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Galactic Ass Creatures From Uranus

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Download links and information about Galactic Ass Creatures From Uranus by Detroit Grand Pubahs. This album was released in 2004 and it belongs to Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, Dance Pop genres. It contains 16 tracks with total duration of 01:17:56 minutes.

Artist: Detroit Grand Pubahs
Release date: 2004
Genre: Electronica, Techno, Dancefloor, Dance Pop
Tracks: 16
Duration: 01:17:56
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Landing in Detroit 2:53
2. God Impostors 4:40
3. Surrender (The Bedroom Edit) 5:09
4. Big Onion 6:12
5. P. Sully (Skit) 0:56
6. Definition of Sick 5:49
7. Dead Presidents 4:01
8. Tig O' Bake Fitties 10:08
9. Bite the Pillow Talk 6:33
10. Training With Dick Cannon 1:31
11. Freak 3:00
12. The Clapper 8:08
13. Weed In the Kitchen 5:01
14. Nurse Hurse Jack Move 6:08
15. Novacane 6:01
16. Butt Dream 1:46

Details

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Just like a few of his musical heroes (George Clinton, Prince), Paris the Black Fu has a perverse taste in material, but a wealth of production smarts to smooth over any of those latent eccentricities, like, say, a bent on the scatological that informs nearly every track he writes. Early Detroit Grand Pubahs tracks, as well as his solo productions, found the perfect balance between the stark, tight world of acid techno and the stark — but conceptually much, much looser — world of booty techno. Their novelty hit "Sandwiches" created great expectations for a debut full-length on Jive Electro, but the group was soon dropped and fellow Pubah Andy Toth left just after. Paris, alone here except for a few tracks (two which feature Toth date from much earlier), proves he's still a solid producer, though his vocal performances are, to put it charitably, complicated. He's undeniably an adept character actor in song, but he attempts far too much and takes far too many liberties with his audience to construct a successful LP. "God Impostors" is an excellent production and an able critique of police practices, but for "Surrender" Paris deserts all semblance of performance technique and delivers an affected, melodramatic vocal that drifts between sung and spoken (if it's a character he's assuming, it must be a drunk off the street). One ambitious track is more successful; over a mid-tempo grind and prefaced by an agonized Randall Lynch guitar solo worthy of Eddie Hazel himself (no small praise), "Tig o' Bake Fitties" is a lament of what plastic surgery has done to beauty, with Paris lamenting on the chorus, "Where have all the real t*****s gone?" Tellingly, the two productions with Toth — booty anthems "Big Onion" and "The Clapper" — are the only tracks here worthy of past Detroit Grand Pubahs material.