| | Hot Water Music Finding The Rhythms CD Hot Water Music Discography of CDs
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2nd Album-Gainsville,Florida Act
Photographer: Var Thėlin.
Hot Water Music: Jason Black (bass guitar); Chuck Ragan, Chris Wollard, George Rebelo.
Personnel: Chuck Ragan, Chris Wollard (guitar); Steve Heritage (recorder); George Rebelo (drums).
Finding The Rhythms Music Hot Water Music Finding The Rhythms Songs Finding The Rhythms Music Review Purchase Finding The Rhythms CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Hot Water Music Fuel For The Hate Game CD (1998)
Finding The Rhythms album
$14.75 The second, and arguably best release from Gainsville's Hot Water Music, is this driving LP that opens with five of the best tracks the band has ever recorded. Swinging, complicated basslines and the throaty vocal screams of singers Chuck Ragan and Chris Wollard punctuate pummeling ...
| | Hot Water Music Live At The Hardback CDs (1999)
Finding The Rhythms CD music
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| | Hot Water Music Neverender CD (2004)
Finding The Rhythms music CDs
$11.79 A career-spanning compilation, 2004's Never Ender collects all the songs from the out of print Push for Coin CD-EP, two vinyl-only singles ("Alachua" and the outstanding "You Can Take the Boy Out of Bradenton") and Hot Water Music's contributions to four different split singles. Like many punk bands, Hot Water Music have always treated the single as one of the defining points of music, and therefore, Never Ender is less a collection of cast-offs than it is the sound of the band at their most focused and sure. The tag-team vocals of co-lead singers Chuck Ragan and Chris Wollard, as well as the standard-issue rhythm section, are entirely within the stylistic parameters of blue-collar post-hardcore, specifically of the Social Distortion variety: medium tempos, articulate lyrics about small-p political and personal ...
| | Static-X Wisconsin Death Trip CD (1999)
Finding The Rhythms songs
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| | Zao Liberate Te Ex Inferis CD (1999)
Finding The Rhythms album
$13.49
| | Hot Water Music Next What's Next CD (2004)
Finding The Rhythms CD music
$11.49 Melodic neo-punk outfit Hot Water Music delivers another tightly constructed album of hard-hitting fare with THE NEW WHAT NEXT. Like 2002's CAUTION, THE NEW WHAT NEXT packs a massive sonic wallop, abetted by a crisp, high-sheen production that lets the group's surging power chords, ringing guitar leads, and jackhammer rhythms come through loud and clear. While the muscle and aggression of Hot Water Music's approach gives a clear nod to classic punk, the band is never shambolic or flip; their lock-sealed chemistry betrays years of practice and meticulous ...
| | Smudge Mo Pootang CD (2007) (Import)
Finding The Rhythms music CDs
$26.29
| | Vells CD (2003)
Finding The Rhythms songs
$9.55
| | Wayne Kramer's Beyond Cyberpunk CD (2001)
Finding The Rhythms album
$14.65 Beyond Cyberpunk was compiled and co-produced by punk rock stalwart Wayne Kramer, who wanted to promote a few alternate voices of the genre. Featuring both pioneers and voices that followed, Beyond Cyberpunk is an interesting and surprisingly literate collection that illustrates just how wide-ranging the spirit of punk rock is. The album kicks off with Mudhoney's "Inside Job." A herking, jerking Mark Arm masterpiece, the song was originally part of Since We've Become Translucent, the band's 2002 "comeback" album, and is the famous fruit of a late-night Mudhoney jam session with Kramer that convinced the legendary Seattle combo to keep on keeping on. The late Dee Dee Ramone checks in with "Bad Little Go-Go Girl," and Kramer himself handles "Crawling Outta the Jungle," which, despite its hokey horror movie vibe, still features a strutting guitar hook in the chorus.
Of the newer material, Downset's furious "Cold Blue Coma" fares best, tracing as it does punk's long, strange trip into a brightly lit post-hardcore world where rap and metal eat freely at the same table. Meanwhile, Cooter's hyperactive "Passtime" is the requisite pop-punk number, but it seems like a placeholder on a compilation that is overwhelmingly strong. Besides tracks from the ever-avant-garage Pere Ubu, a reunited Richard Hell & the Voidods, and original Stooges guitarist Ron Asheton, Beyond Cyberpunk includes Lesbianmaker, a new project of Dead Boy Jimmy Zero. Winning the sweepstakes for best song title, Lesbianmaker turns in "Take Me in Your Arms (Like Heroin)," a tightly wound spitter with the classic line: "This world is a suck-ass place."
Beyond Cyberpunk's strongest moments are those farthest away from the three-chord ethos of punk. Legendary session guitarist Chris Spedding co-wrote the bittersweet "Love on Death Row" with Kramer. Over a mournful guitar line that downshifts into a gritty chorus, oddly touching lyrics trace the story of a dead man walking and the serial-killer groupies who tempt him from a Polaroid scrapbook. The LP's other standout is Stan Ridgway's "Beloved Movie Star." The erstwhile Wall of Voodoo ...
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Finding The Rhythms CD music
$14.95 It only makes sense that, beyond the eight-bit music revolution of using sounds derived from archaic ...
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Finding The Rhythms CD music
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