Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 27, 1993 | |||
Genre | Southern rock | |||
Length | 46:59 | |||
Label | Def American [1] | |||
Producer |
Rick Rubin (
exec.) Brendan O'Brien | |||
Raging Slab chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [1] |
Entertainment Weekly | B [3] |
Rock Hard | 9/10 [4] |
Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert is a studio album by American hard rock band Raging Slab, released in 1993. [5] [6] It was released digitally in 2009. [7]
The video for "Anywhere But Here" included a cameo by actor Gary Coleman. [8]
The album was recorded on a Pennsylvania farm, in a studio constructed by the band. [1] It was produced by Brendan O'Brien; the track "Lynne" features strings provided by Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones. [9]
Raging Slab had recorded three full albums between its 1989 debut and Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert, but due to record label issues did not release any of them. [10]
In 2005, Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert was ranked number 395 in Rock Hard magazine's book The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time. [11] The Chicago Reader called the album "rife with fragments of the 70s: Lynyrd Skynyrd's southern blues boogie, Blue Oyster Cult's heavy rock hooks, Grand Funk Railroad's braggadocio, ZZ Top's riff-drenched electric blues, Bad Company's pure hard rock." [12] Entertainment Weekly wrote that "the absurdly rocking, two-guitars-plus-slide Slab combines about 85 genres into one stinking heap of divine something-or-other." [3] The Washington Post wrote that "the Slab is a retro-boogie band, enlivened by [Greg] Strzempka's skill with melody and arrangement but utterly predictable in style." [13] Spin praised the album's devotion to funk, writing that "the band harks back to an age when heavy rock had more in common with black proto-funk such as the Meters than with the rhythmic regimentation of today's metal." [14]
All songs written by Greg Strzempka.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Anywhere But Here" | 3:56 |
2. | "Weatherman" | 3:12 |
3. | "Pearly" | 3:36 |
4. | "So Help Me" | 4:13 |
5. | "What Have You Done" | 4:05 |
6. | "Take a Hold" | 5:02 |
7. | "Laughin' and Cryin'" | 3:19 |
8. | "Don't Worry About the Bomb" | 2:33 |
9. | "Lynne" | 4:32 |
10. | "Lord Have Mercy" | 3:52 |
11. | "National Dust" | 3:34 |
12. | "Ain't Ugly None" | 5:05 |
Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 27, 1993 | |||
Genre | Southern rock | |||
Length | 46:59 | |||
Label | Def American [1] | |||
Producer |
Rick Rubin (
exec.) Brendan O'Brien | |||
Raging Slab chronology | ||||
|
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [2] |
The Encyclopedia of Popular Music | [1] |
Entertainment Weekly | B [3] |
Rock Hard | 9/10 [4] |
Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert is a studio album by American hard rock band Raging Slab, released in 1993. [5] [6] It was released digitally in 2009. [7]
The video for "Anywhere But Here" included a cameo by actor Gary Coleman. [8]
The album was recorded on a Pennsylvania farm, in a studio constructed by the band. [1] It was produced by Brendan O'Brien; the track "Lynne" features strings provided by Led Zeppelin's John Paul Jones. [9]
Raging Slab had recorded three full albums between its 1989 debut and Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert, but due to record label issues did not release any of them. [10]
In 2005, Dynamite Monster Boogie Concert was ranked number 395 in Rock Hard magazine's book The 500 Greatest Rock & Metal Albums of All Time. [11] The Chicago Reader called the album "rife with fragments of the 70s: Lynyrd Skynyrd's southern blues boogie, Blue Oyster Cult's heavy rock hooks, Grand Funk Railroad's braggadocio, ZZ Top's riff-drenched electric blues, Bad Company's pure hard rock." [12] Entertainment Weekly wrote that "the absurdly rocking, two-guitars-plus-slide Slab combines about 85 genres into one stinking heap of divine something-or-other." [3] The Washington Post wrote that "the Slab is a retro-boogie band, enlivened by [Greg] Strzempka's skill with melody and arrangement but utterly predictable in style." [13] Spin praised the album's devotion to funk, writing that "the band harks back to an age when heavy rock had more in common with black proto-funk such as the Meters than with the rhythmic regimentation of today's metal." [14]
All songs written by Greg Strzempka.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Anywhere But Here" | 3:56 |
2. | "Weatherman" | 3:12 |
3. | "Pearly" | 3:36 |
4. | "So Help Me" | 4:13 |
5. | "What Have You Done" | 4:05 |
6. | "Take a Hold" | 5:02 |
7. | "Laughin' and Cryin'" | 3:19 |
8. | "Don't Worry About the Bomb" | 2:33 |
9. | "Lynne" | 4:32 |
10. | "Lord Have Mercy" | 3:52 |
11. | "National Dust" | 3:34 |
12. | "Ain't Ugly None" | 5:05 |