| MagentaMantaLoveTree | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
|   | ||||
| Studio album by | ||||
| Released | 1993 | |||
| Genre | Modern rock | |||
| Length | 64:51 | |||
| Label | Brainstorm Artists, Intl,  Word Records  | |||
| Producer |  Gene Eugene  Dighayzoose  | |||
| Dighayzoose chronology | ||||
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| Review scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating | 
| Cross Rhythms | (not rated) link [1] | 
| CCM Magazine | (not rated) [2] | 
| True Tunes News | (not rated) [3] | 
| Cornerstone | (not rated) [4] | 
MagentaMantaLoveTree (1993) was the second album released by Dighayzoose with a duration of nearly 65 minutes. All band members, except of Jimmi Rodrigez, participated in the writing process. [3] The album was a departure from their debut which had been, according to multiple critics, essentially a Red Hot Chili Peppers clone. [5] [3] According to True Tunes News the band used the language of psychedelia to create "bizarre and visual lyrics." [3] Their lyrics touched sometimes personal topics such as love & beauty in a dream about a future wife ("MagentaMantaLoveTree"), hate ("H8 Machine"), and self-loathing ("Diggin' Away"). [2] [4] Musically the album contained a great number of styles [1] mashed together into a George Clinton style "cosmic slop." [2] One review drew musical parallels to Steve Vai, Primus, Faith No More, Jane's Addiction, and Scaterd Few. [4]
Many of the tracks are prepended by short samples.