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Tu-Plang : ウィキペディア英語版
Tu-Plang

''Tu-Plang'' (ตู้เพลง Thai for ''Jukebox'') (1996) was the first album released by Regurgitator after making two EPs. The band chose to record the album in Bangkok, Thailand, to the quandary of its label, Warner Music, which was uncertain as to what terms A&R executive Michael Parisi had contracted.〔"Pig City: From the Saints to Savage Garden" by Andrew Stafford, Published by University of Queensland Press, 2004, p.280〕 Ely later said, "We didn't want to do it in just any old place, so we had a tour in Europe and Japan booked and our drummer Martin said, 'let's stop in Thailand on the way and check out some studios,' so we did and we found this place."
Producer Magoo later said the studio, "was (by ) this guy (was in the band ) Carabao. He was described to us as the local, Thai, Bruce Springsteen. He had this compound in outer Bangkok. We'd drive there and it's in the middle of all these slums. There were wild chickens running around everywhere. There were open sewers and stuff like that."
It was the band's only full-length work released in the USA. This was the first of three Regurgitator albums to be made available on vinyl; the others were Unit in 1998 and SuperHappyFunTimesFriends in 2011. It was re-issued on vinyl by Valve in October 2013.
In 2012, Regurgitator performed the entire album along with Unit on the Australian ''RetroTech'' tour.
==Track Information==

* Track 1, "I Sucked a Lot of Cock to Get Where I Am" was only released as a single in the USA and UK in November 1996. Within Australia, the song was attacked by radio personality Alan Jones, who campaigned to have it removed from airplay. It was voted #23 in the Triple J Hottest 100 of 1996. Yeomans later said, "I recall Warner 'loving' the song but being a bit apprehensive about leaving the title as it was. I believe they bandied other more palatable titles about– "Rinsing" comes to mind– but inevitably caved into our infantile demands."〔
* Track 2 "Kong Foo Sing" was the second single released in Australia. It was voted No. 15 in the Triple J Hottest 100 of 1996. The song was inspired by Yeomans sending a box of Kong Foo Sing fortune cookies in an attempt to woo future partner Janet from Spiderbait.〔
* Track 3 "G7 Dick Electro Boogie" contains samples of street sounds in Bangkok. Yeomans later said, " I think this songs small claim to fame is attributed to the "gang-rape a cripple" line nicely taken out of context by a few bored conservative factions floating around at the time.
* Track 4 is a Muzak version of "Couldn't Do It" off the band's first self-titled EP.
* Track 5, "Miffy's Simplicity" was the third single released in Australia.
* Track 10 "F.S.O" is an abbreviation of 'Fuck Shit Off'. It was the first single from the album to be released in Australia. Ely later said, "Quan wrote this about his sister-in-law and how she got married to this guy who turned out to be a brut and was violent with her. This song is his anger at the situation."〔
* Track 13 is an up-tempo version of "Blubber Boy" off the band's second EP, ''New''.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Tu-Plang」の詳細全文を読む



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