| | Naked Raygun Throb, Throb CD Naked Raygun Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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," a song about the effects of napalm at popular beaches, "Gear," a braggadocio commentary about nuclear weapons and the arms race, and "Managua," in which troops march to their impending death, exemplify Throb's political mentality and musical gravity, which are a direct result of the '80s Cold War. Naked Raygun sends the songs up with a sense-raping frazzle and dissonance. While not as furious as Hüsker Dü or as angry as the Misfits, Throb is no less vehement, and ever the more working-class. With comprehensible lyrics everyone can understand and chant, and a plethora of race-against-time guitar melodies, Throb is rare in that it appeals to academics as well as rednecks, straight-shooters as well as in-the-know punks. Borrowing from the big-guitar sound of English heavy metal bands like Iron Maiden and carving catchy melodies usually reserved for Top 40 pop songs into firebrands like "I Don't Know" and "Libido," Naked Raygun assures Throb's place as a classic that is forever ahead of its time, regardless of when it is heard. The Quarterstick reissue of Throb comes with a booklet that contains rare photos of the band, concert set lists, and two short tribute essays. A shortened version of "Libido" is the reissue's only bonus track. ~ Bob Gendron
Includes liner notes by James Fleischel and John Mohr.
Naked Raygun: Jeff Pezzati (vocals); John Haggerty (guitar, saxophone); Camilo Gonzalez (bass); Jim Colao (drums).
Re-Issue
Naked Raygun Throb, Throb Songs Throb, Throb Music Review Purchase Throb, Throb CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Naked Raygun Jettison CD (1988)
Throb, Throb album
$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 ...
| | Kinks Ultimate Collection CDs (2002)
Throb, Throb CD music
$19.79
| | Ozzy Osbourne Ultimate Sin CD (1986) Germany; Remastered
Throb, Throb music CDs
$9.25
| | Ozzy Osbourne Bark At The Moon /Blizzard Of Oz CD (2005) (Import)
Throb, Throb songs
$27.59
| | Cramps Stay Sick CD (2007) (Import)
Throb, Throb album
$26.29
| | Early ZZ Top CD (Import) Import
Throb, Throb CD music
$13.15
| | Competition Coupe/Surfin' With The Astronauts CD (1989) (Import) Germany
Throb, Throb music CDs
$21.19
| | Anthology Of Greek Music, Vol. 4 CD (1997)
$13.39 | | Pidgeon From Gutter With Love CD (2004)
Throb, Throb songs
$13.15
| | Dressy Bessy Electrified CD (2005)
Throb, Throb album
$11.39
| | Clawfinger Don't Get Me Wrong CD (2008) (Import) Import; United Kingdom
Throb, Throb CD music
$26.49
| | Shawn Lee Strings And Things: Ubiquity Studio Sessions, Vol. 3 CD (2006)
Throb, Throb music CDs
$13.59 The third volume in Shawn Lee's impressive Ping Pong Orchestra series is perhaps its zenith. Strings and Things: Ubiquity Studio Sessions, Vol. 3, featuring 15 tracks to accompany as-yet-unmade films, Lee delves deeply into Bollywood and sitar groovescapes, finger-popping funk, and the strange, tense, atmospheric soundscapes that have become a near trademark. The smoking "Greg's Theme" is ...
| | Johnny Rivers Last Train To Memphis CD (1998)
Throb, Throb songs
$11.59 Principally recorded at Smartso Digital, Studio City, California, Oceanway Studios, Hollywood, California, Studio Masters, Los Angeles, California, Sun Studio, Memphis, ...
| | Frazier Chorus Sue CD (1989) (Import)
Throb, Throb album
$15.59 Frazier Chorus aren't what they seem. On Sue, the band's debut album, the group utilizes synthesizers, trumpets, flutes, and clarinets to paint evocative mental images. Most often the music and Tim Freeman's soft, heavily accented vocals paint postcards of England in the summertime. But Frazier Chorus' coyness is deceptive, as the sarcastic wit and sometimes nasty observations of Freeman are often buried underneath the LP's sunny surface. In the otherwise genial "Dream Kitchen," for example, Freeman confesses, "Your life is too good to be true/I think I'll ruin it for you." Usually hailed by fans of '80s electro-pop, Frazier Chorus are refreshingly different from many of their contemporaries, namely due to Freeman's talk-singing style and the incorporation of classical instruments. They have a jazzy side as well, best heard in "Forty Winks." The band could be viewed as forerunners of Pulp, but Pulp already existed -- albeit they were completely obscure -- when Sue was released in the late '80s. Nevertheless, "Sloppy Heart" has graphic yet poetic lyrics about premature ejaculation that would fit perfectly in Pulp's '90s discography. With its beautifully soaring flutes, it's easy to just listen to "Sloppy Heart" and be carried away, completely oblivious to Freeman's erotic story line. However, deciphering Freeman's words is a large part of the fun. Sue may be too subtle for some; the tracks are usually slow and quiet, but they grow on you, especially the breathtaking "Storm." "Dream Kitchen" and "Typical" landed on a few new wave radio stations in the late '80s, but it's the lesser-known songs such as "Sloppy Heart" and "Living Room" where Frazier Chorus create long-term appeal. ~ Michael Sutton
Frazier Chorus aren't what they seem. On Sue, the band's debut album, the group utilizes synthesizers, trumpets, flutes, and clarinets to paint evocative mental images. Most often the music and Tim Freeman's soft, heavily accented vocals paint postcards of England in the summertime. But Frazier Chorus' coyness is deceptive, as the sarcastic wit and sometimes nasty observations of Freeman are often buried underneath the LP's sunny surface. In the ...
| | Ximo Tebar Celebrating Erik Satie CD (2009)
$24.65 |
|
|