Let's Play Domination

Let's Play Domination
Studio album by World Domination Enterprises
Released 1988 (1988)
Label Product Inc.

Let's Play Domination is the debut studio album by English rock band World Domination Enterprises, released in 1988 by Mute Records' subsidiary label Product Inc. World Dom guitarist/singer Keith Dobson re-released it on CD with bonus tracks in 2009 on his label Free Love Records.[1]

Songs

"Message for You People" opens side one with a thud reminiscent of a blowing speaker or depth charge explosion,[2][1] then a pulsing bassline followed by "drums and blistering guitar noise."[2] According to Wyndham Wallace of The Quietus wrote that Dobsons' guitar in the song "forever redefines concepts of ‘industrial’ music."[1] According to Trouser Press, "[t]he astonishing high-pressure racket of Let's Play Domination's opening salvo ("Message for You People") may send you rushing to the turntable to see if your stylus is accidentally gouging a hole in the platter."[3]

"Ghetto Queen" and "Blu Money", the latter featuring a refrain of "I blew money that I could've bought drugs with," have been described as "ghetto punk" in their musical style.[2] Side two of the album is more downtempo.[2] "The Bullit Man" is followed by "The Stack Blew Jack," possibly intentionally placed next to each other in the album "as they follow the same exact start/stop blueprint and melody scheme."[2]

Track List

All songs written by World Domination Enterprises (Keith Dobson, Steve Jameson, Digger Metters) unless otherwise indicated. The use of uppercase and lowercase letters are as they appear on the back cover and labels of the original Product Inc. LP and CD.

Side 1
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Message for you people"Keith Dobson4:20
2."blu money" 2:27
3."Trouble Enough" 3:21
4." I can't live without my Radio" (LL Cool J cover) James Todd Smith/Rick Rubin3:30
5."Look out Jack" 1:24
6."Hotsy Girl" 1:39
7."Ghetto Queen" 2:46
Side 2
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Asbestos lead Asbestos"Keith Dobson2:46
2."That woman"Keith Dobson1:59
3."Jah Jah Call You" (U-Roy cover)U-Roy/Prince Jazzbo4:54
4."Ragamuffin Man" 2:23
5."The bullit Man" 2:30
6."the Stack blew Jack" 1:22
7."Funkytown" (Lipps Inc. cover) Steve Greenberg2:36

The Product Inc. LP and CD both include a thank-you message from Dobson at the very end, hence the difference in run time of the 7" version of "Radio" between the two CD releases.

Reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Trouser Pressfavourable[3]

It was included at number 89 in Alternative Press' list of the top 99 albums from 1985 to 1995.[4] Dusted magazine wrote that "Let's Play Domination proves World Domination Enterprises had it in the mid to late 1980s, an era when a lot of people lost it, or never found it in the first place."[5] In 2009, John Doran of the NME included the album in the magazine's "Unspun Heroes" series where the writers "[dig] up buried treasure from the depths of our collection." He called the band "truly radical post-punkers" and said that "World Domination Enterprises didn’t just bite the hand that fed. They gnawed the fingers off, chewed the bone, cartilage, skin and blood and then spat the mess back in the owner’s face."[6] The same year, Wyndham Wallace of The Quietus wrote that:

"It was a noise like no other, wrapped around a skeletal framework of punk, dub, rockabilly, reggae, hip hop and pop. Even now, some twenty years later, nothing comes close to the sheer physical, brutal force in every sinew, cartilage and muscle right at the very heart of Let’s Play Domination, the 1988 debut album from World Domination Enterprises. Of the many and varied noise records that I have bought or had brought to my attention before and since — Sonic Youth, My Bloody Valentine, Health, Keiji Haino, Lightning Bolt — few provoke such extreme reactions from friends: it's either total, desperate terror or saucer-eyed shock and awe. Nothing shreds my speakers so regularly at such volume; its overpowering, monstrous immensity is a source of relief, a panacea for frustration, a primitive, deafening howl. When people ask what World Domination Enterprises sound like, the simplest answer is that they tear the flesh from my bones in the most deliriously pleasurable fashion imaginable. Their music is like Gunther Von Hagens’ Body Worlds, an emblem of our lives reduced to its most basic, feral form, fascinating and ghastly at once."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Wallace, Wyndham (1 September 2009). "World Domination Enterprises Interview: It's Play Time Again". The Quietus. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Whitney, Jon (14 November 2009). "World Domination Enterprises, "Lets Play Domination"". Brainwashed. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  3. 1 2 Robbins, Ira. "TrouserPress.com :: World Domination Enterprises". TrouserPress.com. Archived from the original on June 21, 2012. Retrieved May 23, 2016.
  4. "Rocklist.net..Alternative Press." Rocklist.net. Retrieved May 23, 2016.
  5. Dale, Jon (6 January 2010). "Dusted Reviews". Dusted Magazine. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
  6. Doran, John (26 November 2009). "Unspun Heroes – World Domination Enterprises". NME. Retrieved 13 November 2017.
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