Fromohio EXPLICIT LYRICS fIREHOSE

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CD

  • Release Date: 10/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1989
  • Sales Rank: 94,947
  • Label: SST RECORDS
  • UPC: 018861023526
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Fromohio

1LISTENRiddle of the Eighties 2:00
2LISTENIn My Mind 2:16
3LISTENWhisperin' While Hollerin' 2:04
4LISTENVastopol 1:24
5LISTENMas Cojones 2:02
6LISTENWhat Gets Heard 2:19
7LISTENLet the Drummer Have Some 0:59
8LISTENLiberty for Our Friend 2:06
9LISTENTime with You 3:13
10LISTENIf'n 3:14
11LISTENSome Things 2:43
12LISTENUnderstanding 3:12
13LISTEN'nuf That Shit, George 0:38
14LISTENThe Softest Hammer 3:03

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

fIREHOSE's second release, 1987's If'n, was a major improvement over their 1986 debut, Ragin', Full On. And while their third album, 1988's fROMOHIO, was another solid set and contained its share of highlights, it seemed to be cut from the same musical cloth as its predecessor rather than a true progression. Again, the playing is inspired, and the new band had already established an original, identifiable sound. The best tracks prove to be Ed Crawford originals -- "In My Mind" and "Time with You" (the latter was an MTV video), while "Whisperin' While Hollerin'" and "What Gets Heard" soon became concert staples. The band's appreciation of folk shines through with a reading of the traditional black folk song "Vastopol" and the original "Liberty for Our Friend," and drummer George Hurley takes center stage on a pair of short, unaccompanied drum solos -- "Let the Drummer Have Some" and "'Nuf That Shit, George." Other highlights include the album opener "Riddle of the Eighties," the funky "Mas Cojones," the laid-back rock of "If'n" and "Understanding," plus the lethargic album closer "The Softest Hammer." Greg Prato, All Music Guide

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