[1] "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.
"[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.
"[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."
"[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.
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.