Another great Jesus Lizard naked lady cover
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.
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.
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.
superb back then, and remains so today. The best place to start your appreciation of the Jesus Lizard.
WARNING: Listenting to this album can result in the uncontrollable loss of faculties. Alcohol severely intensifies the effect.
Outstanding from start to finish. Their best work, to my ears. Standout tracks are "Nub" and "Mouth Breather."
"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.