- White House Bird Seed Zip Hoodie
Enjoy the videos and music you love, upload original content, and share it all with friends, family, and the world on YouTube. Create & stream a free custom radio station based on the album Bird Seed by Whitehouse on iHeartRadio! Rewind 10 Seconds. “Bird Seed,” released in 2003 under the custom label Susan Lawly, can be accredited as being the most popular Whitehouse album. Austria’s Prix Ars Electronica awards presented Bird Seed with. Nearly ten years since original release, Whitehouse's uncompromising 'Bird Seed' is available on vinyl once again. It's later period Whitehouse, some 20 odd years into their oeuvre, with William Bennett producing and Philip Best ranting. It's also the point at which the African and voudun rhythms which inform William Best's scintillating Cut Hands project really take hold, from the incredible. Bird Seed by Released February 13, 2003 Recorded 2001 - 2002, Length 42: 46 Susan Lawly William Bennett chronology (2001) Bird Seed (2003) (2006) Professional ratings Review scores Source Rating Brainwashed very positive C Bird Seed is the seventeenth album by group released in 2003 by their own record label, Susan Lawly.
White House Bird Seed Zip Hoodie
Whitehouse are a band that people either seem to love or hate with an extreme passion. I myself find myself falling into the first catagory, and this their 17th studio album isn't going to make those who hate them drastically change their opinion either. 'Bird Seed' is quite easily Whitehouse's most accessable(!) studio recording to date, but still remains to be a brutally uncompromising piece of work. The sonic assault of 'Why You Never Became a Dancer' (with the voice of Phillip Best belting out the opening lyric 'Can I suggest you: Get Fucked!') is a great start to the record, and a good lead into previous single, and already established WH favourite, 'Wriggle Like A Fucking Eel'. Probably the most powerful track on the album, and a definate high point in a similar way to how 'A Cunt Like You' was on 1998's 'Mummy & Daddy' record. I find 'Wriggle...' to be an oddly uplifting listen, and quite different to a lot of which follows it. 'Philosophy', a reworking of the first track on 'Mummy & Daddy' is one of the darker moments on the record, with an ear piercing screech being drowned out by William Bennetts sinister deep spoken vocals, and 'Cut Hands Has the Solution' could almost be drescribed as acoustic with Bennett and Best ranting over the top of the solid hit of what sounds like to be somekind of tom drum. The only disapointing part of 'Bird Seed' is the title track, another inclusion of Peter Sotos' cut and paste audio clips from interviews with victims of sexual abuse. What was quite chilling and effective the first time this was used as the track 'Private' on 'Mummy & Daddy', has now become boring and predictable (Although full marks to Aphex Twin for DJ-ing this at the Barbican last year!!!).
In my opinion, 'Bird Seed' is some of Whitehouse's best work to date, and is a lot more consistent than their previous record 'Cruise' (which was still pretty good). Whilst a lot of the extreme nature and mystery which surrounded the band in their early years has seemed to have wiltered away gradually over recent times, it's good to see that their recordings are still uncompromising. Even in this day and age, there is no-one really quite like Whitehouse, and how many other bands can you say that about?