Zarathoustra

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Zarathoustra
Deathline International - Zarathoustra.jpg
Studio album by
ReleasedNovember 16, 1995 (1995-11-16)[1]
Studio
Various
GenreIndustrial rock
Length76:56
LabelCOP Intl.
Producer
  • Shawn Brice
  • Don Gordon
  • Christian Petke
Deathline International chronology
Venus Mind Trap
(1995)
Zarathoustra
(1995)
Arashi Syndrom
(1997)

Zarathoustra is the second studio album by Deathline International, released on November 16, 1995 by COP International.[2][3][4]

Reception[]

Black Monday called Zarathoustra "remarkable, intelligent and a must for your collection" and "this is human creativity mingling with technology via expressive interpretation of life, knowledge and freedom."[5] Sonic Boom said that a "fan of all forms of industrial music should find something addicting on this album as Deathline International refused to be constrained within the fragile shell of a particular genre and instead prefer to utilize elements of all of them."[6]

Track listing[]

All tracks are written by Shawn Brice and Christian Petke, except "Tainted Love" by Ed Cobb and "Rawhide" by Dimitri Tiomkin and Ned Washington.

No.TitleLength
1."Sub Space Overture"1:54
2."Tainted Love" (Soft Cell cover)4:01
3."Brot und Spiele"3:59
4."Time"6:48
5."Rawhide" (Frankie Laine cover)4:03
6."Venus Dance Trip" (Consolidated Remix)4:59
7."Sometimes"5:02
8."Disease"3:56
9."Sacrifice/Rot"4:38
10."Circle of Pain"5:17
11."Evil You Shun"3:41
12."Cutting Thin Blue Lines"5:20
13."Alone"6:36
14."Zarathoustra"3:30
15."War Chant Ma$chine" ( Edit)3:03
16."Ethnic Cleansing" (Numb Remix)4:02
17."Moan"6:07

Personnel[]

Adapted from the Zarathoustra liner notes.[7]

Deathline International

  • Shawn Brice (as Spawn) – vocals, producer, executive-producer, engineering
  • Christian Petke (as Count Zero) – singing, producer, engineering, illustrations

Additional performers

Release history[]

Region Date Label Format Catalog
United States 1995 COP Int'l CD COP 017

References[]

  1. ^ Barnhart, Becky (2000). "Schwann Spectrum". Schwann Spectrum. Stereophile, Incorporated. 9 (2): 89. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  2. ^ "Deathline International: Zarathoustra > Overview". AllMusic. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  3. ^ Christian, Chris (July 12, 1997). "Interview with Deathline International, Maritime Hall, San Francisco, CA". Sonic Boom. 5 (7). Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  4. ^ Black, Jett; Psionic; Adrian (August 2, 2001). "Deathline Int'l". StarVox Music Zine. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  5. ^ Miles, Larry (1996). "Deathline International: Zarathoustra" (PDF). Black Monday (1): 9. Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  6. ^ Christian, Chris (April 1996). "Deathline International: Zarathoustra". Sonic Boom. 4 (3). Retrieved August 27, 2020.
  7. ^ Zarathoustra (booklet). Deathline International. Oakland, California: COP International. 1995.CS1 maint: others in cite AV media (notes) (link)

External links[]

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