Lords Of Acid - Voodoo-U (Special Edition)
Release: Lords Of Acid - Voodoo-U (Special Edition)
- Datum: 26.04.2006
01. (00:03:55) - (VBR 197 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Voodoo-U
02. (00:04:13) - (VBR 210 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - The Crablouse
03. (00:04:38) - (VBR 239 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - She and Mrs. Jones
04. (00:04:04) - (VBR 208 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Do What You Wanna Do
05. (00:03:53) - (VBR 226 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Young Boys
06. (00:04:21) - (VBR 207 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Out Comes The Evil
07. (00:04:32) - (VBR 203 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Mister Machoman
08. (00:03:55) - (VBR 196 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Marijunana In Your Brain
09. (00:04:03) - (VBR 177 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Special Moments
10. (00:03:42) - (VBR 204 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Dirty Willy
11. (00:03:59) - (VBR 210 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Drink My Honey
12. (00:03:55) - (VBR 211 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Blowing Up Your Mind
13. (00:03:27) - (VBR 201 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Young Boys Go To Studio 54
14. (00:03:54) - (VBR 176 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - Lords On 45
15. (00:04:38) - (VBR 216 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - The Crablouse (Van Acker Mix)
16. (00:03:32) - (VBR 210 kbit/s) Lords Of Acid - The Real Thing
- Genre: Electronica
- Qualität: 192 kbit/s
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Album................: Voodoo-U (Yellow Case Spec. Edition)
Genre................: Techno-Industrial
Source...............: CD
Year.................: 19994/2005(reissue)
Ripper...............: EAC (Secure mode) / LAME 3.92 & LG HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-4167B
Codec................: LAME 3.98
Version..............: MPEG 1 Layer III
Quality..............: VBR Q2, (avg. bitrate: 206kbps)
Channels.............: Joint Stereo / 44100 hz
Tags.................: ID3 v1.0, ID3 v2.3
Ripped by............: p4P2Pc on 2006-04-06
Posted by............: p4P2Pc on 2006-04-25
Included.............: NFO, M3U, LOG
Covers...............: Front Back CD
Lords of Acid first appeared on the scene with their debut album "Lust", a mix of club-savvy techno, tongue-in-cheek humor, and come-hither lyrics. While tracks like "I Must Increase My Bust" and "Rough Sex" gained them attention, the music itself was not much different from the rest of the dance world at the time. Perhaps aware of this themselves, the Lords (Oliver Adams, Praga Khan, and Jade 4 U) went back to the studio and released a fanastic 2nd album, the wonderful "Voodoo U."
"Voodoo" takes the lords in a different direction than "Lust", fusing dynamic club rhythms to the grit of industrial rock to form a deliciously bitter hybrid. While the tone of "Lust" was playful and light, "Voodoo" delves into a much darker form of humor and a more nihilistic view of sexuality. To be sure, the lyrics are just as sexually-charged, if not more, but when taken with the tone of the album, the Lords' shadowy collective id is much more apparent.
Several classic Lords tracks can be found here, including the undeniably driving "Crablouse" (both in its original form and in an interesting if not entirely superior remix), the creepily seductive "Out Comes The Evil", and the aggressively raunchy "She And Mrs. Jones." "Mister Machoman" and "Young Boys" give Jade 4 U (whose vocals are superb throughout) the chance to play dominatrix-as-berserker, and she does it so well that you can't help but want to give in to her, no matter what. Jade even tones it down for the sensual, alluring bonus track "The Real Thing", purring like the hottest 60's sex-kitten that never was.
Several tracks on "Voodoo" are an attempt by the Lords to be serious, to talk about darker issues. Sometimes, like the hilarious ode to an irreedemable stoner "Marijuana In Your Brain" and the wrenchingly emotional tale of abuse "Special Moments", these work to a great degree. Other times, like the heavy-handed anti-drug "Blowing Up Your Mind" and the song attacking the pimp "Dirty Willy", the songs come off as preachy, with simplistic lyrics that reduce the impact that the song might have had.
Regardless of these few instances, this is a solid album, and a must for any fan of the Lords. While not wildly divergent in its style, the tracks are all wonderfully arranged and delivered: even when they don't connect well with the listener, you have to admire the effort put into them. Of special note in this regard is the bonus track "Young Boys Go To Studio 54", re-imagining the grunge of "Young Boys" into a disco number so masterfully crafted in retro style that you'd swear it's the Village People-Donna Summer duet that was never released.