Thanks to a requested review, we get revisit the 1997 album American Psycho by the Misfits. Minus founder/original lead singer Glenn Danzig, this album saw the band return after years of being an underground influence upon bands like Metallica, Guns ‘n Roses and others. The “horror punk” sound created by the band shifts in the direction of the bands it influenced, incorporating a decidedly more metal sound, while still utilizing the compact song structures, gang vocals and melodic hooks familiar to the band rom the 80s. But at seventeen tracks, is it too much of a good thing?
Songs in this Episode:
#343: Compilations Albums of the 1990s Roundtable
#342: Lovesongs for Underdogs by Tanya Donelly
#341: Where Have All The Merrymakers Gone? by Harvey Danger
#340: Guitar Gods of the 1990s Roundtable
#339: Laughing Gallery by Ruth Ruth
#338: A Little Ain’t Enough by David Lee Roth
#337: Ladies and Gentlemen We Are Floating In Space by Spiritualized
#336: Eternal Nightcap by The Whitlams
#335: Television Soundtracks of the 1990s
#334: Interview with Jody Porter (Fountains of Wayne & The Belltower)
#333: Whirligig by The Caulfields
#332: Batman & Robin soundtrack
#331: Cockamamie by Jennifer Trynin
#330: Duran Duran In The 90s
#329: Interview with Marko DeSantis of Sugarcult, The Ataris and more
#328: Cheap Trick (1997) by Cheap Trick
#327: Blind Love by Ratcat
#326: Roundtable - Sophomore Slump Revisited - Eight Arms To Hold You by Veruca Salt
#325: Small Speaker Joyland by Violetine
#324: Digging Your Scene - Roundtable Discussion on Los Angeles in the 90s
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