Songs the Lord Taught Us The Cramps

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CD

  • Release Date: 09/25/1990
  • Original Release: 1980
  • Sales Rank: 12,491
  • Label: FONTANA A&M
  • UPC: 044797000720
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CD$15.99
 
  • Overview
  • Tracks
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Details & Credits
Track List
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Songs the Lord Taught Us

1LISTENTV Set 3:12
2LISTENRock on the Moon 1:47
3LISTENGarbage Man 3:34
4LISTENI Was a Teenage Werewolf 3:03
5LISTENSunglasses After Dark 3:47
6LISTENThe Mad Daddy 3:47
7LISTENMystery Plane 2:42
8LISTENZombie Dance 1:55
9LISTENWhat's Behind the Mask 2:05
10LISTENStrychnine 2:25
11LISTENI'm Cramped 2:37
12LISTENTear It Up 2:32
13LISTENFever 4:16

About this Artist

Editorial Reviews

Continuing the spooked-out and raging snarls of their Gravest Hits EP, the Cramps once again worked with Alex Chilton on the group's full-album debut, Songs the Lord Taught Us. The jacket reads "file under: sacred music," but only if one's definition includes the holy love of rockabilly sex-stomp, something which the Cramps fulfill in spades. Having spent Gravest Hits mostly doing revamps of older material, the foursome tackled a slew of originals like "The Mad Daddy" and "TV Set" this time around, creating one of the few neo-rockabilly records worthy of the name. Years later Songs still drips with threat and desire both, testament to both the band's worth and Chilton's just-right production. "Garbageman" surfaced as a single in some areas, a wise choice given the at-once catchy roll of the song and downright frightening guitar snarls, especially on the solo. The covers of the Sonics' "Strychnine" and Billy Burnette's "Tear It Up" -- not to mention the concluding riff on "Fever" -- all challenge the originals. Interior has the wailing, hiccuping, and more down pat, but transformed into his own breathless howl, while Ivy and Gregory keep up the electric fuzz through more layers of echo than legality should allow. Knox helms the drums relentlessly; instead of punching through arena rock style, Chilton keeps the rushed rhythm running along in the back, increasing the sheer psychosis of it all. Ned Raggett, All Music Guide

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