Turn Me on Dead Man / God Bless the Electric Freak
Album: | God Bless the Electric Freak | Collection: | General | |
Artist: | Turn Me on Dead Man | Added: | Aug 2004 | |
Label: | Self-Release |
A-File Activity
Add Date: | 2004-10-04 | Pull Date: | 2004-12-06 |
---|
Week Ending: | Nov 21 | Nov 14 | Oct 24 | Oct 17 | Oct 10 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Airplays: | 4 | 1 | 3 | 2 | 3 |
Recent Airplay
1. | May 08, 2019: | On The Warpath (brownian motion)
Take a Stress Pill |
4. | Nov 20, 2004: | On The Warpath
Apocalypse Rock |
|
2. | Jun 30, 2010: | On The Warpath
Daisy |
5. | Nov 17, 2004: | press and release
Apocalypse Rock |
|
3. | Nov 06, 2009: | The DJ Never Has It
Daisy |
6. | Nov 16, 2004: | At The Cafe Civil
Apocalypse Rock |
Album Review
Gabe
Reviewed 2004-09-28
Reviewed 2004-09-28
Psychedelic riff-and-roll that owes a debt to the MC5s, the Stooges, the Heads and their recent ilk, and of course Lenny Kravitz … er, I mean Jimi. Simplistic patterns repeated enthusiastically and a tendency toward astronomy-themed lyrics – spacemen, galaxies, comets, etc. – in the first couple of tracks. Then, seemingly, the stops come out and they start burning down nearly every track. Kickass.
1. Spaceman-beseeching lyrics over melodic guitars
2. Oddly, another astronomy-based lyric, this time an ode to a comet
3. Revved up guitars, ultra-catchy tune, and spaceoid keyboards to complete the package
4. Slightly hackneyed use of sitars-n-stuff and the mid-tempo is a bit dull but the melody is catchy
5. Guitar and vocal distortion with a vengeance; YOW!
6. Oh fuck! “Apocalypse Rock” is what it’s called and it’s screaming on all channels
7. Tribute to George Harrison, whose spiritual explorations in India with and without his Beatles mates made him a patron saint of psychedelic rock
8. Swirling orientalist instrumental
9. Snippet about taking a stress pill by Hal of 2001: A Space Odyssey lurks in the background behind massive power chording
10. Ooh, an in-joke, this being a rockist cover of “Daisy”, the song that Hal starts singing when Dave begins to power him down; ultimately, this is sort of a sweetly psychedelic cover of some children’s tunes
11. Lazy “La-la-la-lazy” run forwards and backwards through the playback
12. Cram the guitar and the vox through a fuzztone and out comes this mighty tune
1. Spaceman-beseeching lyrics over melodic guitars
2. Oddly, another astronomy-based lyric, this time an ode to a comet
3. Revved up guitars, ultra-catchy tune, and spaceoid keyboards to complete the package
4. Slightly hackneyed use of sitars-n-stuff and the mid-tempo is a bit dull but the melody is catchy
5. Guitar and vocal distortion with a vengeance; YOW!
6. Oh fuck! “Apocalypse Rock” is what it’s called and it’s screaming on all channels
7. Tribute to George Harrison, whose spiritual explorations in India with and without his Beatles mates made him a patron saint of psychedelic rock
8. Swirling orientalist instrumental
9. Snippet about taking a stress pill by Hal of 2001: A Space Odyssey lurks in the background behind massive power chording
10. Ooh, an in-joke, this being a rockist cover of “Daisy”, the song that Hal starts singing when Dave begins to power him down; ultimately, this is sort of a sweetly psychedelic cover of some children’s tunes
11. Lazy “La-la-la-lazy” run forwards and backwards through the playback
12. Cram the guitar and the vox through a fuzztone and out comes this mighty tune
Track Listing
1. | Killer Sound Waves From | 7. | Beatle George | |||
2. | The Hale-Bopp | 8. | Molecules | |||
3. | Astrophobia | 9. | Take a Stress Pill | |||
4. | Silky Milky Way | 10. | Daisy | |||
5. | Sunshine Supercreep | 11. | Yzal | |||
6. | Apocalypse Rock | 12. | Mystery Ride |