Goat

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (305 ratings)
ALBUM INFORMATION
EDITOR'S PICK

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 30:24

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Another great Jesus Lizard naked lady cover

nnnoidea

The projections are quite unsettling. This album kicks everything up a notch from their first, but isn't quite up to the levels they attain on the next one (Liar). Well worth owning.

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Loud/Demented

MonsterDad

Play it loud, and by all means, add alcohol. 'Mouth Breather' is a good start. This is not punk, post-punk, or anything else. It's just scary s**t.

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It was

raithrover

superb back then, and remains so today. The best place to start your appreciation of the Jesus Lizard.

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Demential

RobEmDee

WARNING: Listenting to this album can result in the uncontrollable loss of faculties. Alcohol severely intensifies the effect.

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Awesome power of destruction

WashWest

Outstanding from start to finish. Their best work, to my ears. Standout tracks are "Nub" and "Mouth Breather."

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Goat

Mynameismalcolm

"Goat" was the second full-length record from this sorely missed Chicago punk-blues quartet, and in the ears of some fans, it's the band's best work. It was benchmark for them, in a coupla ways: It bore "Monkey Trick," the live version of which often featured singer David Yow twisting his testicles; and also "Seasick," with its now-infamous line, "I can't swim," which, again in a live setting, Yow bellowed as he crowd-surfed. With "Head", "Goat" and "Liar," the Jesus Lizard was on a roll, making pertinent, unforgettable music - music that owed as much to Chicago's blues scene as it did to Austin's noise movement - that, even a decade and some change later, still sounds as dangerous as it did the first time it scared you.

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They Say All Media Guide

The Jesus Lizard’s second album followed in the vein of the first with little immediate variation: loud, excellently produced by Steve Albini, plenty of space in the recording to emphasize the sheer force of McNeilly’s drums and Sims’ bass, and more besides. The little-remarked-upon ability of the rhythm section to kick out some ass-shaking jams spikes up such great numbers as “Nub,” which almost predicts Rocket From the Crypt down to the gang-shout vocals, and the slower but no-less-compelling grind of “Rodeo in Joliet” (also one of the band’s most inspired titles). Denison’s guitar playing seemed a touch more focused at points here, the results almost suggesting such post-punk groove monsters as Gang of Four and even the Pop Group. There’s a more evident melodic lead role for his work as well, as the just plain great riff that fires up “Mouth Breather” and his near-countryish twang on “Karpis” makes perfectly clear. Yow, meanwhile, steps ever more into his own persona, his lyrics now downright comprehensible and his singing levels a touch less doom- (and bass) heavy, if no less aggrieved. The staggered vocal overdubs on “Monkey Trick” are a standout, especially when Denison suddenly serves up another one of his surprisingly sweet passages as a bed. Other treats on the album include the opening “Here Comes Dudley” — in context one of the more non-welcoming greetings around — and the Morricone-tinged freakout of “Lady Shoes,” assuming Morricone scored movies about doctors dealing with some freaky female patients. The whole album seems like a party in hell, not to mention demonstrative proof that there’s still plenty of fun to be had with a basic rock lineup; it’s all in the matter of how it’s handled. – Ned Raggett

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