Two Headed | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | June 20, 1995 (Canada); June 4, 1996 (U.S.) | |||
Recorded | 1995 | |||
Genre | Folk rock | |||
Length | 46:22 | |||
Label | Warner Music Canada | |||
Producer | Spirit of the West and Ken Marshall | |||
Spirit of the West chronology | ||||
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Review scores | |
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Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Two Headed is a 1995 album by Spirit of the West.
It is the band's darkest and heaviest album, with many songs directly addressing the subject of death. Ken Marshall, a noted Canadian producer of industrial music, produced the album, giving many songs a densely layered, textured production which results in an almost psychedelic hard rock sound.
The album reached #20 on RPM's Top 100 albums chart the week of July 31, 1995. [2]
"Tell Me What I Think", the album's first single, was a notable hit, peaking at #25 on the RPM singles chart the week of August 14. The song was also released on CD single, with several remixes by Marshall. The song's video, directed by Morris Panych, was choreographed around a fixed-location camera. However, despite the song's chart success, the video became their first in many years not to receive significant rotation on MuchMusic.
In promotion for the album, Spirit of the West was featured on the cover of the June 11, 1995 issue of RPM magazine. The cover featured the band dressed in drag. [3]
All songs by John Mann and Geoffrey Kelly.
Sass Jordan is a British-born Canadian rock singer from Montreal, Quebec. Her first single, "Tell Somebody," from her debut album of the same title won the Juno Award for Most Promising Female Vocalist in 1989. Since then, she has been nominated three more times for Juno Awards. Her album Rebel Moon Blues hit #5 on the Billboard Blues chart. Released April 28, 2023, her latest is a live album from 1994 when she toured with Taylor Hawkins on drums called Live in New York Ninety-Four.
Spirit of the West were a Canadian folk rock band from North Vancouver, active from 1983 to 2016. They were popular on the Canadian folk music scene in the 1980s before evolving a blend of hard rock, Britpop, and Celtic folk influences which made them one of Canada's most successful alternative rock acts in the 1990s.
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