Most Popular Albums
 Feel Good Inc. Gorillaz
 Don't Phunk With My Heart The Black Eyed Peas
 The Cookbook Missy Elliott
 X-Y Coldplay
 A Tribute To Outkast Outkast
| | Molestia download mp3 | |  | 
| | Molestia [ mp3 ]album: Ultimate Onslaught. Part II format: mp3 release: 2003 year bitrate: 192 length: 65:41 min
| | |
Tracks of Ultimate Onslaught. Part II:
Colon Commando.mp3
Autophagia (Dead Infection Cover).mp3
Chieko Matsumoto.mp3
Bloody Haysickle.mp3
One Banana Here The Other.mp3
No Shouting In The Library.mp3
My Hammer Has A Crush On Your Gen.mp3
Texas Chainsaw Massacre.mp3
To Embrance Decomposure.mp3
Underwear Stealer.mp3
Vomiting Oral Sex.mp3
Hard Gore.mp3
Untitled1.mp3
Untitled2.mp3
Untitled3.mp3
Somewhere At An Alt.mp3
Murdered Hippies.mp3
Jaim.mp3
Excerpt From The Venus Sessio.mp3
Pneumatic Phalluphag.mp3
Uterplacental Maggot.mp3
The Ninja Blast.mp3
Coitus Mongoloidus.mp3
Thundertorso Shotgun Reanima.mp3
The Night Stalker.mp3
Juukan.mp3
Who Wears Short Shorts.mp3
I Like Fecal Matter.mp3
The Disemboweler.mp3
Intestinal Snack Cake.mp3
Himmlers Choochoo.mp3
You Go Girl.mp3
Def Jam 4.mp3
Lump Of Wisdom.mp3
Gluttonous Rupturing.mp3
Wale Me In The Crotch.mp3
Bowel Stew.mp3
Revenge Of The Poopsmith.mp3
Eritoblastose Fetal.mp3
Violate The Dead.mp3
Alien Anal Tor.mp3
Masturbator In The Morgue.mp3
Stresswave.mp3
Boxes Of Crotches.mp3
Evolution From Distortion.mp3
| | | |
News from our arhive: Releases:50 Cent, Mando Diao, The Cape May |
50 CENT The Massacre (Shady/Aftermath/Interscope/Universal) On the strength of a multi-platinum debut record, 50 Cent got rich and didn’t die trying and now the chiseled superstar isn’t looking to mess with the formula. The Massacre beats the usual gangsta tropes to death — Fiddy will kill you if you mess with him, Fiddy’s got lots of money and Fiddy can get any "bitch" he wants. He does deserve credit for doing most of the heavy lifting — The Massacre is mercifully light on guest cameos — and for his charismatic command of the mic, but these skills are wasted on a record that celebrates street life without saying anything new about it. 50 FOOT WAVE Golden Ocean (4AD/Beggars) Someone once wrote that the holy trinity of rock is comprised of The Beatles, The Who and The Pixies. If Golden Ocean is any indication, then a career can be fashioned by aping just one of these triumvirates. 50 Foot Wave swipe The Pixies playbook wholesale, swapping Frank Black’s manic singing with Kristin Hersh’s (Throwing Muses, soloist) gravelly, Janis Joplin-gone-stark-raving-mad caterwauling. This is the antithesis of the punk ethos — instead of inspiration before musical talent, these guys deliver technical expertise with tired, retread concepts. It’s bands like 50 Foot Wave who make the recent Pixie reformation redundant. BELINDA BRUCE Dream Yourself Awake (Maximum/Universal) The first album from the Vancouver-based Belinda Bruce makes for a great campfire soundtrack, drifting along on gentle, unassuming melodies and low-fi intimacy. Bruce’s voice isn’t a powerhouse instrument, especially compared with a couple of certain Sarahs who traffic in the same kind of sound, but when it’s laid over softly-plucked guitars and brooding cellos it takes on a uniquely ethereal quality. Though it too often displays the singer’s maddening tendency to under-enunciate and murk up her lyrics, Dream Yourself Awake introduces Bruce as a master of grown-up lullabies and a worthwhile addition to the female singer-songwriter tradition. |
|
| | | |  |
| |