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Devolver

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Download links and information about Devolver by The Prefab Messiahs. This album was released in 1998 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, New Wave, Punk, Pop, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 27 tracks with total duration of 01:11:09 minutes.

Artist: The Prefab Messiahs
Release date: 1998
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, New Wave, Punk, Pop, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 27
Duration: 01:11:09
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Prefab Sun 2:58
2. Franz Kafka 3:02
3. Got a Hole in Me 0:34
4. Beyond All That 2:50
5. The 16th Track 5:21
6. The P.J. Zone 0:57
7. Virgin Mary 2:13
8. Cousin Artie 3:12
9. Desperately Happy 3:04
10. Prefab City Dub (Edit) 0:50
11. Prefabedelia 5:47
12. He Was a Donut 1:07
13. Don't Go to the Party 3:13
14. Walter Gropius 2:27
15. Bourgeois Sally 3:58
16. Donut Man 1:54
17. Sacred Cow 3:04
18. Seen It All 0:21
19. (I Met Her) At the Laundromat 2:59
20. Donut World 1:11
21. You Don't Know 4:08
22. Temple of Despair 2:42
23. Working Stiff 5:50
24. Rice 4 a Sheik 0:56
25. You're Gonna Miss Me 3:18
26. Winter of Love 2:14
27. Doc's House Call 0:59

Details

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Much of the U.S. new wave scene was as much garage/psych revivalism as anything else, but so long as the music was good fun there wasn't any reason to complain. And thus arrived the Prefab Messiahs, who besides having a great name and a proto-college rock dress sense clearly loved many things acid-ridden and more than slightly spaced out. Devolver, a late-'90s reissue that captured most of what the band recorded via live sets and rehearsals and the like, shows the band — notably featuring future Abunai!/ Lothars member Kris Thompson on bass and backing vocals — merrily careening through a series of mostly brisk, ramshackle joys. It might be a bit limiting to say that their contemporaries were probably the Three O'Clock for the sweetness and the Fleshtones for the mania — if anything, though, songs like "The 16th Track" sound a bit like the Damned in their Naz Nomad guise, while others would fit in well on a Syd Barrett album or two. In any event, the trio plus various assisting performers — including Ringo Casiotone, cousin to such legendary drummers as Echo and Doktor Avalanche — manage to nail a good blend of lightness and merry insanity. "Franz Kafka" is a great example of how the band could turn things into a great full-on rave-up. Humor was always core to the group's approach — while not a comedy band as such, the fact that some song titles included "Prefabedelia" and "Rice 4 a Sheik" says it all. Lead singer Xerox Feinberg's singing is in ways the secret weapon of the band, both beautifully disaffected and snotty in a classic Nuggets sense. Meanwhile, various minute-long songs interspersed throughout are mostly off-the-cuff bizarro dialogues and rants, thus "Got a Hole in Me" (addressed to "Mr. Donut").