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We're the Meatmen and You Still Suck!!! (Live)

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Download links and information about We're the Meatmen and You Still Suck!!! (Live) by The Meatmen. This album was released in 1988 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Metal, Alternative genres. It contains 20 tracks with total duration of 01:02:53 minutes.

Artist: The Meatmen
Release date: 1988
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Punk, Metal, Alternative
Tracks: 20
Duration: 01:02:53
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Razamanaz (Live) 3:43
2. Tooling for Anus (Live) 0:57
3. Rock N Roll Juggernaut (Live) 3:34
4. Lesbian Death Dirge (Live) 3:54
5. Camel Jockeys Suck (Live) 0:56
6. Centurions of Rome (Live) 4:43
7. War of the Superbikes (Live) 4:15
8. One Down 3 to Go (Live) 1:47
9. Turbo Rock (Live) 4:41
10. True Grit (Live) 3:14
11. Rebel Rowser (Live) 3:34
12. What's This S**t Called Love? (Live) 3:26
13. Come On Over to Mah Crib (Live) 3:40
14. Abba God & Me (Live) 3:22
15. Meatmen Stomp (Live) 0:58
16. Wine Wenches & Wheels (Live) 3:41
17. The Making of War of the Superbikes 5:48
18. Hot Rails to Hell 2:56
19. Crime Pays the Bills 3:10
20. Welcome to McDonalds 0:34

Details

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After the Blood Sausage and Crippled Children Suck EPs helped stake the Meatmen's dubious claim to rock godhood, We're the Meatmen and You Suck!! helps slam the door completely on that particular notion. Recorded in front of a live New York City audience whose members presumably knew exactly what they came here for, We're the Meatmen has the same confrontational spirit as, say, the Misfits' Evilive, but one-tenth of the talent. In large part, this is because Tesco Vee is a (admittedly intentionally) terrible singer and raconteur — take his introduction to "Mr. Tapeworm," demonstrating, among other things, what said tapeworm sounds like. More than once, his singing is mere gargled up-and-down hooting. Give him credit for knowing the ridiculousness of what's going on — thus his a cappella rendition of the opening verse of "I Sin for a Living," which demonstrates clearly that Meatmen lyrics are best heard in a blur rather than recited as poetry. More than once, the musicians save Vee from himself — the switch between hyper-speed thrash and slow-burn attitude on "Orgy of One" almost distracts attention from Vee's beefily voiced description of the joys of masturbation on the midsong break. Meanwhile, the otherwise unrecorded "Buttocks" finally gets the whole Meatmen aesthetic, if you will, down right — Vee merrily uses the chorus to shout out "Buttocks, buttocks, I love buttocks!" over a surf-punk combination that's sheer hilarity. This is perhaps all related to the claims about girls who sh*t on the band's faces later during the introduction to "Meat Crimes," if one wished to investigate in more detail. Yes, the whole thing is perversely, stupidly funny — but really, it only needs to be listened to about once every five years, if that. [The album was reissued in 2008 with five bonus tracks added. Two of the songs featured Tesco Vee singing with White Flag ("Hot Rails to Hell" and "Nervous Breakdown") and one, "Crime Pays the Bills", was performed by Tesco Vee's Hate Police.]