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Invisible Girl
King Khan & BBQ Show
Invisible Girl
Genres: Pop, Rock
 
Long-awaited 2009 release from the Garage Rock outfit, their third full-length album. Invisible Girl will not disappoint the band's admirers or their devoted cult following. The album marks a return to the trademark Doo-Wo...  more »

     
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CD Details

All Artists: King Khan & BBQ Show
Title: Invisible Girl
Members Wishing: 3
Total Copies: 0
Label: In the Red Records
Original Release Date: 1/1/2009
Re-Release Date: 11/3/2009
Genres: Pop, Rock
Style:
Number of Discs: 1
SwapaCD Credits: 1
UPC: 759718518122

Synopsis

Album Description
Long-awaited 2009 release from the Garage Rock outfit, their third full-length album. Invisible Girl will not disappoint the band's admirers or their devoted cult following. The album marks a return to the trademark Doo-Wop-laced, anthemic Garage Rock that earned the band their fame and their infamy. The record exhibits their effortless fluency in Rock 'n' Roll's tenets and traditions, but as Mark Sultan (otherwise known as BBQ) notes, it also includes a song so vile that it cannot even be mentioned.
 

CD Reviews

A Polished Album for King Khan and the BBQ Show
A. Woodley | 12/21/2009
(4 out of 5 stars)

"This is a polished album for a band like King Khan and the BBQ Show, but it is nowhere near a polished album. If you've heard their previous efforts, you already know this is a raw band. That sound still carries over onto this effort but is a little sleaker. The album is also a little bit slower than their previous efforts, but that's not a bad thing. The slower vibe of the album gives the guys a chance to show of their musical skills which seem to be getting better and better. Even though the album moves a little slower as a whole, their are some great rocking tracks like "Animal Party." Their are also those classy (scarastically used of course) numbers we have come to expect from the band like "Anala." If you like King Khan, this album won't disappoint."
Sometimes brilliant, sometimes bad, unnecessarily vulgar
Michael A. Borrowman | Santa Cruz, CA United States | 01/18/2010
(3 out of 5 stars)

"Brilliant if you like early 60s music that's been updated and influenced by punk. Anala (Track # 1) has a fantastic doo wop beat, Invisible girl (#2) is just a very good song and I'll be loving you and Third Ave (# 3 and 6) are old fashioned songs, although Third Ave does lose it's way half way through. Truth or dare and Lonely boy (# 7 and 9) are like Ramones lost classics. Awful at times in particularly with Animal house (#4). It must work in concert or something, but is a silly bore(no pun intended). The rest of the songs are fairly forgettable. Unnecessarily vulgar with Anal-a (#1), and tastebuds (#7) which told me more about Khan's dreams for his anatomy than I ever wanted to know."