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Debris Inc. - Debris Inc. flac album

Debris Inc. - Debris Inc. flac album
  • Performer Debris Inc.
  • Title Debris Inc.
  • Date of release 2005
  • Style Punk, Doom Metal
  • Other formats MP3 VQF MP1 AUD MP4 RA AAC
  • Genre Rock
  • Size MP3 1586 mb
  • Size FLAC 1760 mb
  • Rating: 4.7
  • Votes: 809

13. I Feel Like Shit Again. 15. The Ballad of Debris. 16. I Love Living in the City. 17. Manhattan Breakfast. Debris Inc. Learn more. Other productions from Debris Inc.

Debris Inc. discography (all). lt; Happy Violent Drunken Stoner Punk Doom (2004). Type: Full-length. Release date: April 4th, 2005. is the eponymous studio album by the doom punk trio of the same name File history. The Ballad of Debris 02:46 16. I Love Living in the City (Fear cover) 01:54 17. Manhattan Breakfast 00:20. Personnel: Dave Chandler - Guitars, Vocals Ron Holzner - Bass, Vocals Joe Nunez - Drums Tony Costanza - Drums Greg Rogers - Drums Barry Stern - Drums Afzaal Nasiruddeen - Guitars Keith Pastrick - Guitars, Vocals. Karyn Crisis - Vocals.

The latter is probably the most doom track on the album; "Nausea" was one of the more metallic punk recordings of 1980, and it's a song that easily lends itself to a punk/doom blend. No one will accuse this disc of sounding overproduced; Chandler and Holzner favor a very primitive, garage-like ambiance. Neither are taking themselves too seriously, and the whole album has a loose, informal, even sloppy sort of charm.

Horrible Dream" - 5:39. Had Something" - 5:01. Beta Complex" - 6:08. Kiss Me Goodnight as I'm Falling Asleep" - 4:08. "Debris In. (Candlelight). The bulk of this album is made up of the kind of simplistic, gnarly punk rock prominent in the Southern California scene during the late '70s and early '80s. In other words, that whole thing about not givin' a fuck, beatin' the shit out of an instrument, and shouting at anyway within earshot to "get fucked!"

Debris (UK: /ˈdɛbriː, ˈdeɪbriː/, US: /dəˈbriː/) is rubble, wreckage, ruins, litter and discarded, scattered remains of something destroyed, discarded, or as in geology, large rock fragments left by a melting glacier etc. Depending on context, debris can refer to a number of different things. The first apparent use of the French word in English is in a 1701 description of the army of Prince Rupert upon its retreat from a battle with the army of Oliver Cromwell, in England.