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Industrial Rock


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[quote name='bubinga5' post='1329606' date='Aug 6 2011, 09:16 AM']im fascinated as to what Industrial Rock is..?[/quote]

I had the same question. According to Wikipedia [url="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rPiO_G-DEHs"]this[/url] is an early example.

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Its a bit hard to describe, its kinda rock with coarse music that can include samples and loops of noises associated with industry. It also contains allot of electronics.

[url="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_rock"]http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Industrial_rock[/url]

[url="http://youtu.be/HgZIarQQ0Nk"]http://youtu.be/HgZIarQQ0Nk[/url]

Ministry and NIN are Industrial Rock too

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In my last Industrial rock band my bass was normal tuning and rig, it's really down to the track and samples/ backing that governs things. One thing is that generally the loops, click track or backing becomes the time keeper and the acoustic drummer keeps time to the track. In my current band my bass is tuned to d and I use occasional distortion, other than that it's very much like any band, only difference as stated previously I.e. Samples, click track and backing. One thing that is important is that good stage monitoring is crucial or timing will or could be lost.

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Industrial rock covers such a massive range of styles that you could need anything from just a simple bass and amp setup to a massively down-tuned ERB and a whole rack of MIDI controlled effects - it depends entirely on the band.

Have they not given you any recordings to learn or at least a list of bands that they are influenced by?

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In Beta I've always used a 4 string tuned down 1 semitone with a small selection of effects, here's the bassic lowdown of what's in my pedal board:

Valve drive - just to make everything sound phat and give it a little dirt, I like having a really hot signal too
Chorus - I don't use this too much but its good for the spacey or melodic sections, phaser would prob be good too
Octaver - Dirtiest, oldest one I could get hold of, can blend original signal with 1 oct down, 2 oct down and 1 oct up, hit this and the walls shake
Bassballs - with distortion on its a great 'all guns blazing' effect with one click, or an amazing synthy tone with octave. Without distortion its a nice way to add dynamic and contour to melodic playing and adds a lot of definition to an octaved signal

Really though, just see what old dirty junk you can get your hands on and what crazy sounds you can get out out it, then showhorn it into the music. Its a fun genre :)

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I did some industrial stuff for a while. Synth players tend to do most of the work. I played drop D... Used an Overdrive, Chorus and Delay. That was all really. Bass sounds were a mix of clean, grinding NIN-esque and Haunting Tool-esque.

It's more about the layers the instruments create as opposed to having a specific cook book of sounds.

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This is my favourite Ministry song ever!


Followed by



I always though industrial rock tracks work best with a fairly clean bass sound.



or a little bit of overdrive


And some better Industrial music:

A nice Fender Jazz 5 string

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