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The album takes its name from the band's apartment where the album was recorded, which the band nicknamed "The Pod". [11] The album's cover art is a takeoff of the 1975 The Best of Leonard Cohen cover; Ween simply positioned a photo of part-time bassist Mean Ween's head (wearing a "Scotchgard powered bong") over Cohen's cover art, and altered the title text and other graphics. [2]
Pod is the debut studio album by American alternative rock band the Breeders, released by 4AD records on May 29, 1990. Engineered by Steve Albini , the album features band leader Kim Deal on vocals and guitar, Josephine Wiggs on bass, Britt Walford on drums, and Tanya Donelly on guitar.
P.O.D. (an initialism for Payable on Death [9]) is an American Christian metal band formed in 1992 and based in San Diego, California.The band's line-up consists of vocalist Paul Joshua "Sonny" Sandoval, bassist Mark "Traa" Daniels, lead guitarist Marcos Curiel, and drummer Noah "Wuv" Bernardo.
Acoustic albums 1 The discography of American rock band P.O.D. consists of 11 original studio albums , 1 acoustic studio album, 3 live albums , 1 compilation album , 2 video albums , 3 extended plays , 22 singles , 3 promotional singles and 26 music videos .
The cover of The Pod was a parody of the cover of the 1975 Leonard Cohen album, The Best of Leonard Cohen, but with the head of Chris "Mean Ween" Williams (who played bass on the Pod track "Alone") in place of Cohen's.
Their debut studio album Pod was released in May 1990, but was not commercially successful. [2] After the revival of the Pixies and Throwing Muses in 1990, The Breeders became mostly inactive until the Pixies' breakup in 1993. With a new lineup, The Breeders released their Safari EP in 1992, followed by their second studio album Last Splash in ...
In September 2017, Loudwire ranked Satellite as the band's best album, calling it "P.O.D.'s definitive album" and "a record that excels in all aspects". [41] In February 2021, the album was included on Loudwire's list of "The 40 Best Rock Albums of 2001", saying, "After their 1999 breakout, P.O.D. absolutely commanded the airwaves with 2001’s ...
Cross Rhythms gave the album a perfect score, describing it as "a fine exponent of rap-core at it's finest, and the best album by P.O.D. thus far." [4] In June 2000, Mark Jenkins of The Washington Post said the album "drops Bob Marley refrains and makes common cause with U2 by covering that band's "Bullet the Blue Sky." Mostly, though, P.O.D ...