Misplaced Pages

Gods and Monsters (Gary Lucas album)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
1992 studio album by Gary Lucas
Gods and Monsters
Studio album by Gary Lucas
Released1992
RecordedKnitting Factory, New York City, NY
GenreArt rock
Length44:33
LabelEnemy
ProducerGary Lucas
Gary Lucas chronology
Skeleton at the Feast
(1991)
Gods and Monsters
(1992)
Bad Boys of the Arctic
(1994)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusic
Rolling Stone

Gods and Monsters is the debut studio album of Gary Lucas, released in 1992 through Enemy Records.

Track listing

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Glo-Worm" 3:33
2."Skin the Rabbit"Gary Lucas, Rolo McGinty3:50
3."Poison Tree" 3:31
4."Jack Johnson/Ghost Rider"Miles Davis/Suicide4:22
5."Whip Named Lash" 5:04
6."Fool's Cap" 3:23
7."Astronomy Domine"Syd Barrett3:05
8."The Brain from Planet Eros"Gary Lucas, Tony Maimone5:01
9."Dream of a Russian Princess" 1:49
10."The Crazy Ray" 3:56
11."King Strong" 6:52

Personnel

Musicians
Production and additional personnel
  • John Azelvandre – engineering
  • Michael Blair – drums on "Jack Johnson/Ghostrider", percussion on "Whip Named Lash"
  • Harold Burgon – engineering
  • Johnny Byrne – engineering
  • Stephen Byrum – art direction, design
  • Greg Calbi – mastering
  • Anton Corbijn – photography
  • K-Rob – vocals on "The Crazy Ray"
  • Jon Langford – vocals and guitar on "The Brain from Planet Eros"
  • Keith Leblanc – drums on "King Strong", programming
  • Tony Maimone – bass guitar on "The Brain from Planet Eros"
  • Francis Manzella – engineering
  • Skip McDonald – engineering
  • Paul Now – sampler, bass guitar on "The Crazy Ray" and "King Strong"
  • Mary Margaret O'Hara – vocals on "Poison Tree"
  • Chuck Valle – engineering

References

  1. Foss, Richard. "Gods and Monsters". Allmusic. Retrieved February 15, 2013.
  2. columnist (February 4, 1993). "Gods and Monsters". Rolling Stone. p. 68.
Gary Lucas
Studio albums
Collaboration albums
Live albums
EPs
Related


Stub icon

This 1990s rock album–related article is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: