the committee to keep music evil
   
 
     
the committee to keep music evil :: artists
the committee to keep music evil :: label
the committee to keep music evil :: store
the committee to keep music evil :: forum
the committee to keep music evil :: tour
the committee to keep music evil :: gallery
the committee to keep music evil :: links
the committee to keep music evil :: contacts



BJM Live CD!!
@ the Hi-Fi
in Melbourne
 

< return to store

Their Satanic Majesties Second Request

the brian jonestown massacre
their satanic majesties second request
( the committee to keep music evil )

notes: Finally! Never before released- Limited Edition Sunburst Coloured Double Vinyl -- Full Colour Gatefold! Many all new never before seen photos of the band! -- The LOWEST is price here through the Committee!

format ::  
vinyl
28$ us
 28$ outside n. america

   
tracklisting
1. all around you
2. cold to the touch
3. donovan said
4. in india you
5. no come down
6. ( around you ) everywhere
7. jesus
8. before you
9. miss june '75
10. anenome
11. baby [ prepraise ]
12. feelers
13. bad baby
14. cause, lover
15. ( baby ) love of my life
16. slowdown ( fuck tomorrow )
17. here it comes
18. all around you ( outro )
description
Truth in advertising: the Brian Jonestown Massacre’s sophomore album does, as promised, spring forth from the Rolling Stones’ long-underrated 1967 masterpiece Their Satanic Majesties Request, copping not only Mick and Keith’s leering bad-boy attitude but also their their rock-and-roll-circus spirit. Opening with the brilliant "All Around You (Intro)," a tongue-in-cheek guide to the mind-altering journey ahead, the record is a kaleidoscopic, drug-fueled freakout — like the Stones’ namesake album, Second Request is painted by Eastern drones and psychedelic tangents, each track bubbling with dozens of sound effects including sitars, mellotrons, farfisas, didgeridoos, tablas, congas, and glockenspiels. Travelling through the past, darkly, the Massacre arrives on the other side unscathed; their music is too rich to be merely retro, and too knowing to be merely slavish — the Stones themselves haven’t made a record this strong or entertaining in years. -- allmusic.com