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Allegedly featuring the soundtrack to a short film by the same time that appears to involve convulsing, gelatinous blob men, Love God finds Milk Cult engaged in activity that makes Steel Pole Bath Tub seem tame, calm, and inviting. Instrumental credits run from Scotch tape to whipsaws and Maytag equipment, which is perfectly right for an ensemble who sounds like the masses of tools and appliances in America deciding to come to life and march on their users. Throughout Love God, the emphasis is clearly not on live playing but recording manipulation, tape use and abuse, and more besides. It's clear that the band is creating their own death metal crunches and the like, but like Portishead some years later, the idea seems to be to record it and then to deconstruct it to make the real song. If the turntable scratching isn't exactly going to have the DJs of the world shaking in their shoes, it's a way to make some ridiculous, chaotic noise -- listen to "Drag Strip Riot Dream Sequence" for how bizarrely well it comes out; the band knows exactly what they're doing. The "Love God" track itself, full of plenty of heavy-duty riffing and other more immediately familiar rock noise, thinks nothing of throwing in what sounds like a mariachi loop about seven minutes in, only to slow it down and then discard it in favor of industrial sounds, clatter, and various whooshing noises. Then there's the six-part "Clown Party," running nearly 40 minutes and tackling everything from ambient sound to huge, sludgy breakbeats along the way. The funniest bit? The collage of screams, feedback, and other high-volume insanity called, but of course, "Relax and Sleep." ~ Ned Raggett
Personnel: C.C. Nova (loops, sound effects, turntables).
Director: Frank Grow.
NME (Magazine) (3/20/93, p.34) - "...an esoteric mind-boggling excursion....blends deviant samples with discordant guitars and coldly dense tribal percussion..." Love God Review
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Purchase Love God CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Rammstein Liebe Ist Fur Alle Da CDs (2009) Bonus Tracks; Deluxe Edition; Digipak
Love God album
$17.59 Anyone familiar with the industrial-metal band's dark sense of irony should take one look at the title of Rammstein's 2009 album LIEBE IST FUR ALLE DA ("Love Is There For Everyone") and conclude that this one is a mean monster. Combining the tightness and punch of their 1998 album SEHNSUCHT with the musicianship and elaborate textures of their later work, LIEBE IST is a grand achievement, skillfully dividing its time between razor sharp metal rockers like "B********" or the opening theme song "Rammlied" and nostalgic, cabaret pieces that conjure the spirits of Weil and Brecht at a goth club. Best of ...
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| | Avenged Sevenfold City Of Evil CD (2005)
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| | Pain Of Salvation Linoleum EP CD (2009) (Import) Import; Extended Play
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| | Jad Fair Enjoyable Songs CD (1999)
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| | John Fedchock Hit The Bricks CD (2000)
Love God songs
$13.85 Stepping back from his regular New York Big Band setup, John Fedchock applies his considerable talent and attention to a small group session. Armed with a play list that has compositions by Fedchock, contemporaries like Tom Harrell and Kenny Barron, and one straightforward standard, the trombonist and his confreres offer an hour's worth of scintillating and attention catching performances. Fedchock has got to be one of the more lyrical trombone players on today's jazz scene. His seamless technique, reminiscent of Urbie Green, permits the listener to concentrate on the music rather than on the virtuosity of the player. While he may be a wizard with the slide instrument, his technique is so transparent that it doesn't humble the music. While this attribute is present on all cuts, it is especially effective on the haunting "Twilight" with precise and to the point playing. One problem here is that the tune goes on too long, running out of ideas about three-fourths of the way through. But there's no denying the mellifluous Fedchock trombone. Showing an ability to completely rework familiar material giving it another perspective, John Coltrane's "Giant Steps" is made over as a waltz, a somewhat risky venture fooling around with this pedestal occupying jazz standard. But the group pulls it off with aplomb. There's relief offered in the fairly serious proceedings up to now with Fedchock's original "Hit the Bricks," where the trombone player reveals he can get a quick tongued staccato from the instrument as well as long lyrical lines. The tune provides a chance for the rest of the players to show off. Chris Potter on tenor, Scott Wendholt on trumpet, Allen ...
| | Damnwells Bastards Of The Beat CD (2003)
Love God album
$12.05 This Brooklyn group has a lot of assets that fans of Americana would lap up in a minute. After the brief introductory lament, lead singer Alex Dezen toes the line between roots rock and alternative pop à la Soul Asylum on the gleeful and grin-inducing "What You Get." If there's any drawback to the song, it comes off as a tad incomplete. But the Westerberg style on "Kiss Catastrophe" is excellent, a mid-tempo melancholic melody. The first breather on the album is a quasi-country ballad entitled "I'll Be Around," which sounds like a polished Wilco B-side attempt. The trumpet is a refreshing touch though. They nail the subsequent "Newborn History" far better, a slower and moodier effort resembling The Cash Brothers ...
| | Posies Every Kind Of Light CD (2005)
Love God CD music
$14.65 The Posies sure have a funny idea about breaking up -- though they supposedly called it quits in 1999, the band has been playing reunion shows and releasing ...
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| | I Belong To This Band: Eighty-Five Years Of Sacred Harp Recordings CD (2006)
Love God CD music
$13.35 As a companion CD to the film Awake, My Soul: The Story of the Sacred Harp, I Belong to This Band: Eighty-Five Years of Sacred Harp Recordings collects 30 performances in the Sacred Harp style, recorded as early as 1922 and as recently as 2006. As explained in the liner notes, Sacred Harp singing -- a form of Southern gospel music that's rather obscure to much of the general population -- "is characterized by mass participation, full-voiced singing, lack of instrumental accompaniment, and rotation of song leaders." Most of the material performed dates from before the middle of the 19th century, which helps give even the recent recordings in the genre a haunted, out-of-time feeling, and often the beginning sections are sung with the syllables "fa," "sol," "la," and "mi." Not that it matters much, but it's not the most chronologically balanced overview, with no recordings at all drawn ...
| | Cannata Images Of Forever CD (2007)
Love God music CDs
$13.69 REVIEW: " Images of Forever "Cannata has ennobled, with his stratospheric works, history of Album Oriented Rock. Arcangel's masterpiece is there, after more than twenty years, to demonstrate that. The great songwriter, after Arcangel era, continued his career as solo artist releasing a masterpiece that still today is unparalleled in the A.O.R. music with hi-tech flavour. We speak of "Images Of Forever", the second greatest gem that Jeff Cannata gave to the world of this beautiful music. Yes, because Images Of Forever is a concentrate of class, emotion, power which, in 1988, only a few samples could try to match (the Simon Chase all). After this album Cannata will release the excellent "Watching The World", another platter fully legendary but that failed to dispossess from the throne the untouchable "Images Of Forever", the absolute emperor of this style of music so intriguing.The album, a real concentration of hi-tech music, is inaugurated by the sensational and spectacular "Fortune Teller", ...
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