domingo, 7 de junio de 2026

Faith No More "King For A Day… Fool For A Lifetime (2CDS Limited Edition, USA, Liberation Records, TVD93421- RMD53421)"

King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime is the fifth studio album by American rock band Faith No More, released on March 13, 1995, by Slash and Reprise Records. It was their first album recorded without longtime guitarist Jim Martin. The album showcased a variety of musical genres, with Rolling Stone calling the result a "genre shuffle". King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime spawned three singles: "Digging the Grave", "Ricochet" and "Evidence".

Following Martin's departure, Trey Spruance was brought on to perform on the album; he had also been in Mr. Bungle with singer Mike Patton. Production of the album was further marred by the band suffering a car accident, and the absence of keyboard player Roddy Bottum, who was affected by the deaths of both his father and Kurt Cobain; Courtney Love, Cobain's wife and a former Faith No More vocalist, remains his close friend. Spruance was replaced on the supporting tour by the band's former roadie Dean Menta; however, Spruance played live with Faith No More for the first time in November 2011, playing the entire album during a show in Chile.

Critical reception to the album has been mixed, with its varied genres being cited as a detraction by several reviewers. Retrospectively, critique has been more positive and the record has subsequently appeared on several publications' "best of" lists. The album earned the band two Bay Area Music award nominations. The album charted across Europe and Australasia, but failed to chart in the United States.

After releasing Angel Dust in 1992, Faith No More's next project was a collaboration with Boo-Yaa T.R.I.B.E., contributing the single "Another Body Murdered" to the soundtrack for the 1993 film Judgment Night. This would be the first professional recording the band released without guitarist Jim Martin, with bassist Billy Gould recording the guitar parts instead. Martin skipped practice sessions with the band during the Angel Dust recording sessions, and also reportedly stopped writing new music at this time. He had grown dissatisfied with their new musical direction on the album, which he often referred to as "gay disco". Around the time "Another Body Murdered" was released, the band had to cancel a planned run of shows in Peru, Brazil and Venezuela, as a result of the issues they were experiencing with Martin.

Martin was fired from the band later in 1993 due to musical differences, via a fax from keyboard player Roddy Bottum. He subsequently released a solo metal album in 1997 titled Milk and Blood. This was in addition to performing on Flybanger's 2001 album Headtrip to Nowhere; the album was produced by Matt Wallace, who had handled all of Faith No More's albums up to Angel Dust. Mr. Bungle guitarist Trey Spruance was brought in to replace Martin and record for Faith No More's follow up to Angel Dust. However, Spruance left the band before the subsequent tour, and was replaced by the band's keyboard roadie, Dean Menta. Reasons given for the change differ—the band claim Spruance was unwilling to commit to a long touring schedule in support of the album, whilst Spruance claims he was never meant to be a permanent member in the first place. In one magazine interview, Gould labelled Spruance as a "spoilt rich kid" who did not want to tour. However, Spruance recalled not even having enough money to buy the magazine where Gould said this about him. He remembered, "this is like one of those stunning juxtapositions in life when you're standing in fucking Tower Records and this thing goes out to the whole world that you're this spoilt, privileged rich kid, and you can't even buy the fucking magazine it's written in. That was really almost like a cosmic moment."

Roddy Bottum claims to have been mostly absent during this period, owing to the deaths of his father and Kurt Cobain, whose wife Courtney Love was a close friend of his and one of the temporary lead singers of the band before Chuck Mosley joined. In addition to this, Bottum had developed a heroin addiction. At one point, his addiction caused a band intervention, following the filming of the video for "Another Body Murdered". Bottum's absence led to the album being written largely without keyboards. Around the recording of the album in 1994, Mike Patton also married Cristina Zuccatosta, an Italian.

King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime was recorded in Bearsville Studios, in Bearsville, New York, making it the first and only Faith No More album not to be recorded in their native California. Gould has described the remote location of the studio as a form of "sensory deprivation". Writing and rehearsing the songs for the album took eight to nine months, although half of this time was spent finding a replacement for Martin. Recording the album took an additional three months, for which the band hired producer Andy Wallace. Wallace had previously worked with Sonic Youth, Nirvana and Slayer, and despite his surname, bore no relation to their previous producer Matt Wallace. Bottum claimed the combination of Wallace and Spruance as two new influences helped to create "a real up-in-the-air, what the fuck is gonna happen kind of feel" while recording. In a 1995 Australian radio interview, drummer Mike Bordin said that the record was more focused than Angel Dust, and that the departure of previous guitarist Jim Martin made the writing process easier. Gould said at the time, "we've never written stuff with Jim, as a band. Usually we'd give him a tape and he'd put stuff to it because he didn't like practicing with us much." Gould added in another interview, "it's heavier, it's more direct and it's the first record where we had the guitar the way we wanted it. Now it feels we're a dog who's been let off the leash."

According to singer Mike Patton, the band were involved in a car accident during the recording sessions for the album, while Patton was driving. Spruance and drummer Mike Bordin were also involved, and Patton claimed to have "had to look at a lot of things in the face" as a result. The band used art from the graphic novel Flood by Eric Drooker for the album's cover and those of its singles.

It is considered to be one of their most diverse releases. On King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime the band focused on writing songs in different genres, rather than incorporating multiple genres into single songs, like they had done with many of the tracks on Angel Dust. Uproxx stated in 2015 that it saw the band "trying out just about any genre they saw fit." In their review of the 2016 deluxe edition of the album, PopMatters reflected that, "King for a Day has Faith No More pushing further in all directions. It's heavier, it's softer, it's even more varied in genre experimentation, and it's longer." The album includes elements of genres such as heavy metal, punk, big band music, blue-eyed soul, bossa nova, cocktail music, country, death metal, gospel, grindcore, gothic metal, funk, lounge music, Japanese noise music, jazz, power pop, salsa, swing music, thrash metal and western music. In a 1995 interview with Metal Hammer, Mike Bordin discussed the change in songwriting approach from previous releases, saying that "Instead of putting everything into every song, we wanted to take things out and make them a bit simpler." Bordin also said he was pleased with how both the heavy songs and the lighter songs turned out, saying "the smoother songs I've never felt we've gotten exactly right. And this one is pretty damn close to being exactly right." Regarding their stylistic direction on the album, Mike Patton remarked to Meat magazine in 1995 that, "we didn't really have any concept or idea. We don't know what it is we do, we just know how to do it." In another interview from April 1995, he noted that the album was just "us being us".

King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime was pre-released as a limited-edition two-record vinyl album, limited to 10,000 copies, two weeks before the album went on general sale. It was also released in a limited run of 7 x 7 inch records packaged in a hard card box, with bonus tracks and audio interviews with all the band members included.

Track listing
All tracks are written by Mike Bordin, Roddy Bottum, Billy Gould, and Mike Patton, except where noted.

Disc 1 - King for a Day... Fool for a Lifetime
  1. "Get Out" 2:17
  2. "Ricochet" 4:28
  3. "Evidence" 4:53
  4. "The Gentle Art of Making Enemies" 3:28
  5. "Star A.D." 3:22
  6. "Cuckoo for Caca" 3:41
  7. "Caralho Voador" 4:01
  8. "Ugly in the Morning" 3:06
  9. "Digging the Grave" 3:04
  10. "Take This Bottle" 4:59
  11. "King for a Day" 6:35
  12. "What a Day" 2:37
  13. "The Last to Know" Bordin, Gould, Patton 4:27
  14. "Just a Man" 5:35
Total length: 56:33

Disc 2 - B Sides and Alternate Versions
  1. The Morning After 03:42  
  2. Das Schützenfest 03:42   
  3. Malpractice 04:01   
  4. RV (live) 03:51  
  5. A Small Victory (Youth Remix) 07:21  
  6. Absolute Zero 04:07  
Time:  26:44  

ncludes a bonus disc housed in a cardboard sleeve. (PRD95/25)

Official music videos:
- Evidence
- Digging the Grave

This was the first album released without Jim Martin on guitars.

"Caralho Voador" is portuguese for "Flying dick".

Recording information:
Co-produced by Faith No More.
Recorded at Bearsville Studios, Bearsville, NY, USA.
Mixed at Soundtrack Studios, New York City, NY.
Mastered at Masterdisk, New York City, NY.
Andy Wallace – production, recording, mixing
Clif Norrell – recording
Chris Laidlaw – assistant engineer
Steve Sisco assistant mix engineer
Howie Weinberg – mastering
Melinda Maniscalco – art direction and design
Robin Whiteside – production design
Eric Drooker – illustration
Marko Lavrisha – photography





























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