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Confusion Au Go Go

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Download links and information about Confusion Au Go Go by Love Battery. This album was released in 1993 and it belongs to Rock, Grunge, Indie Rock, Alternative genres. It contains 14 tracks with total duration of 52:49 minutes.

Artist: Love Battery
Release date: 1993
Genre: Rock, Grunge, Indie Rock, Alternative
Tracks: 14
Duration: 52:49
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Confusion Au Go Go 3:39
2. One Small Step 3:55
3. Snipe Hunt 3:17
4. Corporate Memo 3:26
5. Colorblind 3:12
6. Get On Da Big Foot 0:30
7. Dead Boys 4:10
8. Hollow Body 4:41
9. Cute One 2:45
10. Punks Want Rights 4:45
11. Transendental Fornication 4:52
12. Guilty of Every Thing 5:09
13. Monkey Brain 4:22
14. Faithfull 4:06

Details

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After regressing from the creative height of their second album, Dayglo, Love Battery finally released an album worthy of their promise. Bringing back to the fore their shimmering psychedelic pop, their reduced commercial prospects ignited a fire beneath the band judging from the playing and energy manifested on the album. The addition of Dan Peters (Mudhoney) on drums definitely tightens the screws, and the reinvigorated rhythm section provides the perfect foundation for guitarist Kevin Whitworth's inspired flights of fancy, including, as on Dayglo, some of the best slide guitar work in alternative rock. This is a remarkably solid album, with not a throwaway track in the bunch. The band mixes it up between slower, thoughtful anthems ("Punks Want Rights," "Corporate Memo"); roaring, soaring, punk-fueled raves ("Snipe Hunt," "Cute One"); and rich psychedelic pop excursions ("Faithfull," "Confusion Au GoGo"). Even new directions are well-rendered, as evidenced by the appropriately bluesy "Colorblind," "Guilty of Everything," a slow-burn number riding a Bo Diddley beat, and "Monkey Brain," which incorporates harmonica into its acid-addled thrall. Ron Nine's vocals are more focused than ever, and all the songs are actually about something. If this album had been released in 1993 as their follow-up to Dayglo, it'd be on the tips of many lips rather than the answer to the sadly unasked question: Where are they now?