Artist: Body Count: mp3 download Genre(s): Other Metal: Alternative Discography: Violent Demise: Last Days Year: 1997 Tracks: 16 Born Dead Year: 1994 Tracks: 12 Body Count Year: 1992 Tracks: 18 Maybe no one saw the humor, or possibly they were distrait by the scarce competent ponderous metal of the record album, but rapper Ice-T's heavy metal mathematical grouping launched a hurricane of publicity with their self-titled debut album, Consistence Count. Ice-T's music had been heavy as gravid admixture for a number of years, and on 1991's turning tip OG Original Gangster, he recorded the speed metal/hip-hop fusion "Body Count" with his band of the same list. Body Count's lineup included Ernie-C (guitar), D-Roe (guitar), Mooseman (bass), and Beatmaster V (drums), all of whom accompanied Crenshaw High School in South Central Los Angeles. On the 1991 Lollapalooza circuit, Ice-T performed with Body Count and earned a material quantity of fans and kudos. "Physical structure Count" was a high spot of OG and, not coincidentally, it was the most serious and charles I Herbert Best song on their 1992 album. For the rest of Body Count, the band in use in heavy metallic element clichés and lyrics that were either humorously over the top or cringe-inducing. Subsequently it was out for a match of months, frenzy over the song dynasty "Cop Killer" made the album a symbol for everything that was wrong with popular culture. After several months of invariant bad promotional material, Warner Brothers and Ice-T pulled the vocal from the album; several months afterwards, he parted slipway with the record company. Body Count released their second album, Born Dead, on Ice-T's young record label, Priority, in 1994. The record failed to yield either argument or sales and disappeared shortly subsequently its fall release, after which Mooseman left the stria. Despite declining interest in Body Count, Ice-T stuck with the stria, recording the group's tierce album, Wild Demise: Last Days, in 1997; unhappily, Beatmaster V fell victim to leukemia early that year. Upon the release of Violent Demise, to the highest degree critics of a sudden got Body Count's mother wit of humor and, consequently, the album received clean good reviews, yet failed to sell. In 2005 the band was reanimated and hit the road. Three live DVDs and one alive CD were sourced from the tour. |
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