Presenting Mike O’Connell’s hilarious tune that is mos def NSFW. Enjoy, won’t you?
Presenting Mike O’Connell’s hilarious tune that is mos def NSFW. Enjoy, won’t you?
“Clones (We’re All)” from the criminally…CRIMINALLY, I TELL YA!!! underrated Flush the Fashion. Disturbing.
Music reviews! You want ’em? We got em. Here’s a fine variety of critics’ thoughts on some of the latest releases from around the web.
Bullz-Eye’s Jim Washington gives his well-written report on Snoop Dogg’s latest Ego Trippin’. Sez Jim, “At first listen, Snoop’s latest album seems to fall into a pattern arguably going back to his first solo disc – a couple of killer singles surrounded by a lot of filler – but the more you listen, the more the filler grows on you, and the singles reveal themselves as some of his most entertaining work in years.”
Gnarls Barkley surprises everyone by releasing their latest earlier than expected. Jeff Giles writes up The Odd Couple, noting that “nothing on The Odd Couple offers as much in the way of immediate gratification as St. Elsewhere’s breakout hit, “Crazy”; though Danger Mouse and Cee-Lo still sound just as disconnected from current trends as they always have.”
“If you’ve been with PUSA from the beginning, you’ll surely enjoy this one.” So says I in regards to the latest from The Presidents of the United States of America and their great new CD, These Are the Good Times People.
The B-52’s are back…again. For good or bad, David Medsker states what many may have predicted about their new album Funplex: “Funplex is more traditional B-52s, for lack of a better word, with a surprisingly strong libido. It is neither their best nor their worst album, but it rights the band’s ship better than anyone had a right to expect.”
Over at Billboard, critic Kerri Mason tackles Junkie XL’s latest Booming Back at You. “Booming still sounds like music to machine-gun an alien attacker by, but with the subcultural electricity of a guy who’s played a packed Los Angeles nightclub or two, in the current, rock-happy decade,” quoth Mason.
Rolling Stone’s always enjoyable critic David Fricke gives a higher than average review for R.E.M.’s new album Accelerate, saying “[Michael] Stipe has not sounded this viscerally engaged in his singing and poetically lethal in his writing since the twilight of the Reagan administration.”
Ben Sisario of Blender covers The Kills’ new Midnight Boom and isn’t exactly bowled over. “‘Getting Down’ is a dizzy, horny dance; the lyrics are faux-menacing boho nonsense, but if you turn it up loud enough it won’t matter.”
Finally, Ink 19‘s Jeff Montgomery takes a listen to the new reissue of Peter Holsapple and Chris Stamey’s Mavericks: Calling Mavericks ‘precious’—in the best sense of the word—is a pretty accurate summation. The album showcases more of the acoustic ’60s folksy pop influences of the two songwriters and even throws in a cover tune that was originally recorded by the Byrds.”
The guys at Runawaybox offer up this hilarious “honest R&B song.” Enjoy.
Video games and popular songs. They come and go, don’t you know. Way back in the ’80s, the shit got started with Buckner & Garcia’s classic “Pac-Man Fever.” There was also an album of the same name by the duo, and as I recall they even got to “perform” on “American Bandstand” at the time. Of course, the arcade craze soon turned into a giant money pit and soon home console gaming started taking over once more near the end of the decade, coupled with the truly awesome god of home computing at the time, the Commodore 64.
By the early ’90s, though, one-on-one fighting games started reeling the kids back into the arcades, and business was once again booming. One of those first 2-D fighters was of course “Mortal Kombat.” Its violent content caused enough of an uproar that when the game was ported to home consoles, the Super Nintendo version was blood-free. But hey, this did not stop the likes of Johnny Cage and Sub Zero from invading your favorite local dance floor.
Enter The Immortals.
Whoever the hell they were, they decided to take standard-grade techno and couple it with sound clips from the game as well as throw on a bunch of hilariously bad original lyrics. Who could not thrill to an Ecstasy-fueled trip while getting all huggy and lovey-dovey on complete strangers while “Sonya (Go Go Go)” or “Scorpion (Lost Soul Bent On Revenge)” pounded away? Indeed, it was “Techno Syndrome (Mortal Kombat)” itself that was a club hit, and also appeared in the craptastic feature film based on the game. This truly was proof positive that America is the land of plenty, and that if you have a “good enough” idea, you can market the hell out of it and enough lemmings will flock to the fly pile.
As we all know, the “Mortal Kombat” franchise went on to spawn four more arcade machines, and luckily there were no other CDs. Still, I wouldn’t have minded some tracks along the lines of “Baraka (He Will Julienne Your Potatoes Beautifully)” or “Reptile (His Acid Reflux Will Literally Melt Your Skull).” If anyone wants to buy these ideas from me, let me know. I got a million of ’em.
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