Chupacabras (album)
Chupacabras is the third album released by composer Phideaux Xavier.
Chupacabras | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | November 11, 2005 | |||
Recorded | NYC & LA | |||
Genre | Progressive rock Psychedelic rock | |||
Length | 48:34 | |||
Label | Bloodfish Music | |||
Producer | Gabriel Moffat | |||
Phideaux Xavier chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
DPRP | (8/10)[1] |
While recording Fiendish in 2002, Xavier had begun work on a song called "Chupacabras". This song was not completed in time for inclusion on Fiendish, and instead, formed the basis for what would become the album of the same name. This album was made up of tracks that had been begun for the previous two albums but had never been finished. It took Xavier further into the progressive rock style with multi-part epics ("Ruffian on the Stairs" and "Chupacabras"), and resurrected a song from Xavier and drummer Rich Hutchins' previous band, Satyricon, called "Titan".
Tracks
- "Okay" (02:06)
- "Chupacabras" (20:41)
- "Party" (05:17)
- "Fortress of Sand" (05:05)
- "Ruffian on the Stairs" (02:59)
- "Sunburnt" (02:50)
- "Return of the Ruffian" (04:17)
- "Titan" (05:14)
gollark: Hey, I'm not saying the u16 is the wrong choice here, just that it also isn't really always right.
gollark: CBOR and whatnot are nicer than using custom binary formats if you plan to swap data between systems a lot, because you can add new fields without breaking things and there's parsers for basically every languæge.
gollark: (yes, this is impossible, but oh well)
gollark: Compression.
gollark: CBOR is better for data interchange, though, since it's at least partly selfdocumenting and more extensible.
References
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