12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
If yer neck ain't red from this, then yer dead. YEEEEEHAWWW, August 14, 2001
This review is from: Sex & Violins (Audio CD)
What do you get when you inject a lethal dose of techno into Hee-haw style country music? You'd probably get something like Rednex's Sex & Violins, the same way Bond injected a new sound into classical music.
The female vocalist sounds a bit like Cyndi Lauper on helium, while the male vocalist sounds at home on Hee Haw or the Red Green Show. Rednex don't stop at fiddles, techno beats, and country rhythms--the music is filled with barnyard noises like cows, chickens, and horses. Oh yes, and yeeehaws!
This is a treat for anyone's CD. Heck, put the CD on random, excluding tracks #4, #7, #11, #12, and party away! However, of those four, "Rolling Home" is actually a sweet ballad with a harmony chorus. "Nowhere In Idaho" is a lazy ballad with a forlorn steel guitar, which is interrupted in the middle by a cowboy's monologue saying that the "song is about a man and a woman, what else?" and the sound of a whinnying horse. Tweaked!
"Cotton-Eye Joe," the single, opens the album and sets the stage for the entire album. A different mix of it also closes the album. For those not in the know, the song is also on the Malcolm In The Middle soundtrack.
Song No. 8 has got to have a record for longest song title. (I think Fiona Apple's clinched the one for longest album title. It also happens to be the shortest song on here, clocking in at 2:20.
"Shooter" is yet another machismo-laced song about a man and his best friend, his gun, except this time he's singing the verses, while his girl's doing the chorus.
"The McKenzie Brothers," no, not Rick Moranis and Dave Thomas, but considering the rest of the album, it is still a strange brew. (Sorry, I couldn't resist.) Anyway, it's a wild west tale done in monologue over a lazy steel guitar.
"Wild And Free" has the swiftest tempo of the 14 songs. If you play this in your brand new Ferrari while hightailing it down the interstate, don't be surprised if A) you get a speeding ticket, B) your engine overheats and smashes through the hood of your car, or C) both.
"Fat Sally Lee" comes in second in terms of tempo, and in the bridge, the Cyndi-ish vocalist dementedly squeaks, "Step one, step two. Step too and shake your boots!"
A one-off effort by a bunch of crazy Swedes. Pity--we could have used a second album, called More Explicit Sex & Violins maybe?
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9 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
THE REDNEX ROCK!, November 10, 1999
By A Customer
This review is from: Sex & Violins (Audio CD)
I'm proud to have a copy of the Rednex' only album--SEX & VIOLINS--which I bought in May 1996. The first song I heard from that album was COTTON-EYE JOE, which I heard on the radio, in 1994.
The Rednex--from Stockholm, Sweden, by the way--were successful in combining country music and techno to form a unique sound that only the Rednex (as far as I know) could produce: high-tech country!
I'm not a country music fan; but, I still recommend SEX & VIOLINS to everyone.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Great, Fun Mix of Country and Techno, January 4, 2001
This review is from: Sex & Violins (Audio CD)
I am PROUD to own my ONLY Techno-Country CD: Rednex's "Sex & Violins". This CD will have you dancing for hours on end (well, if you hit the repeat button on your CD player). It contains all their world wide hits, from the dance floor stompers "Cotton-Eye Joe", "Old Pop In An Oak" and "Wild'N'Free" to the sweet ballad "Wish You Were Here", produced by Max Martin and Denniz PoP, the masterminds behind Backstreet Boys, *NSYNC, and Ms. Spears. Also featured on this CD are some sterling album cuts, such as the hilarious "The Sad But True Story...", which features the chorus lyric "I'll be harder than your husband, I'll be harder than your man; I'll hit you with my twenty-gauge until you cannot stand". "Shooter" features perhaps the best use of female vocals on the CD, with the vocalist reaching into what could almost be called ethereal territory on the bridge. "Mckenzie Brothers" features spoken word narrative over an R&B light funk beat with cheesy "the bad guy's comin'!" guitar riffs. "Rolling Home" is another ballad winner, with more tempo than "Wish You Were Here", and the Slide to the Side Mix of "Cotton-Eye Joe" is almost as good as the original. Definitely an energetic CD to add to your collection.
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