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The Distillers - Coral Fang [Edited Cover] (CD)

Coral Fang [Edited Cover]
$8.93 - $13.98
5 out of 5.0 stars 39 Ratings (37 Reviews)

Album Details: Coral Fang [Edited Cover]

Release Date:10/14/2003
Label:Sire / London/Rhino
UPC:093624858621

User Reviews: Coral Fang [Edited Cover]

  • Overall:

    Coral Fang-tastic

    By garagepunkman  Jun 8, 2004

    Pros: its striking individuality, and superb distillerness

    Cons: not as heavy or punky as its predecessors

    i love this album...its different, from all its competition. it beats the same sounding rubbish from other bands. although lighter and more produced and edited than SSDH and s/t, their previous two albums, i think it still works as well, though in m...y eyes, i prefer the first two. as brody says in one of the interviews, the band needs to rise up, to more mainstream punk, they have done so successfully, i think this album rocks. Read more Less

  • Overall:

    Lyrics:

    Music:

    *THE BEST EVER*

    By perla555@sbcglobal.net  Nov 29, 2003

    Pros: everything rules about this new CD

    Cons: nothing

    I love this new CD by the DISTILLERS its the best Ive heard yet i just dont know where to start telling you about the greatness of this CD well first of all the lyrics are the best Ive seen in my entire 14 years of life lol and the music the beat th...e rythim it just speaks to me and tells me that this is the music that the whole world should be listening to over all the CD just is the bomb so get ur self to the nearest store that sells CD's and buy it because I know from experience that you won't regret buying it :D!* Read more Less

Pro Reviews: Coral Fang [Edited Cover]

  • All Music Guide

    By far the most ambitious album yet to bear the Distillers name, Coral Fang is by turns darker, more polished, and more poppy than any of the band's previous work. The history of Brody Dalle -- now back to her maiden name after separating from Tim Armstrong -- precedes her and certainly informs this album, but it's not necessary to know to appreciate Coral Fang's themes of losing and finding love and dealing with a difficult past. Considering her troubled early years, her relationships with rock stars, and most importantly, the music she makes, it would be easy to call her the new Courtney Love. But the comparison is more than a little apt, and Coral Fang delivers the kind of vicarious, drama-queen punk rock thrills that haven't been around since Live Through This. However, even with their lineup switches, the Distillers have always sounded more like a band than any incarnation of Hole ever did; Dalle's voice might be even more desperate-sounding than Love at her most vitriolic; and, a...rguably, the Distillers' best songs sound more genuine. Direct comparisons aside, Coral Fang does feature some of the best jagged punk-pop in recent memory in "Drain the Blood," where Dalle sings, "I never met a pearl like you/Who could shimmer and rot the same time through" and the nasty breakup song "Hall of Mirrors." "The Hunger" is among the best songs the Distillers have ever written, mixing pretty, yearning verses with firebomb choruses. "The Gallow Is God" is another standout, a heavy, lurching, In Utero-esque catharsis that makes up for its lack of originality with its quality. "Oh my heart it sings suicide," the song begins, and along with titles like "Die on a Rope," it conveys the drama of the album's first half. This drama bleeds into melodrama more often than it should, lending an obviousness that detracts from the Distillers' power. The cover art for both versions of Coral Fang reflects the band's ham-fisted tendencies: the regular artwork features woodcut-like illustrations of bleeding, nude, and scantily-clad women, often pregnant, with razorblades for heads (if they have any at all). The so-called "clean" artwork -- which features the same music as the regular version -- announces its status as a "SAFE COVER" in capital letters and features a sunny vista of cute 'n' cuddly animals (save for a few subversive-looking raccoons, weasels, and skunks skulking in the foreground). Gil Norton's shiny production also makes songs such as "Dismantle Me" sound emptier than they actually are and turns the band into a machine that sounds a little too well-oiled, though it's impossible to totally defang Dalle's vocals and personality. Coral Fang's second half is less dramatic than its gut-wrenching first half, which is both a relief and a letdown. Still, "Beat Your Heart Out" is poppy enough to make Avril Lavigne watch her back, and "Tonight You're Only Here to Know" is another bruised ballad that suggests the Distillers might hit harder with their softer songs. "Death Sex," the aptly named, noisy 11-minute grind that closes the album, is at the very least out of place with the more neatly packaged music here and could be seen as a misguided attempt to inject the album with some more punk sensibility. Strangely, while The Distillers and Sing Sing Death House recalled the punk of the '70s and '80s, this album sounds like a throwback to mid-'90s alternative rock without actually sounding dated. Coral Fang has its fair share of flaws, but it's impassioned enough to have plenty of bite despite them. - Heather Phares, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

The Distillers

The hardcore punk outfit the Distillers first came together in late 1998 when Aussie native Brody Armstrong met bassist Kim Chi at work and realized their love for playing. Soon they hooked up with Detroit guitarist Rose Casper and drummer Matt for an angst-ridden rage familiar in the pioneers before them: Smith, the Plasmatics' Wendy O. Williams, and the Circle Jerks. ... Read more