Shopping > Music > Tonio K. > Life in the Foodchain

Tonio K. - Life in the Foodchain (CD)

Album Details: Life in the Foodchain

Release Date:01/01/1978
Label:Gadfly
UPC:076605220822

Other Available Formats: Life in the Foodchain

User Reviews: Life in the Foodchain

  • Overall:

    Tonio K. - Life In the Foodchain

    By Yahoo! Shopping User  Mar 3, 2002

    Tonio K. is one of my favorite artists. "The Funky Western Civilization" would have to be my favorite from this album. The lyrics are typically Mr. K, following the his famous vocalizing. Don't Miss It!

Pro Reviews: Life in the Foodchain

  • All Music Guide

    One of the best things about the late-'70s punk rock explosion is that it changed the rules for pop musicians across the board, and while Tonio K. wasn't a for-real punk rocker (or even really new wave), there's no way he could have made an album as willfully strange and bitterly witty as Life in the Foodchain without Elvis Costello or Johnny Rotten first raising the stakes in the rock outrage department. And it's a good thing; Tonio K. (aka Steve Krikorian) was actually a staunch Leftist moralist wearing the cloak of a raving lunatic, and on Life in the Foodchain, his rampantly cynical trades about the abuse of wealth, the collapse of values, and the emotional abuse that passed for love near the end of the 20th century cut like a chainsaw while also managing to be pretty damn funny. "The Ballad of the Night the Clocks All Quit (And the Government Failed)" is nearly as ambitious as its title (and even funnier), while "Life in the Foodchain" and "The Funky Western Civilization" say a lo...t more about the failings of our culture than most "serious" songwriters were offering in 1979, and side two's meditations on romance (especially "American Love Affair" and "How Come I Can't See You in My Mirror?") make Warren Zevon sound like James Taylor. And while one might wish that Tonio K. had had a band as tough and brittle as the Attractions backing him, he and producer Rob Fraboni got an admirably hard-rocking, stripped-down sound from their band of studio professionals (including Earl Slick, Albert Lee, and Garth Hudson) -- and Tonio K. was way ahead of the hipster curve in giving Dick Dale a guest shot on a couple cuts. And who wouldn't love an album released by the same people responsible for Dan Fogelberg's career that featured the line "I wish I was as mellow/As for instance Jackson Browne/But 'Fountain of Sorrow' my ass, motherf--ker/I hope you find up in the ground"? A masterpiece. - Mark Deming, All Music Guide Read more Less

Compare Prices: Life in the Foodchain

Store Store Rating Price Notes/Coupons

Barnes and Noble

Write a review

$12.69Total Price N/A New Item everyday low prices Go to Store

Amazon.com Marketplace

48 Ratings

(29 Reviews)

Write a review

$11.75Total Price N/A New Item

4 Coupons & Deals

fantastic prices with ease & comfort of amazon
Go to Store

Tower Records

51 Ratings

(41 Reviews)

Write a review

$13.87Total Price N/A New Item free us shipping for items over $25!!! Go to Store

Rate & Write a Review: Life in the Foodchain

All fields marked with * are required
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
0 out of 5.0 stars
Maximum of 4,000 characters
Cancel

Rate & Write a Review: Life in the Foodchain

Thank You. Your review has been posted.
View your postClose

Biography

Tonio K.

New Wave ironist Tonio K. was born Steve Krikorian in Palm Desert, California on April 15, 1949; the son of Armenian immigrants, he was raised in nearby Fresno, and while in high school formed his first band, the Rake's Progress. In 1973, he appeared on his first album, Remnants, as a member of the former Buddy Holly backing band the Crickets; after going solo, he assum... Read more