Pixies - Death To The Pixies (Limited Edition) (1997)

  • 07 Apr, 16:55
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Artist:
Title: Death To The Pixies
Year Of Release: 1997
Label: 4AD, Rough Trade
Genre: Alt Rock, Indie Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (image, .cue, log)
Total Time: 01:43:15
Total Size: 253/799 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD 1:
01. Cecilia Ann
02. Planet of Sound
03. Tame
04. Here Comes Your Man
05. Debaser
06. Wave of Mutilation
07. Dig for Fire
08. Caribou
09. Holiday Song
10. Nimrod's Son
11. U-Mass
12. Bone Machine
13. Gigantic
14. Where Is My Mind?
15. Velouria
16. Gouge Away
17. Monkey Gone to Heaven

CD 2:
01. Debaser
02. Rock Music
03. Broken Face
04. Isla de Encanta
05. Hangwire
06. Dead
07. Into the White
08. Monkey Gone to Heaven
09. Gouge Away
10. Here Comes Your Man
11. Allison
12. Hey
13. Gigantic
14. Crackity Jones
15. Something Against You
16. Tame
17. Wave of Mutilation
18. Where Is My Mind?
19. Ed Is Dead
20. Vamos
21. Tony's Theme

Line-up:
Bass Guitar, Vocals – Kim Deal
Drums – David Lovering
Lead Guitar – Joey Santiago
Vocals, Guitar – Black Francis

Alternative rock’s most visceral and majestic moments can almost always be traced back to the Pixies. Between 1988 and 1991, the Boston icons released four albums that effectively set the stage for Nirvana’s game-changing Nevermind—an album that Kurt Cobain later admitted was his best attempt at a Pixies rip-off. A controlled chaos of noise rock, art-pop, punk and surf music, moulded around morbid myths and surreal imagery, the Pixies’ sound was never easy to pin down—a major reason why their commercial success would never match their immense influence. In 1986, after moving to Boston from Massachusetts, singer/songwriter/guitarist Charles Thompson IV (who would christen himself Black Francis) and guitarist Joey Santiago put out an ad seeking a bass player. Kim Deal responded, bought a bass and brought in drummer David Lovering. In their first half-decade, the Pixies were prolific: 1988’s Surfer Rosa and 1989’s Doolittle were groundbreaking, as singles like “Where is My Mind?” and “Monkey Gone to Heaven'' delivered sublime punches to the gut with their quiet/loud, start/stop dynamics. Meanwhile, the candied pop hooks of “Here Comes Your Man” lured plenty of unexpected listeners into the Pixies’ madness. Even after they broke up in 1993, that manic-melodic meld had already been embedded in the DNA of bands like Radiohead, Weezer and Smashing Pumpkins. Though the Pixies would reunite in 2004, Deal eventually left the band and was replaced by bassist/violinist Paz Lenchantin, who appeared on their first album in 23 years, 2014’s Indie Cindy. As the Pixies continue redefining their own defining style, they still sound—maybe more than ever—like no one else.



  • whiskers
  •  19:58
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Many Thanks
  • mufty77
  •  16:47
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Many thanks for lossless.