| 1. North Beach Drifter |
| 2. Vanish |
| 3. Scared to Death |
| 4. A lot Like You |
| 5. Please Don't Take It So Bad |
| 6. Sweet |
| 7. Good Good Man |
| 8. Jack O'Lantern |
| 9. Queen of Apostles |
| 10. The Prize |
Editorial Reviews
The Mineral Kings sound like no band you have heard before and every band you have heard before. By drawing upon a wide range of influences, and by not trying to focus on a specific genre of rock music, their fans have compared them to such diverse acts as U2, The Cult, The Clash, INXS, Queen and Midnight Oil. Although they can tentatively be labeled as an "alternative" rock band, they have deep roots in the old school guitar-driven bands, which makes them cutting edge performers in a cookie-cutter music industry.
The Kings strike gold with their latest release and their strongest work to date, Metropolis. Back with their original lineup of Tony Morosini on guitars and drums, Art Forte on guitars, bass, and keys, and Carv Tefft on vocals, they return to powerful form with a bass thumping, guitar crunching, larynx punching effort. Its an angry CD, and thats a good thing in the rock and roll business! This follow-up CD to Atomic Numbers, their superb debut, allows the Kings to really flex their muscles, and its obvious from the opening track that theyve been supplementing with creatine.
But to step back a bit, just as their music wanders through a broad spectrum of styles, integrating and elevating them to a higher level, the two founders of the band have also been East Coast West Coast nomads. Carv and Art met through an ad in The Village Voice in Manhattan, and almost immediately became song-writing soul mates. They recorded under the name Release, but after the bands untimely demise, Art packed up for San Francisco, where Carv was soon to follow. Tony, who had just wrapped up his own CD in Seattle, also migrated down to the now red-hot Bay Area music scene, where bands like Third Eye Blind, Green Day, and Smashmouth were reviving a music scene that hadnt seen such new talent since the days of flower power. An ad in BAM magazine brought Tony into the fold, and after a brief tour in Europe, Tony returned to San Francisco, and The Kings, in 2001.
Atomic Numbers and Metropolis are The Mineral Kings first two CD releases, and both are available on Amazon.com. The bands first two recordings, Tales of the Wailing Yakbone and Diamondhead, are currently only available in tape format and are not for purchase, though this may change in the near future. The band plans to tour nationally in support of their latest release.
With each successive recording, The Kings get closer to mastering the original formula they started out with straight-ahead, melodically catchy rock tunes that are all meat and no fat. They have matured into vital artists that are brightening the somewhat dreary, unadventurous landscape of rock that has arisen from the mergers and homogenization of radio. In summary, the formula for the music fan is actually quite simple; if you like rock and roll, you are guaranteed to like The Mineral Kings.
Product Description
Metropolis is the Mineral King's second release. The CD represents the return of the bands original line up of Art Forte, Carv Tefft and Tony Morosini.
The three members are veterans of the Bay Area, NYC and UK music scenes. With Metropolis, the MKs have created a sound that fuses a lifes worth of influences and geographies. Individual band members have worked professionally with artists as diverse as Dave Grohl, Steve Miller, Buddy Guy and Journey. The sound is unmistakably unique yet familiar all at once. This is made evident from the first single, "North Beach Drifter".
Metropolis,Mineral Kings,Hillside Records
Rock Music:
- Mighty Bop [Import]
- Mirrors
- Nederbeat 63-69: Beat Bluf & Branie the B-Sides V.1 [Import]
- Nero Su Bianco [Import]
- Ocean Gypsy
- One Day at a Time [Import]
- Other Woman
- Party Favorites [Box set]
- Pop Music [Import]
- R.I.T.
Rock Music
Moon & the Sky [CD-single] [Import]
This Is Crucial Reggae [Original recording remastered]
Strauss: Four Last Songs/Songs With Orchestra
