Lion And The Cobra

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Lion And The Cobra album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 9   Total Length: 41:27

eMusic Features

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Comeback Kids: The 10 Best Musical Resurrections

By Arye Dworken, eMusic Contributor

Remember that band you loved that broke up? Well, next year, they're playing Coachella. We live in an age when band reunions are bordering on passé, which can obscure the fact that a well-executed comeback is often difficult to come by. Take Limp Bizkit. That once incredibly popular band released an album this year that you probably had had no idea existed. Or on a somewhat more credible note, Duran Duran reunited and recruited famed… more »

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Interview: Sinead O’Connor

By Elisa Bray, eMusic Contributor

It's refreshing to see Sinead O'Connor written about for the right reasons. Lately, the Irish star and mother of four has been taking up column inches for her fourth marriage, separation and then reunion with her new husband; for her claims of being misdiagnosed with bi-polar disorder; and for threatening to shoot the pope should he visit Ireland. She has always been one to make a statement - she first shaved her hair in defiance… more »

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New This Week: Sleigh Bells, Frankie Rose & More

By J. Edward Keyes, Editor-in-Chief

When it rains it pours, and this month has been a veritable flood. There are more new, great albums than I know what to do with. I need about 15 extra hours each day to listen to them all. Chances are you will, too. HERE WE GO. Sleigh Bells, Reign of Terror: This is probably where we have the discussion about how bands almost never sound good on Saturday Night Live. Artists we know are great… more »

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Moby Let’s Go

By Robert Phoenix, eMusic Contributor

While Virgo is often considered to be the one sign driven by an almost insane desire for perfection and purity, a fair number of the artists that fall under its arc - from August 23rd to September 22nd - can hardly be called Puritanical. A quick check finds Charlie Parker, the archetypal bebop mainliner, shooting junk while deconstructing the songbook of his day in blistering triple-times. Then there's Gene Simmons. While Simmons has eschewed alcohol… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Sinéad O’Connor’s debut, The Lion and the Cobra, was a sensation upon its 1987 release, and it remains a distinctive record, finding a major talent striving to achieve her own voice. Like many debuts, it’s entirely possible to hear her influences, from Peter Gabriel to Prince and contemporary rap, but what’s striking about the record is how she synthesizes these into her own sound — an eerie, expansive sound heavy on atmosphere and tortured passion. If the album occasionally sinks into its own atmospheric murk a little too often, she pulls everything back into focus with songs as bracing as the hard-rocking “Mandinka” or the sexy hip-hop of “I Want Your (Hands on Me).” Still, those ethereal soundscapes are every bit as enticing as the direct material, since “Troy,” “Jackie,” and “Jerusalem” are compelling because of their hushed, quiet intensity. It’s not a perfect album, since it can succumb to uneven pacing, but it’s a thoroughly impressive debut — and it’s all the more impressive when you realize she only topped it with its immediate successor, before losing all focus. – Stephen Thomas Erlewine

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