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Double Brutal

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Download links and information about Double Brutal by Austrian Death Machine. This album was released in 2009 and it belongs to Rock, Metal, Humor genres. It contains 24 tracks with total duration of 52:28 minutes.

Artist: Austrian Death Machine
Release date: 2009
Genre: Rock, Metal, Humor
Tracks: 24
Duration: 52:28
Buy on iTunes $11.99
Buy on Amazon $15.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Double Ahhnold 1:22
2. I Need Your Clothes Your Boots and Your Motorcycle 3:53
3. Let Off Some Steam Bennett 3:14
4. Who Writes the Songs? 1:05
5. It's Simple, If It Jiggles It's Fat 1:44
6. See You At the Party Richter 3:33
7. Hey Cookie Monster, Nothing Is As Brutal As Neaahhh 0:33
8. Who Told You You Could Eat My Cookies? 3:12
9. Come On Cohaagen, Give Deez People Ehyar 3:18
10. Who Is Your Daddy and What Does He 2? 0:23
11. Come On Do It Do It Come On Come On Kill Me Do It Now 2:58
12. Allow Me to Break the Ice 2:09
13. Conan, What Is Best In Life? 2:29
14. Intro to the Intro 0:51
15. T2 Theme 1:13
16. Hell Bent for Leather 2:32
17. Time Travel: The Metallica Conspiracy 0:34
18. Trapped Under Ice 3:58
19. Iron Fist 2:37
20. Recalling Mars 0:35
21. I Turned Into a Martian 1:27
22. Killing Is My Business…and Business Is Good 3:03
23. Tactically Dangerous - Cannibal Commando 2:34
24. Gotta Go 3:11

Details

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Austrian Death Machine is the sidesplitting side project of Tim Lambesis, frontman for As I Lay Dying. His vision is that thrash metal this brutal must somehow relate to Arnold Schwarzenegger’s most savage celluloid characters. In addition to naming the songs after Schwarzenegger quotes and themes (“I Need Your Clothes Your Boots And Your Motorcycle,” ”Allow Me To Break The Ice“), Lambesis also landed an Arnold impersonator to pepper Double Brutal with various skits. Sure the jokes about terminators, barbarians and missions to Mars get old before the 24th and final track on this double album, but you’ll hardly notice because most of these lyrics are screamed gutturally with those prerequisite Cookie Monster inflections of the metalcore genre. Lambesis also breaks up the monotony with some stellar covers of punk and metal songs that have been used in various Schwarzenegger soundtracks. A pummeling portrayal of Judas Priest’s fetish anthem “Hell Bent for Leather” takes the cake, but fans of vintage Metallica are sure to dig ADM’s fierce execution of “Trapped Under Ice.”