Bucketheadland 2
Bucketheadland 2 | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by Buckethead | ||||
Released | October 14, 2003 | |||
Genre | Industrial metal, experimental, spoken word | |||
Length | 58:24 | |||
Label | ION | |||
Producer | Dan Monti | |||
Buckethead chronology | ||||
|
Professional ratings | |
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Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
Allmusic | [1] |
Wilson & Alroy | [2] |
Musique Machine | [3] |
Bucketheadland 2 is Buckethead's tenth studio album. Released in 2003, Bucketheadland 2 is the sequel to Buckethead's debut album, Bucketheadland, a concept album about a fictional "abusement" park.
The album was nominated for the 2004 Shortlist Music Prize.[4]
Track listing
All tracks written by Buckethead and Dan Monti.
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
1. | "Welcome" | 0:13 |
2. | "Slaughter Zone Entrance" | 0:11 |
3. | "The Cobra's Hood" | 2:58 |
4. | "Transportation Options" | 0:51 |
5. | "Machete Mirage" | 3:01 |
6. | "Slaughter Buddies Outside the Revenge Wedge" | 0:21 |
7. | "We Cannot Guarantee Bodily Harm" | 0:17 |
8. | "John Merrick - Elephant Man Bones Explosion" | 4:53 |
9. | "Taxidermy Tots" | 0:23 |
10. | "Bloody Rainbow Spiraling Sherbert Scoop" | 2:55 |
11. | "Can You Get Past Albert?" | 0:27 |
12. | "Vladimir Pockets' Incredible Bloated Slunk Show" | 3:10 |
13. | "The Ballad of the Inside-Out Face" | 1:05 |
14. | "The Battery Cage Brawls (Cage Announcer: The Ghost of Abraham Lincoln; Winner Has to Eat His Way Out)" | 2:18 |
15. | "Ferris Wheel Apology" | 0:08 |
16. | "Can You Help Me?" | 1:02 |
17. | "Grimm's Sponsorship" | 0:14 |
18. | "Realistic Coop Replica" | 0:42 |
19. | "Frozen Brains Tell No Tales" | 5:33 |
20. | "Rooster Landing (1st Movement) / Lime Time (2nd Movement)" | 2:35 |
21. | "Two Pints" | 0:27 |
22. | "Health & Safety Advisory" | 2:14 |
23. | "Digger's Den" | 3:13 |
24. | "One-Way Ticket to Grab Bag Alley" | 0:46 |
25. | "Fun for You" | 1:03 |
26. | "Carpal Tunnel Tomb Torker" | 3:35 |
27. | "Today's Schedule" | 0:08 |
28. | "The Corpse Plower" | 3:20 |
29. | "Unemployment Blues" | 2:05 |
30. | "Slaughter Zone Exit" | 8:16 |
Total length: |
58:24 |
Notes
- Track 19, "Frozen Brains Tell No Tales", uses the same exclamation at 0:57 that is used in track 5, "Want Some Slaw?", from Buckethead's second album, "Giant Robot.
- Track 23, Digger's Den, has a brief exclamation around 0:09 of Bootsy Collins saying "Hit me" which is sampled in the song Bird With A Hole In The Stomach off of Buckethead's 2006 album, The Elephant Man's Alarm Clock.
- Track 26, Carpal Tunnel Tomb Torker, features Bootsy Collins exclaiming "I'm Cocoa for Cuckoo Puffs!" On Bucketheadland, Bootsy is similarly heard singing the jingle for Sugar Crisp.
- Track 30, Slaughter Zone Exit contains a few hidden tracks after random intervals of silence, including many of the spoken word pieces heard throughout the album.
- The tracks Slaughter Zone Entrance and Slaughter Zone Exit would be later used in the track The Ravines of Falsehood on Buckethead's 2004 album, The Cuckoo Clocks of Hell.
- It is possible that the reason for the hidden tracks and silence in the final track are because Buckethead wanted the longest track on the album to be exactly 8:16. This is probably because the longest track on Bucketheadland (Computer Master) is 8:16. This would make the two longest tracks from his debut and the 10th anniversary sequel the same length.
Credits
- Taxidermy, production, 6-string wedge & pieces by Buckethead.
- Co-produced, co-written, mixed, engineered and programmed by Dan Monti.
- Recorded at the Coop & the Del Rey Brewer Factory.
- Voices: Bootsy Collins, Li'l Littles, Keystone Brewer, Bill Monti [the Towel], P-Sticks, Albert.
- Additional drums: Brain.
- Mechanical morgue: Dead.
- Ferris Wheel [Page 1]: P-Sticks.
- Artwork, dialogue & research: Bryan Theiss for Frankenseuss Animatronics.
- Buckethead memorabilia courtesy of the Ronald L. Witherspoon Collection.
- Special thanks: Bootsy, Norm, Li'l Littles, Keystone Brewer, Bill the Towel, P-Sticks, Brain, Dan Monti, Frankenseuss.
- Executive producer: Norman Isaacs.
References
- ↑ "Buckethead 2". Allmusic. Retrieved February 8, 2012.
- ↑ "Buckethead and Praxis". Warr.org. Retrieved 2012-02-09.
- ↑ "Buckethead - Bucketheadland 2". Musique Machine. November 13, 2003. Retrieved April 18, 2014.
- ↑ Archived October 19, 2004, at the Wayback Machine.
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