FLIED EGG
Dr. Siegel's Fried Egg Shooting Machine
Tracklist
Dr. Siegel's Fried Egg Shooting Machine
Rolling Down The Broadway
I Love You
Burning Fever
Plastic Fantasy
15 Seconds Of Schizophrenic Sabbath
I'm Gonna See My Baby Tonight
Oke-Kus
Someday
Guide Me To The Quietness
GOOD BYE
Tracklist
SIDE A (LIVE)
Leave Me Woman
Rolling Down The Broadway
Rock Me Baby
Five More Pennies
SIDE B (STUDIO)
Before You Descend
Out To The Sea
Goodbye My Friends
521 Seconds Schizophrenic Symphony
The 1st Movement: Promenade
The 2nd Movement: A Rock Beside The Gate
The 3rd Movement: Strawberry Path
The 4th Movement: Finale
LINE UP
Shigeru Narumo: Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Hammond Organ , Piano, Moog Synthesizer, Harpsichord, Distorted Organ, Chelesta, Vocals, Equalized Vocal Harmony, Toy Instruments, Sound Effects.
Hiro Tsunoda: Drums, Percussion, Lead Vocals, High Boosted, Toy Instruments, Jokes, Noise.
Masayoshi Takanaka: Bass Guitar, Bowing Guitar, Acoustic Guitar, Vocals, Vocal Harmony Vocals, Toy Instruments.
​
​
​
DUBBED THE JAPANESE JIMMY PAGE
ROBSCURITIES PRESENTS: FUN WITH GOOGLE TRANSLATE FLIED EGG (RUSSIAN TO ENGLISH)
[Dr. Siegel's Fried Egg Shooting Machine]
Debut album by Japanese hard rock band. It makes it possible to create a copy of it. Next track - Rolling Down The Broadway - reminds Uriah Heep's hard rock from 1971-72 with a combination of guitar-organ and vocal presentation. Speedy hard burning ballad during the song. I played my keyboard. Progressive instrumentalities of the keys are not always allowed.
[GOOD BYE]
​
Significantly tougher album than debut album. The first half of the disc is a live recording with a bunch of expression and growling vocals, no progressive, solid hard rock face. I especially note the powerful performance of Rolling Down The Broadway from the first album - an order of magnitude stronger than in the studio version. In addition, we can mention the most ugly performance of Rock Me Baby, which I had to hear. I really liked the 12-minute Five More Pennies, the final “live” part of the album: cheerfully, powerfully, with solo outs and a good pace. The studio part of the album is completely different - in it, on the contrary, it is less than pure hard rock (it is limited to the framework of one song - Before You Descend) and more progressive, quite clearly manifested in the 521 Seconds Of Schizophrenic Symphony instrumental. A good album of two is undoubtedly the best.
​
(review by day_d)