Sister Fellatio Says
by
Count Slowly
humor
Count Slowly says:
I was inspired by Jim Backus's "Delicious," if you haven't heard, you must. Gloria and I went into the vocal booth and adlibed, The Greg Kihn Band one taked it, and the rest is history. ...
Sister Fellatio Says
pop, rock, punk rock, power pop, garage, humor
I was inspired by Jim Backus's "Delicious," if you haven't heard, you must. Gloria and I went into the vocal booth and adlibed, The Greg Kihn Band one taked it, and the rest is history.
Night Baseball
hip hop
"Night Baseball" came to The Count one day on the way to the recording studio in Greg Kihn's VW. It was recorded that day before the band started their session. No one had rehearsed. No one had even heard it, before the moment the record button went was pressed. This is the one and only take. It just goes to show how tight the band was. Here's the line-up in order of appearance: Larry Lynch on drums, Steve Wright on bass, Dave Carpenter on guitar, Greg Kihn on 12 string, and Richie "Dr. Schnoz" Corsello was the engineer, everyone helped on backgrounds, and The Count was the lead vocalist and he played the melodica solo.
R.A.D.I.O.
hip hop, pop
I'm proud to post my first recording as Count Slowly. R.A.D.I.O is a song expressing my love of the radio. When I was growing up, the height in technology was the combination of the flashlight and the transistor radio. After "lights out" I could continue to read comics and listen to popular music under the covers in the seclusion of my bedroom. Radio has introduced me to most of the music I've came to love. This song helps me remember radio when it used to be the teenager's best friend and a beacon for new music. Greg Kihn produced this track, and members of his band, Dave Carpenter, Steve Wright, and Larry Lynch, kindly sat in on the session.
It was recorded it at Hyde Street Studios, and originally pressed in virgin olive oil. R.A.D.I.O. sold out its first release.