Options
Urge Overkill....

Hiya All,
I just picked up a second hand "Exit the Dragon" on vinyl for $18.00 nz dollars mint condition!!
I had this CD many many years ago and had forgotten how good it is, interested to see if any of the family have enjoyed Urge over the years?
Any way it will tie me over until LOTL arrives. (anyone in OZ or NZ got there's yet?)
Peace out
I just picked up a second hand "Exit the Dragon" on vinyl for $18.00 nz dollars mint condition!!
I had this CD many many years ago and had forgotten how good it is, interested to see if any of the family have enjoyed Urge over the years?
Any way it will tie me over until LOTL arrives. (anyone in OZ or NZ got there's yet?)
Peace out

Post edited by Unknown User on
0
Comments
Are they still together dishing out tunes?
It's true, Pulp Fiction is when they were their biggest (even though the song was off an old EP, pre-Saturation). Good cover!
They broke up after Exit the Dragon, but then I thought they were back and touring a few years ago (well the main 2 guys, different drummer if I remember). No idea if they are still doing stuff. Nash Kato did at least one solo album, thought Stone helped produce it? In Santa Fe? Something like that?
New Mexico Pearl Jam Fans (New Mexico, USA) on Facebook!
Strange how stuff like that works out.........here's hoping it will be good.
I really liked how they seemed to do whatever they wanted, Saturation and Exit could be from different bands
Think I'll listen to it right now. Thanks!
Sister Havana has a great fucking riff.
“WHO WERE THE WORST MUSICIANS? ANY GUYS THAT COULD BARELY PLAY THEIR INSTRUMENTS?”
. answer: Urge Overkill.
Quote:
there have been many a time i hear an album the band sounds so good, and then you see them live, and you're like, wtf is going on? which band have you made the biggest improvement on their sound, in this manner?
Well, sometimes a band sets out to make a record that doesn't really sound like they do. To these bands the record is the public face of the band, and the live shows are more of an obligation than an art form, and so they are generally pretty disappointing live.
Other bands enjoy touring and express themselves onstage more than in the studio. These bands see their records as a kind of still photo of their live existence, and you can expect those bands' records to sound pretty much like their live sets. My favorite bands were always like this: the Minutemen, Wipers, Birthday Party, and my own band thinks this way, pretty much.
There are also the rare cases of bands who change from the first type to the second, and they have an obvious cutoff date after which they went from awesome to awful. Aerosmith and ZZ Top are the most obvious examples.
To answer your immediate question, Urge Overkill.
Quote:
who was the biggest pain in the ass to work with?
That would be Urge Overkill.
if you enjoyed these quotes and dig Albini you can read the whole Q&A thread here. pretty funny and informative actually
http://archives1.twoplustwo.com/showfla ... t=all&vc=1
WHen I saw them open for PJ they could definitely play their instruments.