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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Worthwhile Grab For Any Old-School PM5K Fan,
By A. Estes (Maine) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Vol. 1 (Audio CD)
Powerman 5000 presents the first b-sides release put out through their own independent label, Megatronic Records, titled "The Good, The Bad And The Ugly, Volume 1." This release chronicles the bands beginnings as a 1990's Boston favorite, collecting rarities recorded between 1991 and 1996. All of the songs here are played much in the same vein as you may have heard on their "True Force" and "Mega Kung Fu! Radio" releases, a sound which is distantly removed from their more familiar robotic space rock style of recent. Powerman 5000 started out as a rap-metal band with a little funk thrown in for good measure, and most people not familiar with this era of their career might be turned off by this collection. Twenty tracks deep, some of the oddest Powerman 5000 moments are unearthed here, such as a brilliant cover of Bjork's "Army Of Me" and original versions of "Even Superman Shot Himself," "Boredwitcha" and "Earth Vs. Me." Little live-interludes pop-up every now and then (i.e. "B.S. One," "B.S. Two" and naturally, "B.S. Three") to break things up, but four unreleased live tracks -- "20 Miles To Texas, 25 To Hell," "Strike The Match," "What If?" and "Organizized" -- are the best part of this album for me. Live Powerman 5000 recordings are difficult to find, and hearing some really old songs live is an especially sweet treat. The artwork for the album features an array of various concert flyers from their early days, reviews by the local papers, and liner notes from the man himself, Spider. It's a great collection for anyone interested in this era of Powerman 5000 to have. While the future for this band is always uncertain (with their former label disappearing and the line-up constantly revolving), one thing is for sure: Powerman 5000's past is one hell of a history lesson.
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
funk, metal, and blues,
By charlie-pm5001-kruger "Pm5001" (my own world) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Vol. 1 (Audio CD)
this is a cd that hold some (20 to be exact) songs that were made from 1991 to 1996. it is insane. as a longtime powerfan, i have respected and loved the form of music they played in Mega Kung Fu Radio !!! and this cd. it is as though Hendrix teamed up with Rob Zombie and the funk master Ric James.
blasting bass lines and a double percussian blast (from drummer #1 and #2, who later joined the Blue Man Group) and guitars pulled out of some techno dreamland, the only thing left is the voice. the voice that was made is that of Spider One. a master of all things vocal. he can rap (but like the beastie boys not like the new trash) he can go jazzy (see the last track on Tonight The Stars Revolt) he can be a blasting metal screamer (see most of the stuff) and be downright bluesy (look to songs on this cd like city of the dead and slumlord). this is a cd of songs that didn't get enough respect when they came out, and may never get it. but do your part pick it up, you will love it.
5.0 out of 5 stars
just the good,
By bunidiva "bunidiva" (Vermont, USA) - See all my reviews
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: The Good, the Bad and the Ugly, Vol. 1 (Audio CD)
the good the bad and the ugly vol. 1 is a great compilation of old school powerman 5000 songs. i've always liked mega! kung fu radio and the funky rap-rock style of early pm5k so this was refreshing. i own and like every powerman lp, but the '90s were far more kind to them then the new millenium. don't get me wrong, i actually like destroy what you enjoy and transform, but their newer albums can't compare with their old stuff. S.O.T.O.S.O.N. was really refreshing and it came close to capturing the feeling that pm5k's earlier albums gave me. i guess i'm digressing, so back to this album. my favorites were the city of the dead, both of versions of solid, and the live tracks. all the other songs on it were great as well, so i think the album should be entitled "The good." 'cause i can't find nothing wrong with it. i guess you might not be into this cd as much as i am if you don't like pm5k's older style, but really tonight the stars revolt was not the only good album that pm5k put out. believe me, i'm not lying.
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