Highly Refined Pirates
Highly Refined Pirates is Minus the Bear's debut full-length album, released on November 12, 2002, by Suicide Squeeze Records.
Highly Refined Pirates | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | November 12, 2002 | |||
Recorded | 2002 at Studio Litho | |||
Genre | Indie rock, math rock | |||
Length | 42:25 | |||
Label | Suicide Squeeze Records | |||
Producer | Steve Fisk | |||
Minus the Bear chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | |
Pitchfork Media | (5.4/10) link |
Track listing
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Thanks for the Killer Game of Crisco® Twister" | 3:35 |
2. | "Monkey!!! Knife!!! Fight!!!" | 3:32 |
3. | "Absinthe Party at the Fly Honey Warehouse" | 5:23 |
4. | "Hey, Wanna Throw Up?" | 0:34 |
5. | "Get Me Naked 2: Electric Boogaloo" | 4:09 |
6. | "We Are Not a Football Team" | 3:02 |
7. | "You Kill Bugs Good, Man" | 1:10 |
8. | "Spritz!!! Spritz!!!" | 3:03 |
9. | "Women We Haven't Met Yet" | 4:04 |
10. | "Damn Bugs Whacked Him, Johnny" | 0:47 |
11. | "I Lost All My Money at the Cock Fights" | 4:54 |
12. | "Andy Wolff" | 2:08 |
13. | "Let's Play Guitar in a Five Guitar Band" | 5:11 |
14. | "Booyah Achieved" | 0:50 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
15. | "You're Some Sort of Big, Fat, Smart-Bug, Aren't You?" | 1:08 |
16. | "Drop It Like It's Hot" | 2:41 |
Personnel
- Jake Snider - Vocals and guitar
- Dave Knudson - Guitar
- Erin Tate - Drums
- Cory Murchy - Bass
- Matt Bayles - Electronics
Additional personnel
- Produced and Engineered by Steve Fisk
- Mixed by Steve Fisk and Troy Tietjen, except 4,7,10,12, and 14 mixed by Matt Bayles
- Mastered by Ed Brooks
- Additional vocals by Amy Blaschke on "Get Me Naked 2: Electric Boogaloo"
Trivia
- Some of the song titles are quotes from the film Starship Troopers.
gollark: It isn't even that *in theory*.
gollark: Quantum computing is not actually a magic "speed up all computations" box.
gollark: Using relatively general-purpose hardware is quite useful right now since the details of how to do things aren't that pinned down yet and being able to experiment is valuable.
gollark: In that they can frequently do the sort of thing a human could do in one shot without needing to do much conscious thought or use working memory, but fall down horribly on lots of multi-step things or particularly thinky stuff.
gollark: They're not replicating the actual implementation very much. They do seem to be replicating the rough functionality.
External links
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