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Temporarily Disconnected

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (12 ratings)
Temporarily Disconnected album cover
01
Dogs Come Out
2:28 $0.99
02
Outta Mind, Outta Time
3:43 $0.99
03
Fire & Water
1:55 $0.99
04
Why
3:58 $0.99
05
Body Thief
3:34 $0.99
06
Choose Me
4:42 $0.99
07
Heart of Fire
6:08 $0.99
08
Stoner
5:57 $0.99
09
Boots
3:25 $0.99
10
Agroovendee!
4:27 $0.99
11
Coose Me(For Those Who Like it Rough In The Middle)Remix
4:43 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 11   Total Length: 45:00

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Where's "Harder Than You"??

TheDarkPower

So disappointing to find these guys on emusic but their classic first album is missing!! C'mon guys...

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P. Fluid's return...still a little disappointing.

SwellJoe

I absolutely adored Gumbo Millennium in high school...crazy guitar work, off-the-wall soul singing, metal and funk and jazz all inter-twined in ways that baffled and amused and amazed me. And more importantly, it was all sincere and honest and straight from the gut. P. Fluid's vocals were an absolutely vital component in that equation. So when Fluid left, I lost interest in 24-7 Spyz, and when he came back, my interest was again piqued. So, though this album doesn't quite measure up to Gumbo Millennium or Harder Than You, it's the best Spyz record here at emusic, and they are a highly underrated 90's band. So, you probably want it. The Spyz grow on you, even if you think this isn't your sort of thing--but you have to give them a bit of a chance. The songs are all over the map, and that can be hard to appreciate on a single listen. If you like more straight ahead metal with funk leanings, their other records here might interest you...but I find them boring and predictable.

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They Say All Music Guide

The 24-7 Spyz combination of soul, funk, jazz, and metal on display throughout 1995′s Temporarily Disconnected is by no means a breakthrough for the group or its fans. After following Living Colour into the metal-as-practiced-by-black-musicians void, 24-7 Spyz tried mightily to not only avoid the predictable stereotypes, but also had to overcome comparisons to the one and only group that ever made a serious and successful effort at what they were also attempting. All preconceptions aside, if the particular brand of eclectic hard rock or metal that 24-7 Spyz practiced didn’t sound like Living Colour — soaring, soulful vocals laid over angular, jazz-inflected metal riffing with only occasional references to the Black Sabbath chordings from which so many Caucasian outfits draw their rhythmic influence — then nothing did. There are some hard-driving metal standouts like “Fire and Water” and “Heart of Fire,” but the almost wave-ish soft jazz of “Choose Me” — while brilliantly executed — would certainly confound even open-minded metal fans. The jagged musical gifts that this band possesses are on full display on this record, but Temporarily Disconnected is just too scattered to warrant a strong recommendation. – Jason Anderson

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