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Psychward + Sympathia + Unique Oil Free Air - Live At Irene's Whorehouse flac album

Psychward + Sympathia + Unique Oil Free Air - Live At Irene's Whorehouse flac album
  • Performer Psychward
  • Title Live At Irene's Whorehouse
  • Date of release 2009
  • Style Noise, Experimental
  • Other formats MP3 DTS WMA VQF DMF VOX AC3
  • Genre Electronic
  • Size MP3 1128 mb
  • Size FLAC 1711 mb
  • Rating: 4.5
  • Votes: 981

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Psych (season 7). DVD cover art. Country of origin. The seventh season of Psych, containing 14 episodes, premiered on the USA Network in the United States on February 27, 2013. The primary run ended on May 29, 2013, but a television special, Psych: The Musical aired later in the year. James Roday, Dulé Hill, Timothy Omundson, Maggie Lawson, Corbin Bernsen, and Kirsten Nelson all reprised their roles as the main characters in the series.

Oil of Every Pearl's Un-Insides (stylised in all caps) is the debut studio album by Scottish electronic music producer Sophie, released on 15 June 2018, through Transgressive, Future Classic and her own label, MSMSMSM. According to one source, the title may be a variant spelling of the phrase "I love every person's insides". Oil of Every Pearl's Un-Insides was met with widespread acclaim by critics and received a nomination for the Best Dance/Electronic Album at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards.

When you are in a psych ward the decision about your discharge is made by your hospital psychiatrist, so much of your time is spent waiting for him or her to come in. They are all supposed to come every day, but no one seems to know when exactly that will be. Some of the other patients complained that the psychiatrist they had was an asshole and never discharged anyone. I called my friend’s dad to pick me up, and gathered my things together and packed them in a provided plastic bag emblazoned, embarrassingly, with the name of the hospital. While I waited for him to arrive I made small talk with the patients, finally not so consumed in my own anger to see them as real people, too. When I left the psych ward the cool nurse called after me, I like you but I don’t want to see you here again. I told her that she wouldn’t, and I was right, but it wouldn’t be my last psychiatric hospitalization of the summer.

Heavy psych, however, is almost as old as psychedelic rock itself, having emerged a few years later when some rabble rousers in San Francisco lent even more noise and density to the tripped out textures that soundtracked the Summer of Love. Of the earliest wave of heavy psych bands, Japan’s Flower Travellin’ Band pulled off the impressive feat of being both the heaviest and the weirdest. Their 1971 album Satori is a five-part suite of face-melting psychedelia that’s sometimes in the pocket, and at other points terrifying and strange, but it’s always headed in a direction worth following. As it gets off the ground in Satori Pt. 1, the band dips into the bad acid as an appetizer, swirling into a freakishly chaotic riff frenzy that’s unforgettable, but, you know, out there, man.

Tracklist

A Untitled

Notes

Limited edition on hand-painted recycled tapes.