Techincolour Mother

Rate It! Avg: 4.0 (30 ratings)
Techincolour Mother album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 13   Total Length: 49:48

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Good, not Great

MrFixitOnline

Agree with prior reviews that this band has almost everything to be Great. The songs can be very sloppy and lack punch, but then some of it is pretty good so you download some - but you don't love it to death, but it's not bad, but you DID download half of the songs - so it must be ok? Right?

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interesting, not earth-shaking

JandtheBoingers

Lots of really good soundscapes here, just a slight lack of 'it' factor. I like it, have recommended it, don't love it.

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Whatever.

brothermarcus

Review deleted. Emusic screws their loyal customers by hiking the rates, reducing the downloads, and going mainstream. And two year old Sony crap at that. To hell with you, emusic.

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Solid neo-psychedelic rock

Speevy

This band rocks hard and is way more interesting than Wolfmother IMHO. Blistering guitar solos, trippy effects, some elements of Smashing Pumpkins, John Lennon, Sabbath. Let's hope Jello releases their first album on eMusic.

Recommended Albums

They Say All Music Guide

San Francisco’s Turn Me on Dead Man’s second album plays like a journey into space. The album blends the headbanger-worthy riffs and hooks of stoner metal with the spacey nostalgia of psychedelic prog rock and the loud, raw energy of alternative rock. Guitarist, sitarist, and frontman Mykill Ziggy’s detached vocals and effects pedals give the album a feeling of floating aimlessly in space. Technicolour Mother explodes with the exceedingly distorted prog rock instrumental “Child in the Sunburst Pyramid” and never lets up. The album is divided between melodies and full-on metal assaults. “Pharmaceutical Rainbows,” with its onslaught of a suffocating heavy metal solo, sounds like it’s ripping a black hole into outer space. On the other hand, “Galaxina” and “Her Planet Is Love” are sweet, but no less loud and distorted, with candy like vocals. Turn Me on Dead Man define their own genre, and Technicolour Mother is pure enjoyment. Advice: listen to this one loud; really loud. – Megan Frye

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