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Plasmatics - Coup de Grace (CD)

Coup de Grace
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Album Details: Coup de Grace

Release Date:04/02/2000
Label:Plasmatics Media
UPC:663609011022

Track List: Coup de Grace

  1. Put Your Love In Me
  2. Stop
  3. Rock 'N' Roll
  4. Just Like On TV
  5. Uniformed Guards
  6. No Class
  1. Mistress Of Passion
  2. Lightning Breaks
  3. Path Of Glory
  4. Country Fairs
  5. The Damned

Pro Reviews: Coup de Grace

  • All Music Guide

    This 2000 disc (rereleased in 2002 by Plasmatics Media) constitutes the only album of fresh material from the Plasmatics since their disbanding in 1983. Fresh but not unfamiliar, Coup de Grace is made up of the demos for the band's 1982 release, Coup d'Etat. And as one might expect, it's raw and raunchy stuff. In toto, this is a somewhat uneven effort. Some songs are quite strong; others don't stack up so well. But what's always fascinating about the 'Matics is the band's sociopolitical rantobservations, which came at a time when most of the music world was dressing up in skinny ties and jumping on the new wave fun bus. It's hard to ignore a song like "Uniformed Guards" with a lyric that goes: "Uniformed guards take your neighbors away in the night/Turn out the lights and keep yourself out of sight/On the six o'clock news they say everything's really all right." Considering that 20 years later George W. Bush's America was living under the Patriot Act and the Homeland Security Act, and ...fundamentally altering the notions of individual privacy and civil liberties, the Plasmatics don't seem quite as disposable as many critics have claimed. The plum tracks are the leadoff number, "Put Your Love in Me" (which later showed up on the 2002 compilation disc of the same name), the thudding metal warning song "Stop" ("Stop, with the rape of the Earth/You were not made for this/Stop, with your campaign of hate/Stop, before it's too late"), the AC/DClike "Rock n Roll," and a pretty hot cover of Motörhead's "No Class." While the Cars were singing about shaking it up back in the early '80s, wildcat frontwoman Wendy O. Williams and the Plasmatics were doing their damnedest to do just that. Which is about as rock roll as it gets. - Adrian Zupp, All Music Guide Read more Less

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Biography

Plasmatics

Although their "fame" lasted for a full 15 minutes, few bands entered rock roll with such a controversial reputation as did the Plasmatics. Founded by Rod Swenson, a porn film producer who fancied himself the next Malcolm McLaren, the Plasmatics were fronted by sex film "star" Wendy O. Williams, a muscular, raspy-voiced "singer" who generally wore next to nothing onsta... Read more