Top Qs
Timeline
Chat
Perspective
Relief Through Release
1997 studio album by Tura Satana From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Remove ads
Relief Through Release is the second and final studio album by the American band Tura Satana. It was the band's only release under their current name after changing their name from Manhole. It was released in Europe on September 29, 1997,[1] and in the United States in April 1998.
Remove ads
Composition
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2023) |
According to AllMusic, Relief Through Release "is a solid testament to the capability of the nu-metal genre",[2] with Tairrie B's performance being compared to "a mixture of Courtney Love and Marilyn Manson".[2] The band's music was categorized as a "relentless assault on one's ears, musically sounding as raw and heavy as early Coal Chamber".[2]
Remove ads
Reception
![]() | This section needs expansion. You can help by adding to it. (May 2023) |
Like its predecessor, Relief Through Release received mixed-to-positive reviews from critics.[citation needed] AllMusic called the album "a solid chunk of nu-metal sludge that goes a long way in proving that female-fronted groups can be just as unforgiving and brutal in this predominantly male genre."[2]
Remove ads
Track listing
All songs written by Tairrie B and Scott Ueda, except where noted.
- "Welcome To Violence" — 0:09
- "Luna" — 3:58
- "Dry" (Ueda) — 3:53
- "Venus Diablo" — 3:22
- "Unclean" — 4:47
- "Flux" — 3:46
- "Eternalux" — 4:26
- "Storage" — 3:50
- "Scavenger Hunt" — 3:27
- "Negative Creep" (Kurt Cobain) — 2:58
- Nirvana cover featuring John Davis of Slick Fifty
- "Relapse" — 3:55
- "Last Rites" — 3:56
- "Omnia Vinat Amor" — 15:05
Personnel
- Tairrie B - Vocals
- Scott Mitsuo - Guitar
- Rico Villasenor - Bass
- Marcelo Palomino - Drums
- John Davis - Guest Vocals on Negative Creep
- Michael Vail Blum - Producer, Engineer, Mixer
Charts
References
Wikiwand - on
Seamless Wikipedia browsing. On steroids.
Remove ads