Difference between revisions of "Uncle Meat"
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The teeth motif on the front and back covers satirized the old teenybopper posters that had featured "kissable close-ups" of the Beatles' lips, gums and teeth. | The teeth motif on the front and back covers satirized the old teenybopper posters that had featured "kissable close-ups" of the Beatles' lips, gums and teeth. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Or It could be that [[Cal Schenkel]] had just moved into a new studio on Melrose Avenue that was formerly a dentist's office and had loads of dental stuff still in there just waiting to be used. | ||
==Conceptual Continuity== | ==Conceptual Continuity== |
Revision as of 17:01, 20 April 2005
Contents
Release info
Tracks
- Uncle Meat: Main Title Theme (01:56)
- The Voice Of Cheese (00:27)
- Nine Types Of Industrial Pollution (06:00)
- Zolar Czakl (00:55)
- Dog Breath, In The Year Of The Plague (05:51)
- The Legend Of The Golden Arches (03:28)
- Louie Louie (02:19)
- The Dog Breath Variations (01:49)
- Sleeping In A Jar (00:51)
- Our Bizarre Relationship (01:05)
- The Uncle Meat Variations (04:46)
- Electric Aunt Jemina (01:46)
- Prelude To King Kong (03:39)
- God Bless America (Live At The Whisky-A-Go-Go) (01:11)
- A Pound For A Brown On The Bus (01:29)
- Ian Underwood Whips It Out (Live On Stage In Copenhagen) (05:06)
- Mr. Green Genes (03:14)
- We Can Shoot You (02:03)
- If We'd All Been Living In California... (01:14)
- The Air (02:57)
- Project X (04:49)
- Cruising For Burgers (02:18)
- Uncle Meat Film Excerpt, Part 1 (37:35) - 1987 CD
- Tengo Na Minchia Tanta (03:46) - 1987 CD
- Uncle Meat Film Excerpt, Part 2 (03:51) - 1987 CD
- King Kong Itself (As Played By The Mothers In A Studio) (00:51)
- King Kong (It's Magnificence As Interpreted By Don DeWild) (01:19)
- King Kong (As Motorhead Explains It) (01:45)
- King Kong (The Gardner Varieties) (06:18)
- King Kong (As Played By 3 Deranged Good Humor Trucks) (00:34)
- King Kong (Live On A Flat Bed Diesel In The Middle Of A Race Track At A Miami Pop Festival) (07:25)
Writing/Production credits
Players
Background
The teeth motif on the front and back covers satirized the old teenybopper posters that had featured "kissable close-ups" of the Beatles' lips, gums and teeth.
Or It could be that Cal Schenkel had just moved into a new studio on Melrose Avenue that was formerly a dentist's office and had loads of dental stuff still in there just waiting to be used.