Demon Box (album)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Demon Box
Demon Box cover
Studio album by Motorpsycho
Released February, 1993
Recorded Dec 1992/Jan 1993
Genre Rock
Length 71:58
Label Voices of Wonder
Producer(s) Motorpsycho, Deathprod
Motorpsycho chronology
8 Soothing Songs For Rut
(1992)
Demon Box
(1993)
Timothy's Monster
(1994)


Demon Box is the third full-length studio album by Norwegian rock-band Motorpsycho. Released in 1993, it saw the band earn their name as one of the most important bands in Norway.

Contents

[edit] Track listing (CD)

  1. "Waiting For The One" – 2:50
  2. "Nothing To Say" – 5:18
  3. "Feedtime" – 5:15
  4. "Sunchild" – 4:05
  5. "Tuesday Morning" – 4:22
  6. "All Is Loneliness" – 5:08 - a cover of Moondog
  7. "Come On In" – 2:40
  8. "Step Inside Again" – 3:39
  9. "Demon Box" – 17:06
  10. "Babylon" – 2:30
  11. "Junior" – 4:34
  12. "Plan #1" – 7:39
  13. "Sheer Profoundity" – 3:37
  14. "The One That Went Away" – 3:13
  • Nr. 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 10, 11, 14 by Sæther.
  • Nr. 3, 13 by Gebhardt/Ryan/Sæther.
  • Nr. 5, by Ryan/Sæther.
  • Nr. 9 by Gebhardt/Ryan/Sten/Sæther.
  • Nr. 12 by Ryan/Sæther/Burt.
  • Nr. 6 by Moondog.

[edit] Track listing (LP)

The LP version contains three songs that were left off the CD to fit the album onto one disc.

Side A:

  1. "Waiting For The One"
  2. "Nothing To Say"
  3. "Feedtime"
  4. "Gutwrench"
  5. "Sunchild"

Side B:

  1. "Mountain"
  2. "Tuesday Morning"
  3. "All Is Loneliness"

Side C:

  1. "Come On In"
  2. "Step Inside Again"
  3. "Demon Box"

Side D:

  1. "Babylon"
  2. "Mr. Who?"
  3. "Junior"
  4. "Plan #1"
  5. "Sheer Profoundity"
  6. "The One Who Went Away"
  • "Gutwrench" by Sæther.
  • "Mountain" by Sæther/Ryan/Gebhardt/Lien/Sten
  • "Mr. Who?" by Gebhardt/Ryan/Sæther

[edit] Personnel

with:

[edit] Miscellanea

  • The 11-minute long "Mountain" was released as an EP, because the band felt sorry for it being left off the CD version. It was also an integral part of their live sets back in 1993.
  • Demon Box should have been a double album, but the record label didn't approve to that.
  • Kim Hiorthøy did the cover artwork.
  • "Waiting for the One" and "The One who went away" is actually the same song, the first being an acoustic version resembling folk and the second being a rude punk-rocker. The International Tussler Society later took "Waiting for the One" as one of their signature tunes.
  • Starting an album with an acoustic version of one song and ending it with an electric version of the same song is a technique pioneered by Neil Young on his "Rust Never Sleeps" album from 1979.
  • There was a video made for "Nothing To Say".