Bites (album)


Bites is the first full-length studio album by Canadian industrial band Skinny Puppy, released as an LP through Nettwerk in 1985. It was reissued in 1993 on CD with additional material compiled from cassette releases, international releases, and previously undistributed tracks. The cover art was designed by Steven R. Gilmore.
Bites was certified gold by Music Canada on August 5, 1994.

Background

The first CD release of Bites was on the compilation Bites and Remission in 1987. This release replaced the songs "Assimilate" and "The Choke" with remixed versions and it did not include all of the tracks featured on the earlier cassette release, which was significantly longer. A similar but discrete CD called Remission & Bites was released by Play It Again Sam in Europe during the same year. On the 1993 reissue, the song "One Day" is not listed anywhere in the artwork or credits.
The Tear Garden's self-titled EP from 1986 includes a track called "The Center Bullet", a song that runs nearly ten minutes and that later appeared on the 1993 CD release of Bites as an instrumental titled "The Centre Bullet". The two songs are identical save for the presence of vocals by Edward Ka-Spel of The Legendary Pink Dots on The Tear Garden version. Late reissues of The Tear Garden album Tired Eyes Slowly Burning also feature that version of "The Center Bullet". Having both been made by cEvin Key and Dave Ogilvie, it is unclear whether the track was originally a creation of Skinny Puppy or of The Tear Garden.

Critical reception

Billboard magazine recommended Bites, calling it a "strong club collection a la Kraftwerk". Tom Harrison of The Province gave the album a favorable review, calling it "willfully ugly and menacing", and described its songs as "cleanly produced" and "carefully textured". Tim DiGravina of AllMusic was also receptive, calling the album a "fascinating look at Skinny Puppy in embryonic form", and described its sound as "delicate and pristine". DiGravina also noted the influence of groups such as Depeche Mode, Human League, and Cabaret Voltaire.
Mike Abrams of the Ottawa Citizen thought Bites was depressing and for people with "undiscriminating tastes". He named the songs "Assimilate" and "Last Call" as the album's best tracks. James Muretich of the Calgary Herald was less impressed with Bites, calling the record "annoying" and likened the band to robots.
In 1999, Chart magazine listed Bites among the most influential Canadian albums of the 80s.

Track listing

Samples
Credits from AllMusic.
Skinny Puppy
Additional musicians and artwork
Technical personnel