Create account Log in

This Machine Kills Artists

[Edit]

Download links and information about This Machine Kills Artists by King Buzzo. This album was released in 2014 and it belongs to Rock, Grunge, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 44:06 minutes.

Artist: King Buzzo
Release date: 2014
Genre: Rock, Grunge, Hard Rock, Metal, Heavy Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 17
Duration: 44:06
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $7.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Dark Brown Teeth 2:12
2. Rough Democracy 2:32
3. Laid Back Walking 2:31
4. Drunken Baby 2:43
5. Vaulting over a Microphone 3:02
6. New River 3:38
7. The Vulgar Joke 2:37
8. Everything's Easy for You 1:46
9. The Ripping Driving 2:53
10. How I Became Offensive 3:25
11. Instrument of God 4:03
12. The Spoiled Brat 2:35
13. Illegal Mona 2:31
14. Good and Hostile 1:34
15. The Blithering Idiot 1:34
16. Useless King of the Punks 2:06
17. The Hesitation Twist 2:24

Details

[Edit]

After nearly 30 years in the Melvins, it's hard to say how much guitarist and founder King Buzzo — also known as Buzz Osborne — still hopes to do musically that he hasn't done just yet, but he's crossed two items off his bucket list in one stroke: he's made his first full-length solo album and recorded his first acoustic project at the same time. This Machine Kills Artists finds Osborne armed only with his acoustic guitar and his voice (along with some discreet overdubbing) as he pounds through 17 songs that bear a fairly strong melodic resemblance to his traditional style. The buzzy report of Osborne's acoustic lacks the titanic force of his traditional Les Paul axe and Sunn amps, but the tone isn't as dissimilar as one might think (especially since he seems to have tuned down on a few cuts), and the songs conform to Osborne's typical lyrical and musical obsessions (any album with songs titled "Dark Brown Teeth," "Drunken Baby," "How I Became Offensive," and "Useless King of the Punks" would appear to be right in Buzz's wheelhouse). Without a bass and percussion, This Machine Kills Artists sounds like the Melvins with the power off, and it's a worthy experiment that sometimes succeeds.