Primus: Pork Soda Cover Art


Track Listing
Pork Chop's Little Ditty
 
Listen My Name Is Mud
 
Listen Welcome to This World
 
Listen Bob
 
Listen DMV
 
Listen Ol' Diamondback Sturgeon (Fisherman's Chronicles, Pt. 3)
 
Listen Nature Boy
 
Listen Wounded Knee
 
Listen Pork Soda
 
Listen The Pressman
 
Listen Mr. Krinkle
 
Listen The Air Is Getting Slippery
 
Listen Hamburger Train
 
Listen Pork Chop's Little Ditty
 
Listen Hail Santa
 



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Primus:
Pork Soda
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CD Information
Label: Interscope
Genre: Alternative Metal , Alternative Pop/Rock , Funk Metal
Titles: View all titles by Primus
Review
Once audiences got a chance to hear Primus' instantly recognizable sound, driven by Les Claypool's bizarrely virtuosic bass riffs, their audience grew by leaps and bounds. It was enough to make their second major-label album, Pork Soda, one of the strangest records ever to debut in the Top Ten. Stylistically, it isn't much different from Sailing the Seas of Cheese, though the band does stretch out and jam more often. This can result in some overly repetitive sections, since Claypool's riffs are the basis for most of the compositions, but it also showcases the band's ever-increasing level of musicianship. Their ensemble interplay continues to grow in complexity and musicality, and that's really what fans want from a Primus record anyway. The material isn't quite as consistent as Seas of Cheese, though there are numerous high points; among them are "My Name Is Mud," on which Claypool plays his instrument like percussion, and "Mr. Krinkle," where he switches to a bowed upright bass. There are hints of lyrical darkness stripped of the band's usual goofiness (especially in the suicide lament "Bob"), but for the most part, the humor is again split between eccentric character sketches, cheery paranoia, and annoying novelties (with a slightly higher percentage of the latter than before). Still, despite occasional flaws, what makes Pork Soda a success is that the band keeps finding novel variations on their signature sound, even if they never step out of it. ~ Steve Huey, All Music Guide

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