GOZU "They Probably Know Karate" (Blacklight Media)
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- čas přidán 7. 11. 2018
- Order at: blacklightmediarecords.com/gozu/
GOZU "They Probably Know Karate" from "Equilibrium."
Directed by Tony Simone at Zenbeast Media.
Lead actress: Jen Janet
Cult members: Adam Spencer, Tyler Montaquila, Nicole Kohan
#GOZU #BlacklightMedia #Karate - Hudba
Love the music - less said about the vocals the better.
HMmmmm . . Wonder what Beavis & Butthead´s comments would be on this video . . . ;o) ?
When the vocalist aims for Chris Cornell but sounds like Chris Griffin.
I need the lyrics holy fuck
feeling some serious Alice in chains influence I like it
so true
Cool. Gozu also a good movie. Creepy old japanese flick
Awesome band love all their stuff. And yes He had a love it or hate it voice. I happen love it makes them very unique.
Been supporting them and purchases since locust season.. they blocked me for asking about the Macy gray poster ..REPRESENT... douche
Tone-deaf singer is tone-deaf
Song's kinda catchy and not bad at all. The singer tho... 🙉
Great job. Music and video is bad ass.😎😈🤘🎛️🎸🎛️🍺🍺
HAIL GOZU!
MUITO, MUITO BOM"
Great track. Definitely checking out this album. Singer kinda sounds like Ian Astbury.
Nice track!!!
GOZU? Never heard of!
I'd go with any outdated music over this cheesy riffy/tone-deaf singing rubbish.
Singer sounds like he's singing drunk KTV or something. terrible
Good track, weird name
I've been waiting for neo-grunge to emerge, and here it is.
There is more than enough neo grunge to check out.
Puppy, Violent Soho, Nothing, Dead Soft etc etc
@@Annekromhout Not really. Neo-something, is when you take something from a pop-cultural phenomenon that is the very essence of it and shapes it into something new. Neo-classical metal bands, for instance, don't play classical music that sounds exactly like Mozart. Those bands you mention are grunge (not neo), because they've copied the music of that era and plays it like it sounded back then. They've created nothing new genre-wise. What's new about them is that they're millennials.
@@lingonberriesofwrath1836 I'm sorry but I'm going to have to school you here. Neo (in terms of art, which for obvious reasons I'm filing music under as well) doesn't refer to something new, but another era in which a style is copied. Neogothic, Neoroman, Neoclassical era's all copied their inspirations to the letter.
What you're referring to is imitation with intent to surpass or deviate from the original. Which would be called emulation.
@@Annekromhout No need to apologize, I'm perfectly happy with straightening things out for you. First off, there is no such thing as "neoroman". What you may think of is the Romanesque revival architecture, sometimes called Neo-romanesque that reached its peak during the second half of the 19th century. For some reason I still don't think that's what you meant, I think you meant neo-classical, but whatever. I normally hate being the language police, but when someone tries to "school me", and doesn't have their facts straight, I get cranky.
A lot of neo-styles popped up during the 19th century, like neogothic, neoclassical, neobaroque etc. What they all had in common was that they were a nostalgic look back to something long lost, and perhaps also at what was percieved as better times, as is so common in many retro trends.
To anyone with the slightest grasp of art history and architecture, it's obvious that works of art from that period cannot have been made in the period which they are inspired by. The reason for that is what I stated in my first post. They took aestethic elements from those periods, and incorporated them into contemporary art and architecture.
Now, the musical retrotrends of today are largely a postmodern phenomenon, but the same principle applies also here. You take aestethic fragments from an old era, combine them with modern elements, and create something new - and hopefully fresh. Sometimes the fragments are few, like in neoclassical metal, where more or less the only elements borrowed are the harmonic minor scale and some scale patterns. Sometimes there are many, like the Led Zeppelin et al-inspired '70s retro heavy rock of today.
So what about Gozu and Violent Soho? Violent Soho plays grunge, because there is nothing there that couldn't have existed in -92. The riffing is grunge. The production is of the early '90s era, with weaker bass and a big dynamic range. Gozu's sound is of today. The production is a wall of sound with modern compression that can be found in many pop productions of recent years. There is a total lack of dynamics; everything is cranked up to the max from beginning to end. None of these things would have been done in the early '90s. Not because they weren't technically possible, but because the average listener would have hated that over-the-top sound back then. There are fragments of grunge in some of the riffing and you can easily hear Layne Staley in the singer's voice, but no one would believe they're not a modern band.
X Lightcameradeath I’m sorry, I studied art history in Dutch. So a mistake here or there outside of my native tongue is to be expected. Here Neoromaans, is the acceptable term for Romanesque revival. I’ll have to respectfully disagree with your views on neo culture. Baroque, Gothic, modernism etc they all refer to an era. You could make imitate gothic art now, but it would still be neo gothic. In the same sense you can make grunge now, it would still not have been produced in the ‘90s.
gozu means in pesian: who farts to much
No no no..
The singer sings off-key all the way. Totally amateur and painful.
I don’t think it’s that bad. It’s pretty good.
Painfully wack singing.
Sounds like BLS. Nice.