Play More Music

Play More Music is the third full-length album by American electronic music group Consolidated, released in 1992.[2][3][4]

Play More Music
Studio album by
ReleasedSeptember 22, 1992
RecordedRazors Edge, May-June 1992
GenreIndustrial, big beat
Length71:43
LabelNettwerk Records
Consolidated chronology
Friendly Fa$cism
(1991)
Play More Music
(1992)
Warning: Explicit Lyrics
(1993)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic[1]

During its concerts, the band placed microphones in the crowd, so that audience members could interact with the band between songs. The short tracks on this disc are comments by audience members, or interaction between the band and the audience.

Track listing (CD)

  1. "Industrial Music Is Fascism" – 0:37
  2. "Tool And Die" – 5:44
  3. "CNN" – 0:08
  4. "Praxis" (Bold As Love) – 4:33
  5. "We Came Here For Music" – 0:11
  6. "Accept Me For What I Am" – 5:09
  7. "Veggie Beat Manifesto" – 2:45
  8. "Why I'm In The Klan" – 0:40
  9. "Guerrillas In The Mist" featuring Paris– 4:24
  10. "Hello Are You There" – 0:59
  11. "Infomodities 92" – 5:58
  12. "Animal Rights / Abortion Rights" – 0:53
  13. "Wendy O Matik" featuring Wendy-O Matik – 1:28
  14. "One More Song" – 0:26
  15. "He" – 5:08
  16. "I Reckon You Should Shut The Fuck Up And Play Some Music" – 0:25
  17. "You Suck" featuring The Yeastie Girlz – 4:11
  18. "The Men's Movement" – 6:25
  19. "Gone Fishing" – 5:27
  20. "Labor Vs Leisure" – 0:41
  21. "A Day On The Green" – 6:02
  22. "More Music" – 0:04
  23. "Hip O Crits" – 0:27
  24. "Industry Corporate" – 3:00
  25. "This Isn't A Fuckin Press Conference" – 0:28
  26. "Crackhouse" featuring Crack MC – 5:16
  27. "More Music Please" – 0:14

Track listing (Vinyl)

Side One

  1. "Industrial Music Is Fascism" – 0:37
  2. "Tool And Die" – 5:44
  3. "CNN" – 0:08
  4. "Praxis" (Bold As Love) – 4:33
  5. "We Came Here For Music" – 0:11
  6. "Accept Me For What I Am" – 5:09
  7. "Why I'm In The Klan" – 0:40
  8. "Guerrillas In The Mist" featuring Paris – 4:24
  9. "Hello Are You There" – 0:59
  10. "Infomodities 92" – 5:58
  11. "Animal Rights / Abortion Rights" – 0:53

Side Two

  1. "One More Song" – 0:26
  2. "He" – 5:08
  3. "I Reckon You Should Shut The Fuck Up And Play Some Music" – 0:25
  4. "You Suck" – 4:11
  5. "Labor Vs Leisure" – 0:41
  6. "A Day On The Green" – 6:02
  7. "More Music/Hip O Crits" – 0:31
  8. "Industry Corporate" – 3:00
  9. "This Isn't A Fuckin Press Conference" – 0:28
  10. "Crackhouse" featuring Crack MC – 5:16
  11. "More Music Please" – 0:14
gollark: Mine uses a simple bodged-together RPC interface, because I find REST kind of uncool.
gollark: Mine is a... not horrendously complex but still a bit annoying... Mithril-based SPA.
gollark: That's more advanced than my implementation, which just prefetches *all* the relevant data when you hover it at all, but OH WELL.
gollark: I decided to make my inefficient JS project *appear* mildly faster by prefetching the data for links when you hover over them, you see.
gollark: Also, apparently Firefox on mobile generates onmouseover events when you start tapping on a link, which is useful.

References

  1. Play More Music at AllMusic
  2. Thompson, Dave (June 14, 2000). "Alternative Rock". Hal Leonard Corporation via Google Books.
  3. "Consolidated".
  4. Colin Larkin, ed. (2000). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Nineties Music (First ed.). Virgin Books. p. 96. ISBN 0-7535-0427-8.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.