| | Naked Raygun Basement Screams CD Naked Raygun Discography of CDs
With a total running time of eight minutes, the original six songs on Basement Screams are little more than the average in-your-face, post-punk gristle. Screaming vocals, piercing guitars, rolling drums, and snapping basslines show up in each take. Despite the apparent simplicity, there are hints of what lie ahead in Naked Raygun's future. "I Lie" features a catchy outro that completely subverts the song's original tempo in favor of an advanced and defined melody -- a strategy the band would use on all but its final album. "Tojo," a ditty about the ruthless dictatorship of a Chinese emperor, is brave and light years ahead of what most other American punk bands were singing about. Basement also has a penchant for the witty on "Swingo," with lines like "Go swing/Like the pendulum do/Go swing/Like John Wilkes Booth" throwing open the cellar doors that lead to political and social commentary -- the EP makes it plainly clear that Naked Raygun had something to say. It is doubtful that the stop-start, smooth-rough passages that provide the frame for "Potential Rapist" could be pulled off by anyone else, save for an artist like Gang of Four. The song's first-person account of the psychological chess game between males and females walking in the inner city forever ring true. As Steve Albini states in his tributary essay in the reissue's liner notes, Naked Raygun are "the absurd alongside the magnificent." The Basement reissue comes with eight bonus tracks, seven of which were previously unreleased recordings from Chicago's 222 S. Morgan Street, an address that served as the storied practice and living area for the city's early '80s punk bands. It's hard to discern what Naked Raygun are singing on the bonus material, but the energy is undeniable. Basement is the key that unlocks the irrepressible action, politics, and challenging musical structures that became the band's trademark until guitarist John Haggerty (the man who replaced Basement player Santiago Durango) left in 1989. ~ Bob Gendron
Includes liner notes by Steve Albini.
Naked Raygun: Jeff Pezzati (vocals); Santiago Durango (guitar); Camilo Gonzalez (bass); Jim Colao (drums).
Additional personnel: John Haggerty (saxophone); Marko Pezzati (bass); Bobby Strange (drums).
Re-Issue
Naked Raygun Basement Screams Songs | 1. | I Lie |
| 2. | Bombshelter |
| 3. | Tojo |
| 4. | Swingo |
| 5. | Mofo |
| 6. | Potential Rapist |
| 7. | I Lie - (Street Version) |
| 8. | Swingo |
| 9. | 12XU |
| 10. | Tell Them |
| 11. | Got Hurt |
| 12. | New Dreams |
| 13. | Fashion |
| 14. | Thank You |
| Basement Screams Review
GuidelinesRemember to focus your comments on Naked Raygun Basement Screams CD. Check our review guidelines for specific details regarding customer review policy. To submit your review, please fill out the above form and click "Submit Review." A staff member will then verify your review meets our guidelines. Upon approval, your review will be published within a few days. Please do not use this form to comment on web site errors or for order related questions. If you have concerns of this nature, please contact customer service by filling out this form.
Purchase Basement Screams CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Naked Raygun Throb, Throb CD (1985)
Basement Screams
$12.15 From its onset, the tube-crunch surf guitar intro of "Rat Patrol," Throb Throb sizzles like grease in a frying pan until it comes to a halt some 30 minutes later. Like the tank on its cover, Throb is largely informed by an antagonism that rails against the Reaganism that helped spawn intelligent '80s post-punk groups much like Naked Raygun. Titles like "Surf Combat," ...
| | Naked Raygun All Rise CD (1986)
Basement Screams
$12.19 Something happened during the two-year time span between Naked Raygun's first album and the follow-up All Rise. Rather than having more of the offbeat, absurd song formality that gave their debut Throb Throb its edge, this album has more of a structured quality. Not to say that Naked Raygun have lost their touch; by progressing into a more (dare it be said) mature sound, they have remained one step ahead of all the Raygun clones emerging from their hometown Chicago. The results are pretty decent; with songs like "Home of the Brave," "Knock Me Down" and ...
| | Naked Raygun Jettison CD (1988)
Basement Screams
$12.15 Principally recorded at Jericho Studio and The Riviera, Chicago, Illinois. Includes liner notes by Bernie Bahrmasel.
Occupying the space between the punk movement's departure and the arrival of grunge, Jettison is a definitive link between the two musical genres and, with its speedy slashing and grinding, is the most jarring and diverse of Naked Raygun's albums. Electrocuting guitars, pummeling drum beats, and unmerciful vocals, which combine the Misfits' ...
| | Naked Raygun Understand? CD (1989)
Basement Screams
$12.19 The most striking aspect of Quarterstick's reissue of Understand? is the two bonus tracks that come at the end of the album. Recorded live at Chicago 's Riviera Theater in November 1987, the spirited performances of "Mr. Gridlock" and "I Don't Know" blast through the speakers with an ardent fury that all of the tracks on Understand? so desperately lack. In a word, the live material cuts to the heart of what plagues Understand?, a record that is dull, idle, and plain boring when measured against the albums that precede it. Missing from most ...
| | Raygun...Naked Raygun CD (1990)
Basement Screams
$12.25 With the departure of guitarist John Haggerty, Naked Raygun seemed to stumble out of touch, as Raygun...Naked Raygun fails to achieve the full potency of their previous few albums. Part of that is due to the lack of clarity in some songs' production, but Haggerty's absence also deprives the group of some of its edgy instrumental spark, and the lyrics seem less relevant than before, mixing clichéd skateboard anthems with affected cyberpunk posturing. Make no mistake, there are still some good songs ...
| | 20 Years Of Dischord CDs (2002)
Basement Screams
$19.75 Includes a 132 page booklet with liner notes by Ian MacKaye, Jeff Nelson, and Henry Rollins.
A Dischord box set? It may seem like an oddity to many who know little about the label, but when you think about it, it makes absolutely perfect sense. Many of the D.C. bands were and are known for amazing live shows, blowing most "punk" bands out of the water. Unfortunately, given these bands' tendency to break up after a year or so, those in the other parts of the country and the world couldn't necessarily make it down to the 9:30 club to check out Severin or Soul Side -- hence, the existence of Dischord as a label. Initially started just to document one band (the Teen Idles), it has served to document the ...
| | Operacycle Warmer CD (2000)
Basement Screams
$11.99 Recording this album at the age of 21 from his home in Portland, OR, Jordan ...
| | Alexander Von Schlippenbach Globe Unity Orchestra 67/70: 1967-1970 CD (1970)
Basement Screams
$11.49 (alto saxophone); Manfred Schoof (trumpet, cornet); Jurg Grau, Claude Deron (trumpet): Albert Mangelsdorff (trombone); Karlhanns Berger (vibraphone); J.B. Niebergall, Peter Kowald (bass); Jaki Liebezeit (drums, tympani).
Evan Parker (soprano saxophone, tenor saxophone); Kenny Wheeler (trumpet, flugelhorn); Tomasz Stanko, Bernard Vitet (trumpet); Albert Mangelsdorff (trombone); Derek Bailey (guitar); Arjen Gorter (bass, electric bass); Paul Lovens (drums, percussion).
On this reissue, Alexander Von Schlippenbach leads two huge, all-star lineups of 18 European improvisers through two big band pieces that aren't just the crazy free explosions one might expect. While there's plenty of playing that's aggressive, dissonant, and, well, loud, these pieces are also ingeniously arranged. Von Schlippenbach scored both pieces using ...
| | Leftfield Rhythm & Stealth + Remixes CD (2000) Remixes
Basement Screams
$29.09
| | Hank Thompson Six Pack To Go CD (1966)
Basement Screams
$10.59 1965 was the year Hank Thompson & His Brazos Valley Boys began a run of drinking records, and this was the first. A Six Pack to Go is a classic by any country music standard: It is full of honky tonk songs, heartbreak songs, a couple of polkas, and a few Western swing tunes to boot. With all of the songs centering around drinking -- the title track, "Drunkard's Blues," "Hangover Heart," the Bob Wills/Tommy Duncan classic "Bubbles in My Beer," "Honky Tonk Town," and the downright depressing "Hangover Tavern" among others. The delivery Thompson gives them is all but depressing, however. He is a bouncy singer with a band that always plays on the right side of honky tonk and has Western swing in the heart of everything they play. But what sets A Six Pack ...
| | Young Buck Buck The World CD (2006)
Basement Screams
$12.99
| | New Kids On The Block Super Hits CD (2001)
Basement Screams
$7.65
| | 20th Century Masters: The Millennium Collection: The Best Of The Who CD (1999) Remastered
Basement Screams
$7.79
| | Bis - We Are Bis From Glascow, Scotland DVDs (2007) With CD
Basement Screams
$20.29
| | Bravo CD (2007) (Import)
Basement Screams
$19.69
|
|
|