Gob is the debut EP first release by Canadian Punk rock band Gob. It is the first release on Landspeed Records (LSCD-001).
The album was originally released on Positive Records then later re-released that same year on Landspeed Records. Both editions of the album feature similar covers but with different color schemes. The Positive Records edition is orange whereas the more widely known blue cover is the Landspeed Records re-release. It is their only release with Kelly Macauley on bass.
Odd numbered songs were written and sung by Theo and even numbered songs by Tom.
Tracks 1, 2, and 8 were re-recorded for their first full-length, Too Late... No Friends.
Gob may refer to:
GOB as an acronym may refer to:
! is an album by The Dismemberment Plan. It was released on October 2, 1995, on DeSoto Records. The band's original drummer, Steve Cummings, played on this album but left shortly after its release.
The following people were involved in the making of !:
"@" is a studio album by John Zorn and Thurston Moore. It is the first collaborative album by the duo and was recorded in New York City in February, 2013 and released by Tzadik Records in September 2013. The album consists of improvised music by Zorn and Moore that was recorded in the studio in real time with no edits or overdubs.
Allmusic said "@ finds two of New York City's longest-running fringe dwellers churning out sheets of collaborative sounds that conjoin their respective and distinct states of constant freak-out... These seven improvisations sound inspired without feeling at all heavy-handed or urgent. More so, @ succeeds with the type of conversational playing that could only be achieved by two masters so deep into their craft that it probably feels a lot like breathing to them by now".
All compositions by John Zorn and Thurston Moore
?! is the third studio album by Italian rapper Caparezza, and his first release not to use the former stage name MikiMix.
Reviewing the album for Allmusic, Jason Birchmeier wrote, "The Italian rapper drops his rhymes with just as much fluency and dexterity as his American peers throughout the album. [...] Caparezza's mastery of the Italian dialect [makes] this album so stunning."