Rick and Morty Soundtrack 2xLP LOSER EDITION Sub Pop SEALED color vinyl +sticker

Sold Date: September 28, 2018
Start Date: September 26, 2018
Final Price: $29.95 (USD)
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Rick and Morty "Rick and Morty Soundtrack" vinyl LP. This is release from Sub Pop Records (SP1265). A Loser Edition 2xLP pressed on Blue & Green-colored vinyl featuring two single-pocket LP jackets housed together in a custom die-cut slipcase.

This copy is BRAND NEW SEALED!

Tracks Rick and Morty Theme Jerry's Rick The Small Intestine Song The Flu Hatin' Rap African Dream Pop Look On Down From The Bridge - Mazzy Star The Rick Dance Goodbye Moonmen Summer and Tinkles Do You Feel It - Chaos Chaos Unity Says Goodbye Get Schwifty (C-131) Raised Up (C-131) Stab Him in the Throat - clipping. Help Me I'm Gonna Die Let Me Out Memories - Chaos Chaos Stuttering Light - Chad VanGaalen Alien Jazz Rap For the Damaged Coda - Blonde Redhead Fathers and Daughters Seal My Fate - Belly Terryfold - Chaos Chaos Tales from the Citadel Rick and Morty Score Medley Human Music Rick and Morty is the critically acclaimed, half-hour animated hit comedy series on Adult Swim that follows a sociopathic genius scientist who drags his timid grandson on insanely dangerous adventures across the universe.

Rick and Morty stars Justin Roiland (Adventure Time), Sarah Chalke (Scrubs), Chris Parnell (Saturday Night Live) and Spencer Grammer (Greek). The series is created by Dan Harmon (Community) and Roiland who also serve as executive producers.  

This release is the first official collection of music from Rick and Morty. All formats feature 26 songs, 24 of which are from the first 3 seasons of the show, and 18 of which were composed by Ryan Elder specifically for the show. The album also includes songs by Mazzy Star, Chaos Chaos, Blonde Redhead, and Belly, all of which have been featured in the show, as well as two new tunes from and inspired by the show.

Appropriately enough, bits of recent news events float through the record: “Please Mr. Gunman,” on which Arm bellows “We’d rather die in church!” over his bandmates’ careening charge, was inspired by a TV-news bubblehead’s response to a 2017 church shooting, while the ominous refrain that opens the submerged-blues of “Next Mass Extinction” calls back to last summer’s clashes in Charlottesville.

Mudhoney’s core sound—steadily pounding drums, swamp-thing bass, squalling guitar wobble, Arm’s hazardous-chemical voice—remains on Digital Garbage, which the band recorded with longtime collaborator (and Digital Garbage pianist) Johnny Sangster at the Seattle studio Litho. The anti-religiosity shimmy “21st Century Pharisees” builds its case with Maddison’s woozy synths, which Arm says “add a really nice touch to the proceedings.” Digital Garbage closes with “Oh Yeah,” a brief celebration of skateboarding, surfing, biking, and the joy provided by these escape valves. “I would’ve really just loved to write songs about just hanging out on the beach, and going on a nice vacation,” says Arm. “But, you know, that probably doesn’t make for great rock.”

Mudhoney, however, know what does make great rock—and the riffs and fury of Digital Garbage will stand the test of time, even if the particulars fade away. “I’ve tried to keep things somewhat universal, so that this album doesn’t just seem like of this time—hopefully some of this stuff will go away,“ Arm laughs. “You don’t want to say in the future, ‘Hey, those lyrics are still relevant. Great!’”