| | Daughters Hell Songs CD Daughters Discography of CDs
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Alternative Press (p.214) - "Above al the jagged spazzing out and drum-pummeled breakdowns, Marshall's voice, sounding both sexually desperate and right on the edge of panic, pops up, commanding your immediate attention." CMJ (p.4) - "[T]he expansive, jagged post-grind that comprises HELL SONGS conjures memories of art-punkers Arab On Radar and Antioch Arrow." Daughters Hell Songs Songs Purchase Hell Songs CD To buy, Click on price to add to cart | Locust Plague Soundscapes CD (2003)
Hell Songs album
$10.69 Plague Soundscapes is the Locust's first release for Anti, the Epitaph offshoot that includes among its intellectually superior ranks Tom Waits, Eddie Izzard, and Buju Banton. Have these respected dinner guests encouraged the Locust to serve up something less severe for dinner? ...
| | Daughters Canada Songs CD (2003)
Hell Songs CD music
$8.55
| | Locust Safety Second, Body Last CD (2005)
Hell Songs music CDs
$8.89
| | Holy Molar Cavity Search CD (2007) Extended Play
Hell Songs songs
$6.39
| | Psyopus Our Puzzling Encounters Considerd CD (2007)
Hell Songs album
$10.69
| | Locust New Erections CD (2007)
Hell Songs CD music
$11.05
| | Kenneth Siversten Remembering North CD (1993)
Hell Songs music CDs
$15.75
| | Rhoda Scott Alone CD (1998) Import
Hell Songs songs
$25.59
| | Shawn Colvin Whole New You CD (2001) Bonus Track; Japan
Hell Songs album
$40.75 Asesino's WHOLE NEW YOU mixes elements of grindcore and death metal. Tracks include "Matter of Minutes", "Nothing LIke You", and the title track.
On her first album of new material in over five years, Shawn Colvin's voice remains a supple, elastic thing, bending notes and phrases to suit her idiosyncratic style. Here, she once again works with producer/guitarist John Leventhal and much of the same cast of musicians that appeared on her Grammy-winning 1996 album A FEW SMALL REPAIRS. Colvin seduces the listener with rich, atmospheric washes of guitar and unabashedly pretty ...
| | Legendary Pink Dots All The King's Men CD (2002)
Hell Songs CD music
$11.39 The companion album to the more cohesive and slightly more aggressive All the King's Horses, All the King's Men is a much more murky puddle of psychedelia if you don't get the back-story. Early in 2001 the Dots' main man and lyricist Edward Ka-Spel started working on his "Unlikely Event" piece. The story was of a man on an airplane about to crash and his attempt to reach his wife's cell phone, only to get voicemail. The events of September 11th of that year had his sometimes too hardcore following declaring him a prophet once again. Regardless, All the King's Men is chilling without the synchronicity and a pensive, confused triumph. This is a more personal view of disaster with a "what can you do?" message. On "The Day Before It Happened" the main character is planning to get his teeth fixed next year, only listens to ten percent of what his spouse is saying, and doesn't get much rest. Sad, and it's not that Ka-Spel has thrown a "Live Everyday Like It's Your Last" bumper sticker on his car, but it's as close as he's come to making a comment that reaches everyone. The album's argument is that tragedy doesn't always come with foreshadowing and there are few ways to prevent it. All the King's Horses floats above and around disaster and everyday life with detachment. The story isn't linear, it jumps back and forth in time, and three instrumentals only hint at the concept with their combination of everyday piano and darker electronics. Ka-Spel's lispy and meandering vocals are way up in the mix, which makes him sound right next to you through headphones. You have to be predisposed to the Dots for the album to work at all, and even then it's more of a "mood" album than usual. This is glum stuff but Ka-Spel is inspired, and with a little explanation the complexity and obscurity pays off. ~ David Jeffries
Can we put Humpty Dumpty back together again-? Edward Ka-Spel & LPD are definitely going to try. - "All The King's Men" (all new material) & its companion release on Soleilmoon "All The King's Horses," are albums inspired & affected by the events of September 11th. In classic LPD form, they use a nursery rhyme to evoke both the apocalyptic events of a year ago & the hope that has arisen from them. This album is a paradox & a provocation. The world has fallen apart & we must put it back together. What should we do?Formed in 1980 in the UK, and shortly thereafter transplanted to Amsterdam, The Legendary Pink Dots are more together today than ever before. Constantly touring for 20 years on the Continent and USA, they have produced over 25 records on labels such as Play It Again Sam, Wax Trax, Staalplaat, Caroline, and Soleilmoon USA. Their ...
| | Bizarre Hannicap Circus CD (2005) Bonus Track; Japan
Hell Songs music CDs
$29.09 Bizarre is known as the Ol' Dirty Bastard of Eminem's D12 posse--an out-of-control, just-maybe-crazy guy whose visual hook is that he's always wearing a shower cap. After a series of guest spots on Eminem's records, Bizarre manages to define himself as a solo artist on HANNICAP CIRCUS. Although the Marshall Mathers-produced first single "Rockstar" sounds suspiciously close to Mathers's own "Just Lose It" and D12's "My Band," the rest of the album sounds more like the 2005 equivalent to Blowfly's cheerfully obscene R&B party records of the '70s. Bizarre's unique sensibilities are such that a track called "Porno Bitches" is the closest thing to a conventional love song, and "Gospel Weed Song" delivers exactly what the title promises. On HANNICAP CIRCUS, the goofiness of Bizarre's silly lyrics and between-song skits almost overshadows the fact that he and his co-producers give the laughs more substance through the stacks of solid beats and the inventive use of samples on tracks like "Let the Record Skip."
The shower cap-wearing freak from D12 won't change the world with his first proper solo album, but Hannicap Circus is solid, filthy, fun, and everything else that you'd want from a less nimble Kool Keith. Bizarre shares Keith's love of sleaze and weirdness, but Bizarre is more earthbound and ghetto enough that you'd never confuse the two. His trashy attitude makes him more Insane Clown Posse than any other Shadyville artist, but his street clout is real and ICP never had beats so good. Eminem himself is behind the album's party highlight, "Rockstar," an equally infectious and herky-jerky sequel to D12's "My Band." Cool production tricks sweeten Bizarre's cool rambling on "Let the Record Skip," and Devin the Dude's appearance on "Porno Bitches" should put the Stevie Wonder-feelin' track on that ...
| | Gojogo All Is Fair CD (2006)
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$11.85
| | Dewey Redman Struggle Continues CD (1982)
Hell Songs album
$14.65
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