Force Fed
Force Fed is the debut album by the band Prong. Although the album was recorded from January to July 1987, it was not released until early 1989,[2] due to label problems.
Force Fed | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1989 | |||
Recorded | January–July 1987 | |||
Genre | Crossover thrash | |||
Length | 29:15 | |||
Label | Spigot, In-Effect | |||
Producer | Prong | |||
Prong chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic |
The CD version included two bonus tracks, the cover of Chrome's "Third from the Sun" and "Mind the Gap", originally taken from the band's 1989 EP Third from the Sun (also known as 3).[3][4] Although the EP is no longer available, Prong still regularly performs the song "Third from the Sun", though it is actually a cover of a song originally by Chrome. Drummer Ted Parsons co-wrote some of the songs for the first time.
Track listing
- "Freezer Burn" – 2:33 (Tommy Victor)
- "Forgery" – 1:52 (Mike Kirkland)
- "Senseless Abuse" – 3:18 (Ted Parsons, Victor)
- "Primitive Origins" – 3:23 (Victor)
- "Aggravated Condition" – 2:52 (Victor)
- "The Coliseum" – 2:33 (Parsons, Victor)
- "Decay" – 2:44 (Kirkland, Victor)
- "It's Been Decided" – 2:18 (Kirkland)
- "Force Fed" – 2:48 (Prong)
- "The Taming" – 1:47 (James, Kirkland)
- "Bought and Sold" - 3:16 (Kirkland, Victor)
- "Look Up at the Sun" – 3:07 (Prong)
- "Drainpipe" – 2:20 (Victor)
- "Third from the Sun" (bonus CD re-issue track)
- "Mind the Gap" (bonus CD re-issue track)
Personnel
- Tommy Victor - vocals/guitar
- Ted Parsons - drums
- Mike Kirkland - bass guitar
gollark: You can simulate quantum computers on classical computers. It's just very slow.
gollark: Real time conversation rate is maybe 40 WPM which is, according to my calculator, about 25 times faster than that, so there may be difficulties.
gollark: Obviously that isn't very fast and you'd want to run the candles at a greater baud rate or put some in parallel.
gollark: If the candle can switch between "on" and "off" once a second, you can receive about a word per 40 seconds using standard ASCII.
gollark: Computer science shows us that that doesn't actually matter.
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.