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In for the Kill! is the fourth studio album by Welsh rock band Budgie.It was released through MCA Records in May 1974. The album includes the song "Crash Course in Brain Surgery," originally released in 1971 as a single and was included on their self-titled debut album.
Stevie pretends to be a budgerigar exploring the toys in its enclosure. Lauren acts as a budgie performing circus tricks on a silk trapeze. Fely sorts out her animal figurines according to their habitat; land, air and sea. Lauren goes fishing out on the water with her favourite fishing rod.
Budgie was the sound engineer of the album, and he mixed it near Toulouse before its release in 2003. After recording four studio albums as the Creatures, Budgie's final performance with Siouxsie (featuring Eto and the Millennia Ensemble) was filmed in 2004 at the Royal Festival Hall in London for the DVD Dreamshow. This was Budgie's last ...
Bandolier is the fifth album by Welsh rock band Budgie, released in September 1975 through MCA Records.It reached No. 36 in the UK. The album was released in the US on A&M Records in late 1975.
"Breadfan" is a song by Welsh Blues Rock heavy metal power trio Budgie, appearing on their 1973 album Never Turn Your Back on a Friend. [2] The title of the song refers to a person's relationship to money, with "bread" being a slang term for money. The lyrics further highlight the moral dilemmas on what to do with money; keep it, give it away ...
In this version, the soldier wears red, Kuala Lumpur is first disguised as Florida and then a koala, and the pygmy and budgie are sinister, blowing the soldier to pieces with rocket launchers on the second "I've seen things, I've seen them with my eyes; I've seen things, they're often in disguise", to which a box, marked "One Marching Soldier ...
Best of Budgie was the first compilation album by Welsh rock band Budgie. It contained tracks from the band's third , fourth and fifth studio albums. At over an hour in length, it is among the longest single-LP rock records.
According to drummer Budgie, they were all big fans of the White Album except for Smith, and they settled on "Dear Prudence" because it was the one song he knew. [69] Bassist Steven Severin recalled that the track particularly appealed to him because "John Lennon's version sounds a bit unfinished".