The Soup Dragons - Hydrophonic (1994)
BAND/ARTIST: The Soup Dragons
- Title: Hydrophonic
- Year Of Release: 1994
- Label: Mercury
- Genre: Alt Rock, Indie Rock, Psychedelic Rock, Noise Pop
- Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks, .cue, log)
- Total Time: 01:03:24
- Total Size: 166/466 Mb (scans)
- WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:
01. One Way Street
02. Don't Get Down (Get Down)
03. Do You Care?
04. May the Force Be With You
05. Contact High
06. All Messed Up
07. The Time is Now
08. Freeway
09. Rest in Peace
10. J.F. Junkie
11. Automatic Speed Queen
12. Out Of Here
13. Motherfunker
14. Black and Blues
15. Hypersonic Re-entry
Line-up:
Sean Dickson (vocals, guitar)
Jim McCulloch (guitar)
Sushil K. Dade (bass)
Paul Quinn (drums)
01. One Way Street
02. Don't Get Down (Get Down)
03. Do You Care?
04. May the Force Be With You
05. Contact High
06. All Messed Up
07. The Time is Now
08. Freeway
09. Rest in Peace
10. J.F. Junkie
11. Automatic Speed Queen
12. Out Of Here
13. Motherfunker
14. Black and Blues
15. Hypersonic Re-entry
Line-up:
Sean Dickson (vocals, guitar)
Jim McCulloch (guitar)
Sushil K. Dade (bass)
Paul Quinn (drums)
Hydrophonic is the fourth and final studio album from The Soup Dragons. By this stage, lead singer Sean Dickson was the only original member of the band, working with a variety of session musicians including Bootsy Collins, Lynval Golding, Neville Staples, Tina Weymouth, The Kick Horns and the Scottish Chamber Orchestra.
It was released in 1994 to weak sales and generally apathetic or poor reviews. Jason Damas's AllMusic review has since claimed that this was an injustice and that "if you liked the more rocking parts of Hotwired, and want to hear more, this is an extremely worthwhile place to go." Trouserpress was contrastingly dismissive, called the album a "soggy hodgepodge of lunkheaded rock, would-be hip-hop, blues, soulful backing vocals and chants" and advised readers to "flush it".
Following the disappointing sales of the album, Dickson ended the Soup Dragons and went on to form The High Fidelity.
It was released in 1994 to weak sales and generally apathetic or poor reviews. Jason Damas's AllMusic review has since claimed that this was an injustice and that "if you liked the more rocking parts of Hotwired, and want to hear more, this is an extremely worthwhile place to go." Trouserpress was contrastingly dismissive, called the album a "soggy hodgepodge of lunkheaded rock, would-be hip-hop, blues, soulful backing vocals and chants" and advised readers to "flush it".
Following the disappointing sales of the album, Dickson ended the Soup Dragons and went on to form The High Fidelity.
Alternative | Indie | FLAC / APE | Mp3
As a ISRA.CLOUD's PREMIUM member you will have the following benefits:
- Unlimited high speed downloads
- Download directly without waiting time
- Unlimited parallel downloads
- Support for download accelerators
- No advertising
- Resume broken downloads