Minuteman for the Moment

Minuteman for the Moment is the second studio album by Look What I Did released on October 4, 2005 on Combat Records/KOCH Records. It features an updated version of the song "Cupid Full of Eros" previously seen on the band's 2003 album My First Time, as well as the second song in the "Zanzibar" chapter also seen on the band's previous release. The producer for this album also worked with bands like Jane's Addiction, and TheStart. Lead singer Barry Donegan frequently updates his blog Today's Dangerous Truth with the frightening reality the world, and more specifically the US, is currently in. Their views can be reflected through their music just as powerfully.

Minuteman for the Moment
Studio album by
ReleasedOctober 4, 2005
RecordedStagg Street Studios, Los Angeles
GenreProgressive metal, mathcore, hardcore punk
LabelCombat Records, Koch Records
ProducerBrian Virtue
Look What I Did chronology
My First Time
(2003)
Minuteman for the Moment
(2005)
Atlas Drugged
(2010)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic link
Decibel(not rated) link

Track listing

  1. "Minuteman for the Moment" (3:07)
  2. "Ultimate Complete Home Fitness Machine" (3:18)
  3. "The Soiree" (5:13)
  4. "The FOX Eats TV Ishmael" (4:39)
  5. "Raining Pleasantries" (3:53)
  6. "Appomattox Whorehouse" (3:35)
  7. "Benevolesaurus Lex" (4:09)
  8. "Chest is a Ribcage "(4:27)
  9. "Lightning Bugs" (4:21)
  10. "Cupid Full of Eros" (3:06)
  11. "Is, Was, and Will Be" (4:50)
  12. "Zanzibar II: Sasha and Sebastian" (7:24)

Credits

  • Paul Romano - artwork
  • Brian Virtue - Producer, Mixing, Engineer
  • Chris Bradley - Vocal production, Bass performance
  • Barry Donegan - Vocals
  • Colby Shea - Guitars
  • Miles McPherson - Drums
  • Aaron Childress - Guitars
gollark: When speaking, you must speak at a speed you can be fairly certain the other person can understand, but you can read at arbitrary rates.
gollark: Oh, right, I worked it out, thanks LyricLy.
gollark: <@137565402501742592> Explain. You have 33 attoseconds.
gollark: Anyway, if speech's information rate is constrained by how fast the brain can process it... how can people read at different (faster, I think) speeds?
gollark: I mean, as far as I know you get maybe 1 bit per 8 characters, and a syllable is maybe 4 characters usually.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.