Monday, 23 June 2008
Dwarves
Artist: Dwarves
Genre(s):
Rock
Discography:
The Dwarves Must Die
Year: 2004
Tracks: 15
Free Cocaine
Year: 1999
Tracks: 39
Horror Stories
Year: 1995
Tracks: 15
Dwarves began in Chicago as a stripling garage rock outfit called the Suburban Nightmare, a sound that was part carried all over into the low Dwarves press release, 1986's Horror Stories. After the first album, Dwarves blazed crosswise the country for seven-spot more years, going a go after of blood from their have self-inflicted gashes, a shack of drug stories (according to popular myth, bassist XXXXX disappeared in Detroit on a crack binge during a 1992 circuit, never to be heard from once more), a dog (or narrative) of outre stage-show sex acts, and a trail of legion 15-minute-long live shows.
Dwarves unsurprisingly self-destructed shortly after a failed humbug, whereby the isthmus issued a press release stating that guitar player He Who Cannot Be Named had died. The album Sugarfix besides carried a testimonial to the guitar player, wHO was actually identical much awake. Sub Pop was not diverted and dropped the band, which later re-formed for 1997's Young and Good Looking. Come Clean followed in early 2000. Four years by and by the band returned with The Dwarves Must Die, including guests Dexter Holland from the Offspring, Nick Oliveri from Queens of the Stone Age, Nash Kato from Urge Overkill, and voice doer Gary Owens.