Peace, Love and Murder | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | 1987 May [1] [2] | |||
Recorded | 1986 Summer / Fall | |||
Studio | Beat Farm Cleveland, OH | |||
Genre | alternative rock, indie rock [3] american underground [4] | |||
Length | 40:32 [5] | |||
Label | Birth Records [6] House in Motion [7] | |||
Producer | Chris Burgess [8] | |||
My Dad Is Dead chronology | ||||
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Peace, Love and Murder is the third album by American rock band My Dad Is Dead, released on vinyl in May 1987 by Birth Records, later reissued on CD and vinyl by Houses In Motion.
Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Robert Christgau | unfavourable [9] |
Trouser Press | favourable [10] |
Trouser Press called it "a compelling, hypnotic debut". [10]
Recorded Summer/Fall 1986.
Comes with lyric sheet. [13]
In My Tribe is an album by the American alternative rock band 10,000 Maniacs. Released on July 27, 1987, it was their second major-label album and their first to achieve large-scale success. John Lombardo, Natalie Merchant's songwriting partner on previous albums, left the band in 1986. Merchant began collaborating with the other members of the band, most notably with Rob Buck.
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Christine Elizabeth Clark, better known as Chris Clark, is an American soul, jazz, and blues singer, who recorded for Motown Records. Clark became known to Northern Soul fans for hit songs such as 1965's "Do Right Baby Do Right" and 1966's "Love's Gone Bad" (Holland-Dozier-Holland). She later co-wrote the screenplay for the 1972 motion picture Lady Sings the Blues starring Diana Ross, which earned Clark an Academy Award nomination.
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The Effigies were an American punk band from Chicago, Illinois, United States. The band played its first show in 1980 and was active initially for approximately a decade, undergoing multiple personnel changes with frontman John Kezdy the only constant, before disbanding in 1990. The band released 5 albums and several EPs, most on the record label they founded in 1981, Ruthless Records, which was distributed by Enigma. Later albums were on the Fever Records and Roadkill Records labels. They toured the U.S. and Canada and played notable venues, including CBGB, Maxwell's, First Avenue (nightclub), Mabuhay Gardens, Paycheck's (Detroit), Exit (Chicago) and The Rathskeller, among others. They also received a significant amount of national airplay on college radio at a time when it was the only medium for alternative music.
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