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Devil's Food

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Download links and information about Devil's Food by Supersuckers. This album was released in 2005 and it belongs to Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 46:16 minutes.

Artist: Supersuckers
Release date: 2005
Genre: Rock, Hard Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Heavy Metal, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 16
Duration: 46:16
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Gato Negro 2:38
2. Shake It Off 3:07
3. Hey Ya! 4:06
4. Teenage Shutdown 3:16
5. Double Wide (Country Version) 2:41
6. Team Man 1:25
7. Can Pipe 1:59
8. Rubber Biscuit 2:55
9. Born With a Tail (Country Version) 3:14
10. Devil's Food 3:18
11. Sail On 4:09
12. Kid's Got It Comin' 2:51
13. Eastbound & Down 3:22
14. Then I'm Gone 1:57
15. Flyin' Into the Mid-Day Sun 3:21
16. End of an Era 1:57

Details

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Once you get past their resin-soaked detour into country music, Must've Been High, the Supersuckers aren't a band offering much in the way of surprises — put on one of their records, and you'll get big slabs of high-swagger Rawk, with hard rock guitar punch bolted to hardcore speed-jive while a cloud of smart-ass humor hovers over the top. With this kind of consistency of vision, it shouldn't come as a shock that Devil's Food, an odds 'n' sods collection of single sides, Internet-only tracks, covers, and unreleased tunes, hangs together with the focus of a "real" album instead of a compilation, but what should genuinely raise eyebrows is that nothing here sounds like a throwaway that didn't make the cut elsewhere. Originals like "Gato Negro," "Can Pipe," and "Kid's Got It Comin'" bring the rock in grand style, the "country" remakes of "Born With a Tail" and "Doublewide" boast large portions of both twang and c***nes, and the covers are inspired, especially the fifth-gear run through Jerry Reed's " "Eastbound and Down" (you know, that song from Smokey and the Bandit) and a hard rockin' but faithful version of OutKast's "Hey Ya!" Crack open a beer, crank up the stereo, slap this in the player, and make with those Devil's horns — the Supersuckers are still kickin' it out, and Devil's Food shows they've got the goods and then some.