Gorillaz
Demon Days
Label ©  Parlophone
Release Year  2005
Length  50:44
Genre  Trip Hop
Personal Star Rating [1-5]  
  Ref#  G-0036
Bitrate  ~193 Kbps
  Other  
  Info  
    Track Listing:
      1.  
      Intro  
       1:03  
      2.  
      Last living souls  
       3:10  
      3.  
      Kids with guns  
       3:45  
      4.  
      O green world  
       4:32  
      5.  
      Dirty harry  
       3:43  
      6.  
      Feel good inc.  
       3:41  
      7.  
      El mañana  
       3:50  
      8.  
      Every planet we reach is dead  
       4:53  
      9.  
      November has come  
       2:41  
      10.  
      All alone  
       3:30  
      11.  
      White light  
       2:08  
      12.  
      DARE  
       4:04  
      13.  
      Fire coming out of a monkey's head  
       3:16  
      14.  
      Don't get lost in heaven  
       2:00  
      15.  
      Demon days  
       4:28  
    Additional info: | top
      Drop an anvil at the recording of Demon Days, the celeb-packed second album from Gorillaz ? the Technicolor front for Blur's Damon Albarn, producer Dan the Automator, artist Jamie Hewlett, and rapper Del Tha Funky Homosapien ? and you'd probably have crushed a half-dozen B-list musicians, a couple of style icons, and the odd Hollywood star besides. Given that it's been co-produced by Dangermouse, creator of copyright-flaunting hip-hop epic The Grey Album, you'd be right to suspect many of these are rappers: Daisy Age legends De La Soul add zing to the tweaked disco-hop of "Feel Good Inc", while Roots Manuva adds a touch of brooding introspection to the juddering "All Alone". But there's some strange surprises, too: a cameo from Dennis Hopper, whose monologue on "Fire Coming Out Of The Monkey's Head" is an eerie highlight; ex-Happy Mondays frontman Shaun Ryder, who rambles along enjoyably on "DARE" ? even though he never gets much further than announcing the song's title; or the welcome return of Neneh Cherry, who joins Albarn in song with a snatch of Salt N Pepa's "Push It" on the menacing "Kids with Guns". A dark return from these dedicated culture vultures, but thankfully, not at the expense of their cartoonish pop presence. --Louis Pattison
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