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Tracklisting
1. Alloy Mental
2. God is green
3. I am
4. So silent
5. People are strange
6. Stick it in your neck
7. We have control
8. All weathers
9. Gotta love
10. Seconds
11. Fortunate one
12. Light
Alloy Mental's ability to fuse rock and dance music contrast the jagged, Pixies-style guitars of So Silent and Stick It In Yaow Neck with the slamming electro and techno of Streets On Fire and We Have Control also means that their gigs have united a cross-section of ravers, Goths and indie kids. In short, it's a sociologist's wet dream. When we do gigs, punks and people who read Kerrang turn up, as much as people who go to clubs, Phil says, while Martin adds that Alloy Mental's dance background means the audience ineracts with the band. Most rock audiences are pretty conservative, they don't dance, but because our sound has a techno element, there is a lot more energy. It also works the other way: clubbers have been starved of human interaction, so they go mad at our shows because there is a singer.
The album contains the mellow Light , which descends into a droning guitar mantra and the reflective Seconds, where Martin sings about hectic women because Martin believes you need balance, you can't headbutt your audience in the face all the time. Having said that, when I'm on stage with Phil and Danny, it feels like I'm standing with my back to a jet engine on full blast.