Love And Hate In Dub sourced Godflesh's 1996 album Songs Of Love And Hate and showed Justin Broadrick's evolving proclivities for electronic remixing and ultra-heavy beat manipulation that he was developing in the last half of the 1990's. Finally released on vinyl by Kreation, this album features Broadrick reshaping the original album's material into a scrap metal wasteland of crushing ambient dub, brutal drum n' bass, and metallic hip-hop influenced beats that make the history of the entire nu-metal movement completely irrelevant. Songs Of Love And Hate was itself extremely influenced by hip-hop, but it's sheer grueling heaviness, flashes of blissed out pop and paint peeling noise made sure that noone was going to confuse it for the nu-metal scene that was at full steam by 1996. But with his subsequent remixes, the album is completely transformed into something else, a fusion of Godflesh's noise guitar-led industrial rock heaviosity and the massive beatscapes of his work in Techno Animal and Ice. Jungle patterns and atypical rhythms ride out on waves of deep, low-frequency metallic drone and distorted basslines. Broadrick's vocal diatribes are stripped down into even more minimal mantras that float looplike over ...In Dub's grinding rhythms. The live drums that were used on the original album work perfectly for these remixes, sounding dirty and organic, but they are stretched out, dubbed out, looped and sliced, and become something even more relentless in their groove and monstrously heavy. Sure, this stuff is danceable as hell, but it might be the heaviest dance music ever made. A crucial album for anyone into crushing metallic dub, Scorn, Broadrick's later work in Techno Animal and Ice, and ultra-heavy drum n' bass/breakbeats. The LP comes on black vinyl in a full color jacket that has slightly different artwork from the original CD release of ...In Dub that Earache released.