Compare Prices for Loud & Horrible

Half Japanese - Loud & Horrible

Loud & Horrible Music CD Cover
Artist: Half Japanese
Edition: Music CD
Audio: English (Original Language)
CD Release Date: 2004-07-27
Music Label: Drag City
Soundtracks:
  1. My Concentration, Oh No
  2. 2 Hearts=1
  3. If My Father Answers, Don't Say Nothing
  4. Scientific Devices
  5. Gift
  6. Dumb Animals
  7. Popular
  8. I Know How It Feels. Bad
  9. Perfume
  10. New Brides Of Frankenstein
  11. Forget You
  12. Loud/Louder/Loudest
  13. Spy
  14. No Danger
  15. Love Lasts Forever (Sometimes)
  16. Nurse
  17. Only Dancing
  18. Bad To Your Best Friend
  19. Baby Wants Music
  20. High School Tonight
  21. Thing With A Hook
  22. Don't Go To Bed
  23. Rosemary's Baby
  24. Vampire
  25. Walk Through Walls
  26. My Knowledge Was Wrong
  27. I Know How It Feels...Bad
  28. No Danger
  29. Heart
New New
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
$11.43
Used Used
Usually ships in 1-2 business days
$9.50
A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee Protection
Your purchase is protected by the A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee. Amazon.com automatically transfers your payment to the merchant so you'll never need to pay a merchant directly. Amazon.com A-to-z Safe Buying Guarantee covers both the delivery of your item and its condition upon receipt.

Free Music Notes for Loud & Horrible Album

Free Music Review: Classic Idiosyncratic Do-It-Yourself
Hit: 5 Stars

The early Half Japanese records are among the most blaring and chaotic rock sounds made in the whole punk/post-punk era. While many fought about who was punker, more hardcore, faster, more shocking, truer to rock's roots or more anti-prog rock than the next guy, Half Japanese comes off as one of the most truly inspired and nutty acts of the era. Their f*** it, lets make a really loud and crazy record is still shocking on their triple LP (!) debut, 1/2 Gentlemen Not Beasts, and on this even louder sequel. Though for Loud they added some more musically talented members to the band, it hardly sounds so. Jad Fair alternately squeals and screams his vocals, the sax honks and blares to eleven, and the guitars sound like they used barbed wire for strings. Although they pull no punches in their desire to be as over-the-top as possible, their blaring mess remains unpredictable, fresh and fun, though likely an acquired taste.

Kudos to Drag City for tacking on the monstrous Horrible EP and the rare Spy single to this reissue. Perhaps they will see fit to do the same for Jad Fair's early solo records as well. Love it or hate it, this one-of-a-kind unholy ruckus still startles a couple of decades later. When you feel like you're hearing nothing new in music, spin through this cathartic platter to clear your mind (and ear canals). Can't imagine that this won't remain an inspiration for years to come.
Compare prices and find music notes for more than one million Music CD titles