| | Mushmouth Out To Win CD Mushmouth Discography of CDs
(2 Customer Reviews)
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Our Price: $11.85 CDFor Sale Usually ships in 1-2 days
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Recorded at Loho Studios, New York, New York.
Personnel: Chris M. (guitar).
Recording information: Lo-Ho Studios. Mushmouth Out To Win Songs Purchase Out To Win CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Sick Of It All Call To Arms CD (1999)
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$6.69
| | Nothingface Pacifier CD (1997) Reissue
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$13.55
| | Mushmouth Lift The Curse CD (2000)
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$12.39
| | Out To Win Persist & Destroy CD (2002)
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$8.99
| | Space Ghost Coast To Coast - Vol. 1 DVDs (2003) Full Frame; Subtitled
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$12.09
| | Sick Of It All Life On The Ropes CD (2003)
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$6.69 Even after more than 15 years, Sick of It All's Life on the Ropes finds the band as heavy, fast, and fun as ever while still allowing plenty of room for some thoughtful lyrics. Throughout the entire length of the album, the band keeps switching back and forth between circle-pit anthems and singalong youth crew tunes. Thus, the band sounds like a good cross of old- and new-school hardcore mixed with good old punk rock. Street-tough vocals from Lou Koller spout out lyrics that seem to be predominately about philosophy and self-reflection, which may seem out of place among much of the hardcore scene, but Sick of It All makes it work ...
| | S Club 7 CD (2000) Import
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$19.79 With teen pop trends changing ever more rapidly, the forces behind S Club 7 took action: just ten months after the release of their debut S Club, the inevitably named follow-up 7 arrived. However, in a misguided attempt to make the group's prefab pop sound more mature, 7 ditched their debut's fun, bouncy style in favor of by-the-numbers ballads and a forced eclecticism, both of which muddied S Club 7's sound instead of expanding it. Though their songs were never as recognizable as Britney, Christina, Backstreet, or 'N Sync's, S Club's cheerful, more innocent style at least set them apart from the rest of the teen pop B-list. But by adopting the poses of the style's bigger stars -- as on the Britney-esque "Natural" and the boy-band-lite "Best Friend" -- S Club 7 ends up sounding more faceless than before. Anonymous ballads like "Lately" and "Never Had a Dream Come True" emphasize the fact that the group's voices aren't as strong or interesting as those of teen pop's stars; the would-be dance-pop anthems "Bring the House Down" and "Love Train" (thankfully, not a cover of the O'Jays' classic) confirm just how thin the septet's pipes are. Worse, 7's first half never settles into a comfortable groove. Instead, the album skips from "I'll Keep Waiting"'s fusion of sugary pop, reggae, and hip-hop to "All in Love Is Fair," a lite version of contemporary R&B that whitewashes everything about the style, down to the syncopated, Timbaland-style beats. Wanting to showcase the band's range is understandable, but the disappointing results only prove how little they grew in the ten months between their first and second albums. However, 7 doesn't completely dispose of S Club's fun, carefree sound: "Reach" is a brassy update of the Partridge Family's bubblegum charm, while "Cross My Heart" is a slick pop confection that proves that the group's vocals can have some oomph to them. "I'll Be There" ...
| | Friends And Family, Vol. 2 CD (2001)
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$16.45 The second volume of Suicidal's Friends and Family compilation series assembles more grooves from Suicidal Tendencies and its extended family. Kicking off with the title track to ST's Free Your Soul...And Save My Mind, it moves quickly into the previously unreleased "Fight the Losing Battle," which works the classic funk-thrash model to a tee. After a few tightly-wound funk numbers from Infectious Grooves (including an instrumental), there's some ridiculousness from Jeremiah Weed and the Bad Seed, which returns at the end of the disc for a hokey closing bit. In between, there are two amazing tracks from Missile Girl Scoot, the Japanese compatriots of Suicidal who mix punk, thrash, and pop as only the Japanese can. "Big Mouth" even finds a way to mash churning metal into chirpy, third wave ska. Friends and Family's second half is given over to guest shots from other Suicidal artists. Of these, two previously unreleased tracks from My Head seem to be the standout. Overall, Friends is pretty enjoyable. It provides a nice primer for where the label is now, and gives longtime fans a wealth of rare material. Ideally, the label's next project should be a domestically-issued Missile Girl Scoot album. ~ Johnny Loftus
Suicidal Records released Friends and Family 1 as there first release. Now the second round is back with more Suicidal Tendencies, Infectious Grooves, The Funeral Party, and Creeper. New contributors include the Japanese Rock group Missile Girl Scoot. They opened for ST in Japan and the band liked them so much they asked them ...
| | Mickey Jupp Live At The BBC CD (2004)
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$15.29 This collection of four separate 1978 and 1979 BBC sessions does what live BBC collections should: preserve and present evidence of a performer in a somewhat different light than what's heard on the artist's records. It doesn't lean exclusively ...
| | Funeral For A Friend Hours CD (2005)
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$11.35
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