In what many consider to be Ministry's peak, the band creates another wonderful album to follow The Land of Rape and Honey.
Fusing thrash guitars with excellent synth and percussion work, Ministry lay the foundation for even more followers of the band's music.
But what makes the album even more commendable is the unique flair and the avoidance of cliché elements that have brought down the guitar-heavy industrial-rock genre.
Purists might argue that Ministry have given up these roots; but it's plain to see that the roots remain, and are only revamped by the necessary progression of a band that has been around for so many years.
The sound is Ministry's, most definitely.