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Bodies For Strontium 90

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (8 ratings)
Bodies For Strontium 90 album cover
01
Caught My Tell
7:27 $0.99
02
Weedy Species
3:13 $0.99
03
Sex
2:01 $0.99
04
Chop Shop
2:21 $0.99
05
Space Is The Place
2:52 $0.99
06
Is It Safe?
4:10 $0.99
07
Flunky
4:07 $0.99
08
Drugs
3:10 $0.99
09
Cars
3:23 $0.99
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 32:44

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CRAW!

eisenfaust

This album is awesome, but it's the Lost Nation Road album that best showcases Craw's unique skills and eccentricities. Not saying you shouldn't pick this one up - if technical math-metal is your thing, you need this - just that you should hunt down a copy of that one if you like what you hear on Bodies.

user avatar

perhaps the band that makes me hate nine inch nail

mattyboyfloyd

s the most. you won't hear this at the junior prom probably. so stand on the punch table and sing stairway to heaven if you have to.

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They Say All Music Guide

The sound of Cleveland’s Craw, like that of so many other veteran underground acts, has shifted with each successive release due to personnel changes. On Bodies for Strontium 90, the band debuts a quartet lineup, recording for the first time without founding member David McClelland on guitar. One of McClelland’s roles in the band was to paint swirling effects and colors over the band’s airtight math-metal song structures. With his contributions gone, Craw’s songs still provide an awesome kick, but lack the space and texture that made its first two records, Craw and Lost Nation Road, genuine classics of heavy underground rock in the ’90s. A characteristic track on Bodies for Strontium 90 is “Chop Shop,” a pummeling, stop-start rocker over which vocalist Joe McTighe plays the part of a sleazy fat cat who contacts a “Chinese body shoppe” to replace his “pickled” liver and “fried” kidneys. These lyrical snippets should convey that Craw is no ordinary band; the dizzyingly complicated riffs (translated to perfection by drummer Will Scharf, also of the excellent Keelhaul) and completely bizarre lyrics should be experienced by anyone who finds mainstream metal too cheesy or mainstream rock too disaffected. – Henry M. Shteamer

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