Kill Your Girlfriend
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Kill Your Girlfriend | ||
EP by Theatre of Ice | ||
Released | 1988 | |
Genre | Deathrock | |
Label | Orphanage Records | |
Professional reviews | ||
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See article. |
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Theatre of Ice chronology | ||
In The Attic (1987) |
Kill Your Girlfriend (1988) |
This Is What You Get For Christmas (1988) |
Kill Your Girlfriend is the second ep recorded by the Deathrock/Gothic Rock band Theatre of Ice. Easily the crudest and sloppiest recording the band had yet to release, it rapidly became the groups largest selling record.
Contents |
[edit] Musicians
- Brent Johnson - Vocals
- Dale Garrard - Guitar
- Craig Moore - Guitar
- George Carlston - Bass
- Richard Hillquist - Drums
[edit] Track listing
- Kill Your Girlfriend (live) - 4.03
- Big Bikes at Nite - 1.48
- Mommy Stinks Real Bad Now - 3.39
- Miron - 3.05
[edit] Reviews
- Maximum RockNRoll - Demented, sick, deranged, perverted, degrading -- in other words, pure enjoyment. This is brilliant raunchy rock and roll, obviously the product of disturbed minds. Parental guidance suggested. (DF)
- Flipside - Theatre of Ice are easily one of the more consistent bands releasing albums and singles. They play an extremely varied sound, ranging from rock and roll, new wave, to gloom -- all extremely catchy and well executed and this ep does not tanish their image. (Krk)
- Factsheet Five, Massachusetts - These recordings are more metallic and sillier than their early, wonderful gothic stuff. and it's quite a loss. Any appeal of thus is likely to be strictly as a collector's item, for as a non-gloom band they're not too good. (MG)
- Forced Exposure - ...much more punk rock than the last one, this sounds like the sorta psych that used to find a home on England's Lightning Records. Production values still hover in the Plan 9 zone and the spook shit's still whacked-out enough to stand up and puggle and this packed to webs with real loose skunk-psych string action. [C/U 10]
- Conflict - Almost metal song about wasting your squeeze, done to what vaguely sounds like the tune of Roky's "Bermuda", but I could be hallucinating. Vocalist sound nothing like Peter Murphy or the guy from Empty Rituals, so this is a genuine progress, mark the date on your calendar.