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Ultima II Massage
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Ultima II Massage in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99

Ultima II Massage in Bloomington, MN
Current price: $15.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: OS
As with all the
Tobacco
albums so far, the frontman of
Black Moth Super Rainbow
dispenses with that group's sticky whimsy in favor of something harsher and noisier, but still insanely catchy and fun.
Ultima II Massage
is his first album for new label
Ghostly International
and it's probably his best so far. It's got everything one has come to expect in a
project -- the trademark woozily overloaded synths, his heavily treated vocals, the totally warped melodies -- only this time they are all turned up to ten. Or at least nine. There's not a weak song in the bunch, with hooks sharper than knives and the tightly wound and perfectly layered sound making it all go down smoothly. As smoothly as an album with song titles like "Father Sister Berzerker," "Lipstick Destroyer," and "Face Breakout" are supposed to go down, anyway. And there is a thread of toughness running through the album that's new for
as his almost untreated vocals on "Eruption" drop more profanities than your average rapper, and many of the songs have hard-charging beats and rippling, chainsawed synths that almost verge on some weird mutant form of heavy metal. He does rein in the aggression with some pretty songs, like the loping "Self Tanner," and some laid-back grooves ("Good Complexion") that help make the experience a well-rounded one. There's even a song, the rollicking "Blow Your Heart," that could be a chart hit on some planet that's just a little weirder than this one.
is a uniquely
Black Moth
and
experience to be sure, and anyone who's been exposed to their odd and wonderful world in the past will find this album to be among the best things to come out of it. ~ Tim Sendra
Tobacco
albums so far, the frontman of
Black Moth Super Rainbow
dispenses with that group's sticky whimsy in favor of something harsher and noisier, but still insanely catchy and fun.
Ultima II Massage
is his first album for new label
Ghostly International
and it's probably his best so far. It's got everything one has come to expect in a
project -- the trademark woozily overloaded synths, his heavily treated vocals, the totally warped melodies -- only this time they are all turned up to ten. Or at least nine. There's not a weak song in the bunch, with hooks sharper than knives and the tightly wound and perfectly layered sound making it all go down smoothly. As smoothly as an album with song titles like "Father Sister Berzerker," "Lipstick Destroyer," and "Face Breakout" are supposed to go down, anyway. And there is a thread of toughness running through the album that's new for
as his almost untreated vocals on "Eruption" drop more profanities than your average rapper, and many of the songs have hard-charging beats and rippling, chainsawed synths that almost verge on some weird mutant form of heavy metal. He does rein in the aggression with some pretty songs, like the loping "Self Tanner," and some laid-back grooves ("Good Complexion") that help make the experience a well-rounded one. There's even a song, the rollicking "Blow Your Heart," that could be a chart hit on some planet that's just a little weirder than this one.
is a uniquely
Black Moth
and
experience to be sure, and anyone who's been exposed to their odd and wonderful world in the past will find this album to be among the best things to come out of it. ~ Tim Sendra
As with all the
Tobacco
albums so far, the frontman of
Black Moth Super Rainbow
dispenses with that group's sticky whimsy in favor of something harsher and noisier, but still insanely catchy and fun.
Ultima II Massage
is his first album for new label
Ghostly International
and it's probably his best so far. It's got everything one has come to expect in a
project -- the trademark woozily overloaded synths, his heavily treated vocals, the totally warped melodies -- only this time they are all turned up to ten. Or at least nine. There's not a weak song in the bunch, with hooks sharper than knives and the tightly wound and perfectly layered sound making it all go down smoothly. As smoothly as an album with song titles like "Father Sister Berzerker," "Lipstick Destroyer," and "Face Breakout" are supposed to go down, anyway. And there is a thread of toughness running through the album that's new for
as his almost untreated vocals on "Eruption" drop more profanities than your average rapper, and many of the songs have hard-charging beats and rippling, chainsawed synths that almost verge on some weird mutant form of heavy metal. He does rein in the aggression with some pretty songs, like the loping "Self Tanner," and some laid-back grooves ("Good Complexion") that help make the experience a well-rounded one. There's even a song, the rollicking "Blow Your Heart," that could be a chart hit on some planet that's just a little weirder than this one.
is a uniquely
Black Moth
and
experience to be sure, and anyone who's been exposed to their odd and wonderful world in the past will find this album to be among the best things to come out of it. ~ Tim Sendra
Tobacco
albums so far, the frontman of
Black Moth Super Rainbow
dispenses with that group's sticky whimsy in favor of something harsher and noisier, but still insanely catchy and fun.
Ultima II Massage
is his first album for new label
Ghostly International
and it's probably his best so far. It's got everything one has come to expect in a
project -- the trademark woozily overloaded synths, his heavily treated vocals, the totally warped melodies -- only this time they are all turned up to ten. Or at least nine. There's not a weak song in the bunch, with hooks sharper than knives and the tightly wound and perfectly layered sound making it all go down smoothly. As smoothly as an album with song titles like "Father Sister Berzerker," "Lipstick Destroyer," and "Face Breakout" are supposed to go down, anyway. And there is a thread of toughness running through the album that's new for
as his almost untreated vocals on "Eruption" drop more profanities than your average rapper, and many of the songs have hard-charging beats and rippling, chainsawed synths that almost verge on some weird mutant form of heavy metal. He does rein in the aggression with some pretty songs, like the loping "Self Tanner," and some laid-back grooves ("Good Complexion") that help make the experience a well-rounded one. There's even a song, the rollicking "Blow Your Heart," that could be a chart hit on some planet that's just a little weirder than this one.
is a uniquely
Black Moth
and
experience to be sure, and anyone who's been exposed to their odd and wonderful world in the past will find this album to be among the best things to come out of it. ~ Tim Sendra