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The Residents are an American art collective and art rock band best known for their avant-garde music and multimedia works. Since their first official release, Meet the Residents (1974), they have released over 60 albums, numerous music videos and short films, three CD-ROM projects, and ten DVDs over the course of over half a century.
Duck Stab!/Buster & Glen, later renamed Duck Stab, is the fifth studio album by American art rock group the Residents, released in November 1978.. It is named after the first side of the album, Duck Stab!, a seven-song EP released earlier in 1978; Buster and Glen, the B-side of the album, was intended to follow Duck Stab!.
The design of Meet the Residents, as well as its title, is a direct parody of the Beatles' 1964 Capitol Records debut, Meet the Beatles. The front cover features all four Beatles cartoonishly defaced, while the back cover is formatted identically to the original, substituting the sleeve notes, track listing, album and publishing credits, and crawfish heads and claws are drawn over the original ...
The Third Reich 'n Roll is the second studio album by the American art rock group the Residents, released on Ralph Records in 1976. The album consists of two side-long suites of "'semi-phonetic' interpretations of Top 40 rock and roll from the Sixties."
Not Available is the fourth studio album by the American band the Residents, released in 1978. [2] [3] The album was allegedly meant to only be released once its creators completely forgot about its existence (adhering to their "Theory of Obscurity," in which an artist's purest work is created without an audience) - however, due to ongoing delays in the release of Eskimo, Not Available was ...
The Ghost of Hope was The Residents' first non-instrumental album of entirely newly written material since 2008's The Bunny Boy, with a nine-year difference between the two. In between that time, the group toured their 'Randy, Chuck & Bob' trilogy of live shows, starting in 2010 with Talking Light and concluding in July 2016 with Shadowland. [ 3 ]
Commercial Album is the seventh studio album released by art rock group the Residents in 1980. It is commonly considered a follow-up to their 1978 album Duck Stab/Buster & Glen, in that it retains the former album's pop-oriented song structures.
Eskimo is the sixth studio album by American art rock group the Residents. [2] [3] The album was originally supposed to follow 1977's Fingerprince; however, due to many delays and arguments with management, it was not released until 1979.