Create account Log in

Who's Been Sleeping In My Brain

[Edit]

Download links and information about Who's Been Sleeping In My Brain by Alien Sex Fiend. This album was released in 1983 and it belongs to Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 55:48 minutes.

Artist: Alien Sex Fiend
Release date: 1983
Genre: Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 11
Duration: 55:48
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $8.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Wish I Woz a Dog 7:13
2. Wild Women 3:23
3. I'm Not Mad 4:33
4. New Christian Music 5:49
5. Wigwam Wipe-Out 3:00
6. I'm Her Frankenstein 2:54
7. I Am a Product 4:27
8. Ignore the Machine 6:45
9. Lips Can't Go 5:44
10. Black Rabbit 1:26
11. New Christian Music / Crazee - Live 10:34

Details

[Edit]

The title of the album, songs with names like "I'm Her Frankenstein" and "Wish I Woz a Dog," the utterly demented look of Nik Fiend in full make-up and regalia, not to mention the rest of his bandmates — the Alien Sex Fiend ethos was set from the start, in all its wiggy glory. Sometimes the sheer wackiness obscured the fact, though, that ASF offered great music along with the humor, always the distinction between the truly great comedy bands and the ones that are just a bad joke to begin with. While not pretending to be pushing the cutting edge of music, Brain was still a great combination of punk's snarl, glam's giddiness, campily dramatic theatricality equal parts Alice Cooper and the Damned, and not a little bit of envelope-pushing with the band's extensive use of drum machines alongside Johnnie Ha-Ha. With Mrs. Fiend pulling a bit of a Ray Manzarek on keyboards and bass sounds, and Yaxi kicking up the guitar dust, all Nik needed to do was wrap his electrocuted-Cockney singing around it all, and the rest was genius; however, Youth provided the finishing touches as a producer, balancing crispness with just enough echo and murkiness to satisfy all sides. To its further credit, Brain wasn't just one tune repeated over and again; while ASF aren't exactly ever going to be known for ballads, the rumbling Burundi-into-'50s raunch of "Wild Women" isn't the pulsing pagan psychosis of "New Christian Music," which in turn isn't the anthemic, heroic surge of "Ignore the Machine," and so forth. Though arguably ASF has never really moved beyond the bounds of what it set on Brain, what the band did come up with was more than great then and now. The CD reissue adds live-on-Swiss-radio takes of "New Christian Music" and "Crazee," which if anything are even more demented than the album.