Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
God Hears Pleas of the Innocent
1995 studio album by Killdozer From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
God Hears Pleas of the Innocent is the sixth album by Killdozer, released in 1995.[6][7] It was the band's final album. "Pour Man" is a cover of the Lee Hazlewood song.[8]
Remove ads
Critical reception
The Washington Post wrote that "such tunes as 'The Buzzard' and 'Big Song of Hell' suggest an alternate universe where Black Sabbath taught Robert Johnson how to play the blues, rather than the other way around."[8] The Wisconsin State Journal deemed the album "another outrageously heavy slab of sludge-grunge."[9]
The Chicago Tribune determined that Killdozer is "still uproariously brutish, raucous, heavy and slow, and it still thankfully sounds like it records down a dirt road in the company of several dozen mysteriously buried corpses."[4] The Philadelphia Inquirer called God Hears Pleas of the Innocent "an offering of thick, sludgy rock and roll for the working man (and woman), and a rare mix of social consciousness with a sense of humor."[10]
Remove ads
Track listing
All tracks are written by Killdozer, except "Pour Man" by Lee Hazlewood.
Remove ads
Personnel
- Killdozer
- Michael Gerald – vocals, bass guitar
- Dan Hobson – drums
- Paul Zagoras – guitar
- Production and additional personnel
- Steve Albini – production, engineering, mixing
- Killdozer – production, mixing
References
External links
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads