| | Primus Rhinoplasty CD Primus Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
This is an Enhanced CD which contains regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Primus: Les Claypool (vocals, bass); Larry LaLonde (guitar); Brain (drums). Additional personnel: Irene Sazer (violin); DJ Disk (scratches); Adam Gates (background vocals). Principally recorded at Prairie Sun Recording, Cotati, California. This is an Enhanced CD, which contains both regular audio tracks and multimedia computer files. Personnel: Les Claypool (vocals); Larry LaLonde (guitar); Irene Sazer (violin); Brian "Brain" Mantia (drums); DJ Disk (turntables); Adam Gates (background vocals). Audio Mixer: Toby Wright. Recording information: Henry J. Kaiser Auditorium; Prarie Sun Recording, Cotati, CA. Photographer: Jay Blakesberg. Rhinoplasty? Call it Miscellaneous Debris, Pt. 2. An EP of covers and live cuts designed to buy time between albums, Rhinoplasty is another small treasure for fans. When Primus covers songs, it rarely sticks to the original recorded versions, preferring to turn in new, sometimes startling arrangements that are often unpredictable. If the band hasn't chosen any surprising covers -- there are more Peter Gabriel and XTC tunes, as well as Police, Stanley Clarke, Metallica, and Jerry Reed songs, plus a new version of their own "Too Many Puppies" -- it makes up for it with great performances. Rhinoplasty is certainly an EP intended for the dedicated, but it does the most important thing any specialist release can do -- it doesn't disappoint. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine What could be more fun than a Primus album? How about an album of cover songs done Primus style? On RHINOPLASTY, Les and company attack a set of already fairly wacky songs and make them even wackier. Thus XTC's "Scissor Man" is full of Larry LaLonde's trademark disjointed guitar and on Metallica's "The Thing That Should Not Be," Les Claypool sounds like he's singing in a tin can. Stanley Clarke's "Silly Putty" is a funky jazz-fusion workout that lets the group show off their considerable chops. The Police's "Behind My Camel," which was the oddest of the songs to begin with, is given the most faithful reading. Of course the CD wouldn't be complete without a few selections from Primus' own songbook. Live versions of "Tommy The Cat" and "Bob's Party Time Lounge" fit that bill. And believe it or not, Les Claypool actually sings and plays a normal bass line on a couple of tracks. Now that's wacky. Rhinoplasty Music Review Average Rating: (4 out of 5 stars)   Claypool For President!!!!! A good album not a great album. Good covers of "Scissor Man", "The Thing That Should Not Be", and "Amos Moses". The best song on the album is the remake of "Too Many Puppies". Any self respecting fan of Primus of Les himself should pick this one up. Submitted by Primussucks3 (Taunton, MA, USA) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
Nose Job A good, good ALBUM! The origional South Park musicians, I guess they were dumped by that!
Anyway, BUY THIS! The best songs are definatly, 'The Thing That Should Not Be,'Tommy the Cat' and Bobs Party Time Lounge. Silly Putty is good aswell, and all the songs have humpour. It is a very Rock orientated album, and you will love it if you dig true rock. Larry as always plays the guitar with not only mechanical perfectness, but a soul that is uncanny. Buy this CD. Live the experience that is RHINOPLASTY!!!
YOU WILL NOT REGRET IT. TRUST ME!!!!!! Submitted by a reviewer (Perth, Western Australia) Was This Review Helpful? Yes No
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Purchase Rhinoplasty CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Primus Brown Album CD (1997)
Rhinoplasty
$6.55 Primus: Les Claypool (vocals, bass); Larry LaLonde (guitar); Brain (drums). Recorded between December 1996 and April 1997. Personnel: Les Claypool (vocals); Larry LaLonde (guitar); Brain , Brian "Brain" Mantia (drums). Recording information: Rancho Relaxo, CA (12/1996-04/1997). Unknown Contributor Roles: Larry LaLonde; Les Claypool; Brian "Brain" Mantia. The replacement of drummer Tim "Herb" Alexander with Brian "Brain" Mantia doesn't affect ...
| | Primus Sailing The Seas Of Cheese CD (1991)
Rhinoplasty
$6.49 Primus: Les Claypool (vocals, bass); Larry "Ler" LaLonde (guitar); Tim "Herb" Alexander (drums). Additional personnel: Tom Waits (vocals); Mike Bordin, Butt House. The first Primus album to achieve much widespread airplay (thanks to its release on a major), and the one that broke them on MTV, Sailing the Seas of Cheese completely redefined the possibilities of the electric bass in rock music for those who'd never heard the group before. Slapping like a funk player, but strumming power chords and finger-tapping ...
| | Primus Miscellaneous Debris CD (1992)
Rhinoplasty
$6.85
| | Primus Antipop CD (1999)
Rhinoplasty
$12.19 1999 Primus release with special guests Tom Waits, Jim Martin, James Hetfield and many more. Features a bonus track.
Primus: Les Claypool (vocals, bass); Larry LaLonde (guitar); Brain (drums). Additional personnel includes: Tom Waits (vocals, Mellotron); Martina Topley-Bird (vocals); Tom Morello, James Hetfield, Jim Martin (guitar). Producers include: Tom Morello, Tom Waits, Stewart Copeland, Fred Durst, Matt Stone. Personnel: Tom Waits (vocals, Mellotron); Les Claypool (vocals); James ...
| | Primus Frizzle Fry CD (1990) Bonus Tracks; Remastered
Rhinoplasty
$11.09 ,+1 Bonus Track
Primus: Les Claypool (vocals, acoustic bass guitar, bass guitar); Larry LaLonde (acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Tim "Herb" Alexander (drums). Primus' first studio ...
| | Primus Suck On This CD (1990)
Rhinoplasty
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| | Ragga Pitch CD (1994)
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| | Jackson Browne Running On Empty CD (1977)
Rhinoplasty
$6.05 Also available with JACKSON BROWNE (SATURATE BEFORE USING) on 1 cassette. Personnel: Jackson Browne (vocals, guitar); Danny Kortchmar (guitar); David Lindley (lap steel guitar, fiddle); Craid Doerge (keyboards); Leland Sklar (bass); Russ Kunkel (drums); Doug Haywood, Rosemary Butler (background vocals). Recorded live in 1977. Having acknowledged a certain creative desperation on The Pretender, Jackson Browne lowered his sights (and raised his commercial appeal) considerably with Running on Empty, which was more a concept album about the road than an actual live album, even though its songs were sometimes recorded on-stage (and sometimes on the bus or in the hotel). Unlike most live albums, though, it consisted of previously unrecorded songs. Browne had less creative participation on this album than on any he ever made, solely composing only two songs, co-writing four others, and covering another four. And he had less to say -- the title song and leadoff track neatly conjoined his artistic and escapist themes. Figuratively and creatively, he was out of gas, but like "the pretender," he still had to make a living. The songs covered all aspects of touring, from Danny O'Keefe's "The Road," which detailed romantic encounters, and "Rosie" (co-written by Browne and his manager Donald Miller), in which a soundman pays tribute to auto-eroticism, to, well, "Cocaine," to the travails of being a roadie ("The Load-Out"). Audience noises, humorous asides, loose playing -- they were all part of a rough-around-the-edges musical evocation of the rock & roll touring life. It was not what fans had come to expect from Browne, of course, but the disaffected were more than outnumbered by the newly converted. (It didn't hurt that "Running on Empty" and "The Load-Out"/"Stay" both became Top 40 hits.) As a result, Browne's least ambitious, but perhaps most accessible, album ironically became his biggest seller. But it is not characteristic of his other work: for many, it will be the only Browne album they will want to own, just as others always will regard it disdainfully as "Jackson Browne lite." ~ William Ruhlmann An audacious concept album about life on the road, this is a mix of in concert performances and informal sessions taped in various hotel rooms (see "Shaky Town," although it's hard to believe that Browne, by then a major star, was actually staying at a Holiday Inn). It's very '70s--the overall aura of cocaine-fueled decadence is almost palpable--but it works far better than you'd expect, and the songs ...
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