Babylon (The Tea Party song)

"Babylon" is a song by Canadian rock band The Tea Party. It was released as a promotional single in Canada.[1] The music video was shot in Toronto and was unique at the time for being one continuous shot with a single camera.

"Babylon"
Promo CD Single, CDPRO 1611, Canada
Single by The Tea Party
from the album Transmission
ReleasedSeptember 1997
RecordedAlkemical Studios (Montreal)
GenreIndustrial rock
Length2:58
LabelEMI Music Canada
Songwriter(s)The Tea Party
Producer(s)Jeff Martin
The Tea Party singles chronology
"Temptation"
(1997)
"Babylon"
(1997)
"Release"
(1998)

"Babylon" "was the last track to make it on to Transmission" and features "some of the most distorted sounds" The Tea Party ever made, with Jeff Burrows playing a sped up version of drums sampled from "Psychopomp" and "most guitar sounds are in fact keyboards in disguise".[2]

Track listing

  1. "Babylon (radio mix)"
gollark: Perhaps passive components are just too symmetric.
gollark: I feel like there must be *some* horrifying way to trick PCB traces into implementing complex logic, but I don't know how.
gollark: I mean, there might be, I forgot.
gollark: Bold of you to assume there is one.
gollark: While exposing it to air.

References

  1. transmission era The Tea Party a visual discography Accessed 18 April 2007
  2. Stuart Chatwood, In Tangents The Tea Party Collection 2000, CD, EMI Music Canada, Mississauga.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.