Music To Start a Cult To

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Music To Start a Cult To album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 46:58

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Best effort

elbuort

This is BY FAR their best album. I HIGHLY recommend it (though I can not say the same for their other work).

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Some really good stuff

aelder

Some of the tracks are pretty amazing. Personal favs New Energy, Kill a Man, and Witness. Def def worth the download.

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music to start a cult

BobL-tx-09-79

I enjoyed the music. Great vocals and the music,hypnotic. Where the Devil Plays, Kill A Man, Cowboys and Aliens i bought first then after a few weeks i bought most of the rest check them out you may enjoy them too.

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Great Band, Great Disc

mtnviewz

I thought this was one of the best albums of 2005. It's chock full of great tunes. the band has a bit of an alt country sound at times, with influences from Gram Parsons, but they also forge their own sound. Check it out.

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They Say All Music Guide

Mysterious and salacious, Gram Rabbit’s debut is an eclectic pilgrimage through a myriad of styles and characters. Revolving around the supposed “Royal Order of Rabbits,” the Joshua Tree, California trio (vocalist/keyboardist/guitarist Jesika von Rabbit, guitarist/vocalist Todd Rutherford and bassist/sampler Travis Cline) formulates the sound to go with the gimmick. After the dark, folk-country of “Dirty Horse,” a tale involving Jesus and the Devil, they explore Western, synth-tinged dance on “Disco#2″ and “Cowboy-Up.” “Kill a Man,” a commentary on violence, shows the group has talent, as there are all kinds of lush sounds and voices. Despite the shifting and blending of styles, Gram Rabbit maintains its consistent edge. Add the loungy “Lost in Place” to this Western world of cowboys, desert roads and aliens, and Music to Start a Cult To’s far-out, synth-infected country could easily find its place in soundtracks to film noirs by David Lynch. – Kenyon Hopkin

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