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Dumbass On A Rampage

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Download links and information about Dumbass On A Rampage by Barnyard Playboys. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 18 tracks with total duration of 45:02 minutes.

Artist: Barnyard Playboys
Release date: 2000
Genre: Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 18
Duration: 45:02
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Truckdriver Joe 2:09
2. Mr. Coffee 2:44
3. Foggy Mountain Nervous Breakdown 2:27
4. Keep the Honkytonks Open 2:09
5. Pennsylvania Ditch 4:00
6. Flat Butts & Beer Guts 2:13
7. I'm Hurt, Let's Party 2:10
8. Breaker 1-9 2:55
9. Total Feces 2:21
10. Victorian Dad 3:00
11. Terminal Case of Morning Wood 2:37
12. Screwtop Bottle 1:35
13. Eight-Ball For Christmas 2:46
14. Substance Abuse Diet 2:46
15. Cowboy Shirt 2:13
16. Cowboy Gun 2:01
17. Blue Denim Diapers 2:51
18. Home On the Road 2:05

Details

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The debut from this New York indie rock trio shows the Barnyard Playboys attempting to blend country with hard rock, or at least adding a brashness to their Railroad Jerk-inspired sound. Led by singer/guitarist John Lyons' reckless and honky tonk approach, and backed by the furious rhythm section of bassist Adam Freeman and drummer Joe Baxley, the group chose its approach and stuck with it throughout the 18-song disc. With songs like "Keep the Honkytonks Open," "Flat Butts & Beer Guts," and "Terminal Case of Morning Wood," the band's beer-soaked bar roots shine through. The band marches through "Breaker 1-9," an ode to truck driver culture, with seething tension, and on "Total Feces" the band attempts a lo-fi juvenile art piece. But Ween has nothing to worry about, with the track sticking out like a sore thumb as the disc continues with tracks like the rollicking and testosterone-fueled "Terminal Case of Morning Wood" and the jittery "Screwtop Bottle." After the band stretches to prove its country sensibilities on "Cowboy Shirt" and "Cowboy Gun," and references Hank Williams and George Jones on "Blue Demim Diapers," the disc sputters to an end with "Home on the Road." Despite the Barnyard Playboys' undeniable sincerity, the disc is clearly a one-trick pony, as the band never seeks to create anything outside its self-created box. Rubric Records released the disc in 2000.