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No World Order (Expanded Edition)

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Download links and information about No World Order (Expanded Edition) by Todd Rundgren. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Rock, Pop genres. It contains 37 tracks with total duration of 02:19:36 minutes.

Artist: Todd Rundgren
Release date: 1993
Genre: Rock, Pop
Tracks: 37
Duration: 02:19:36
Buy on iTunes $19.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. World Epiphany 1.0 1:19
2. No World Order 1.0 0:57
3. World Epiphany 1.1 1:21
4. Day Job 1.0 4:24
5. Property 1.0 4:30
6. Fascist Christ 1.0 (featuring Too Rundgren) 5:35
7. Love Thing 1.0 3:44
8. Time Stood Still 1.0 1:42
9. Proactivity 1.0 2:55
10. No World Order 1.1 6:21
11. World Epiphany 1.2 4:23
12. Time Stood Still 1.1 0:38
13. Love Thing 1.1 1:36
14. Time Stood Still 1.2 2:33
15. Word Made Flesh 1.0 4:36
16. Fever Broke 1.0 6:34
17. Day Job (U.S. Club Version) 5:48
18. No World Order (Yokohama Morning Version) 3:47
19. Day Job (U.S. Radio Version) 3:42
20. Worldwide Epiphany 5:21
21. Love Thing 3:46
22. Property 4:14
23. Day Job 3:13
24. Fascist Christ 4:51
25. No World Order 5:11
26. Proactivity 3:14
27. Word Made Flesh 2:55
28. Fever Broke 4:38
29. Fascist Christ (Fax Version) 2:56
30. Property (Video Version) 4:12
31. Day Job (Radio Version) 3:59
32. Fascist Christ (Radio Version) 4:27
33. Fever Broke (Xaos Version) 4:03
34. Property (Lost Version) 3:59
35. Day Job (Club Version) 4:35
36. Fascist Christ (Broken Version) 3:53
37. No World Order (Yokohama Night Version) 3:44

Details

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Every Todd Rundgren album seems to have a gimmick, and on this one, which inaugurates his recording relationship with the Forward subsidiary of Rhino Records, the trick is that he recorded almost four hours of musical fragments of four to eight seconds each and put them on an interactive CD so that they could be combined in a nearly infinite number of ways. If you have a CD-I, that is. If you only have a regular old CD player, this non-interactive version presents 10 songs and six variations on them. Rundgren has added rap to his arsenal, his lyrics are more political, and many of the tracks seem aimed at the dance floor. Sounds like music designed to fall through the cracks, right? Rundgren fans will be put off, while the new jack swingers won't bother to listen. But the real problem is that it's just not very good. (By the way, with this release Rundgren anticipated Prince's decision to rename himself in a weird way: he officially became "TR-I," for "Todd Rundgren-Interactive.") (On June 7, 1993, Forward released No World Order—"Lite," an alternate version of the album's 10 tracks, through mail order at a midline price.)