leeb and Fulber have pushed barriers and created excellent music.

Bill Leeb was born in Vienna, Austria and moved to Vancouver, Canada when he was about 15. A violin and bass player, Leeb became interested in the electronic music of Kraftwerk and Tangerine Dream in the '70s. He also felt energized by the punk and new wave of the Sex Pistols, The Clash, Wire, XTC, Killing Joke, and early Human League.

Leeb and his friends cEvin Key and Ogre (Kevin Ogilvie) formed Skinny Puppy as a loud electronic alternative to what they felt to be the insipid popular music of the early-'80s. Leeb, under the pseudonym "Wilhelm Schroeder," played bass with Puppy (available on the Brap collection) until '86, when he decided to go his own way. He formed Front Line Assembly with Michael Balch; synth-man Rhys Fulber occasionally aided the duo.

They released cassette-only albums (now available as Total Terror 1 and 2) and other albums in the late-'80s. Front Line found its sound when Balch departed and Fulber joined the group for '90's industrial classic Caustic Grip. Grip is a punishing, percolating miasma of body-beats, keyboard lines, samples, and distorted vocals railing against a fascist future in the mode of Front 242. Assembly uses machines to caution against mechanization, and drive the body into a frenzy. Grip varies enough rhythmically and melodically - especially on "Iceolate" and the great "Provision" (one of industrial’s greatest hits) - to avoid the sameyness of much of the genre (a Leeb and Fulber hallmark in any style).

'92's Tactical Neural Implant incorporates elements of techno ("Lifeline") and trance ("The Blade") into the industrial ("Final Impact," "Mindphaser") mix and has a less-punishing feel than Grip, but moves the body and chills the soul as effectively. Another standard. '92 also saw the debut of the pair's Intermix incarnation, a trance project of beauty and weight.

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  • 1 - Jim S

    Jan 29, 2004 at 2:30 pm

    Monument, while mostly remixes and b-sides, remains my favorite, with Hard Wired a close second.

  • 2 - Thomas

    Sep 14, 2005 at 2:23 am

    FLA is just great!! No other band can reach 'em.

    Tom

    PS: Caustic Grip is my favorite

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