Now, such criticism can not attach at "FBBF" definitely. It takes a deflection off all over the place, the production has indeed again a stronger Industrial logging, but there's consistently hammergeiles choruses - and also quite varied arrangements. Especially the remarkably strong use of the good old Hammond organ gives the whole then neatly Schmackes and enough grip, so that zombies lovers Seventies Roots must not fall by the wayside. And also John 5 may fire some nice solo licks, enriching the respective songs with beautiful accents.
Only the opener "Teenage Pussy Nosferatu" unfortunately falls a bit, because despite nice tug-Groove and cool Hammond licks: the song we have in this type at least four already heard five times previously, at least once (in double time) as "Demonoid Phenomenon" - which is why he also equal to a few lines of text from stiebitzt. Not bad, but just stop far less original than the rest of the disc.
Otherwise, there are plenty of fun for the next cookout - whether you're the groovy catchy "Dead City Radio" preferred the fluctuating between Kraftwerk strength oldschool electro sound and late White Zombie "Rock and Roll (In A Black Hole)" The ultra typical "Behold the Pretty Filthy Creatures", the Glam-owned "Revelation Revolution" or the sleazy old-school hard rockers "Trade in Your Guns for a Coffin" preferred. And "We're An American Band" joins the ranks of zombies cool cover one, even if it is time remained fairly close to the original.
Conclusion: Zombie is easy and remains one of the coolest sows the rock circus. Buy!