Black Science
Black Science is the second studio album by heavy metal band GZR (for this album the band was known as Geezer). It was released on July 1, 1997 by TVT Records. The cover art for this album is intended to represent the Black Sabbath song "Hand of Doom".
Black Science | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1 July 1997 | |||
Recorded | Studio Morin Heights | |||
Genre | Groove metal, industrial metal | |||
Length | 55:06 | |||
Label | TVT | |||
Producer | Geezer Butler and Paul Northfield | |||
GZR chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Vox | (6/10)[2] |
Geezer about the Doctor Who connection in the song "Among the Cybermen":
"Yes, the lyrics were originally about the death of Doctor Who. The original chorus was "Doctor Who lies dead among the Cybermen", about the final battle of Dr. Who, but was supposed to be symbolic of the end of childhood. I changed it because I thought it sounded a bit silly. Most of the album is about growing up in the era of Sixties television, and its influence on me."
Track listing
- "Man in a Suitcase" – 4:09
- "Box of Six" – 3:53
- "Mysterons" – 5:36
- "Justified" – 4:05
- "Department S" – 4:45
- "Area Code 51" – 4:48
- "Has to Be" – 3:29
- "Number 5" – 5:04
- "Among the Cybermen" – 4:43
- "Unspeakable Elvis" – 3:47
- "Xodiak" – 3:34
- "Northern Wisdom" – 3:46
- "Trinity Road" – 3:26
- "Beach Skeleton" – 3:28 (Japan pressing only, but later released online for free on March 3, 2010.)
Credits
- Geezer Butler - bass guitar, keyboards
- Pedro Howse - guitar
- Clark Brown - vocals
- Deen Castronovo - drums
- Recorded at Studio Morin Heights
- Produced by Geezer Butler & Paul Northfield
- Assisted by Simon Pressey
- Mixed by Paul Northfield at Studio Morin Heights
- Assisted by Don Hachey
- All music and lyrics written by Geezer/Howse/Clark
gollark: And yet they don't have usable keybords for writing things, sufficiently large screens to do video editing and such without æ, OSes which are designed to allow data sharing between apps for purposes, a sufficiently non-locked-down system for basically any sort of scripting/programming outside of somewhat isolated environments, etc.
gollark: I only do it in emergencies or when heavpoot asks for OIR:EM or something because it's quite irritating.
gollark: Phones are not designed for content creation.
gollark: The solution is of course to replace my calculator's innards with some sort of high end microcontroller with a 2G modem, relabel the buttons, and install SSH on it.
gollark: Or, well, the connection is okay, mosh can compensate for latency, but æ the bad phone IO.
References
- Henderson, Alex. "Geezer: Black Science". allmusic.com. Allmusic.
- Ewing, Jerry (September 1, 1997). "Reviews: ALBUMS: GEEZER". proquest.com. No. 83. Vox. p. 98.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.