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Badmotorfinger

Rate It! Avg: 4.5 (149 ratings)
Badmotorfinger album cover
01
Rusty Cage
4:26
$1.29
02
Outshined
5:11
$0.69
03
Slaves & Bulldozers
6:56
$1.29
04
Jesus Christ Pose
5:51
$1.29
05
Face Pollution
2:24
$1.29
06
Somewhere
4:21
$1.29
07
Searching With My Good Eye Closed
6:31
$1.29
08
Room A Thousand Years Wide
4:06
$1.29
09
Mind Riot
4:50
$1.29
10
Drawing Flies
2:26
$1.29
11
Holy Water
5:07
$1.29
12
New Damage
5:40
$1.29
Album Information

Total Tracks: 12   Total Length: 57:49

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20 years after

pearlstfitter

this is "grunge". "New damage" to the seattle scene.I was a slave as this album bulldozed me over.causing a complete mind riot as i stood in my jesus christ pose as this holy water saved me. The rusty cage, of life, that plagued me now took my mind to somewhere,a room a thousand years wide.There was no drawing flies as this album outshined everything else.The face was smiling and the pollution of oppression stopped. I was there, no more searching with my good eye closed, i was there,in my soundgarden. And i stayed for 20 years

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Their Best

djfriendly

Agreed, this is their best album. a distillation of their finer moments on the other records. Though SU has some great tracks, it always felt like a come-down from the consistent energy of this record & only equaled BMF sporadically. The lyrics on this record far outshine (npi) those on other SG records, IMO.

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More Super and More Unknown

Updog

Yes, I know that everyone finally gave Soundgarden their due upon the release of Superunknown. However, as a long time SG fan, I have to say that this is a much better album. Not a song on here that is less than stellar. If you're downloading some Soundgarden, this is absolutely the place to start.

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They Say All Music Guide

Bidding for a popular breakthrough with their second major-label album, Soundgarden suddenly developed a sense of craft, with the result that Badmotorfinger became far and away their most fully realized album to that point. Pretty much everything about Badmotorfinger is a step up from its predecessors — the production is sharper and the music more ambitious, while the songwriting takes a quantum leap in focus and consistency. In so doing, the band abolishes the murky meandering that had often plagued them in the past, turning in a lean, muscular set that signaled their arrival in rock’s big leagues. Conventional wisdom has it that despite platinum sales, Badmotorfinger got lost amid the blockbuster success of Nevermind and Ten (all were released around the same time). But the fact is that, though they’re all great records, Badmotorfinger is much less accessible by comparison. Not that it isn’t melodic, but it also sounds twisted and gnarled, full of dissonant riffing, impossible time signatures, howling textural solos, and weird, droning tonalities. It’s surprisingly cerebral and arty music for a band courting mainstream metal audiences, but it attacks with scientific precision. Part of that is due to the presence of new bassist Ben Shepherd, who gives the band its thickest rhythmic foundation yet — and, moreover, immediately shoulders the departed Hiro Yamamoto’s share of songwriting duties. But it’s apparent that the whole band has greatly expanded the scope of its ambitions. And Badmotorfinger fulfills them, pulling all the different threads of the band’s sound together into a mature, confident, well-written record. This is heavy, challenging hard rock full of intellectual sensibility and complex band interplay. And with their next album, Soundgarden would learn how to make it fully accessible to mainstream audiences as well. – Steve Huey

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