The Fool Funnel - Cure For Cancer Revealed
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Album Details
- Artist: The Fool Funnel
- Album: Cure For Cancer Revealed
- Label:
- Year of Release: 2012
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Tell us why this album is great or sucks ass, or correct the reviewer. If you write enough quality reviews you may find yourself on the editorial staff.
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Review:
on 2012-02-17 thefoolfunnel Said:
http://thephoenix.com/Boston/music/133908-weeks-neglected-press-releases/
The week's neglected press releases
The Big Hurt
By David Thorpe, Feb 15, 2012
Another slog through the PR dregs because if I didn't do it, who would?
THE FOOL FUNNEL RELEASES DEBUT ALBUM
Wow! It's extraordinary to see such earthshaking news buried in an obscure band's press release. The doctors of the world have been pulling the wool over our eyes, and one band holds the key to saving millions of lives:
Phoenix, AZ, Feb 6, 2012 (Press Release): Arizona-based indie rock project The Fool Funnel releases controversial album entitled The Cure for Cancer Revealed. The album's title track claims that cancer is curable and the medical community knows of the cure. The is [sic] multi-genre and has many radio-friendly tracks. The album is available on Spotify, Amazon, and iTunes along with many Internet radio stations.
I headed straight for Spotify to investigate the album's title track, but the medical establishment was one step ahead of me the song clearly contained important information, but the lyrics had been rendered completely inaudible by some kind of audio production sabotage! Big Pharma had buried the truth under a oatmealy slurry of guitar noise, and only fragments of intelligible phrases remained: " . . . research . . . the cure in 2004 . . . studies, based on events. . . . "
The band's Web site leads to a domain parking page; they've probably been assassinated by industrialized medicine. The good news is that, after I listened to it half a dozen times to try to make out the words, the track kind of grew on me; it's cute, in a weird-Eraserhead-baby sort of way. I wound up listening to the whole record, and several of the tunes were indeed "radio friendly," in that they could be played on a radio without damaging it (or I guess just played at a radio without damaging it).
Read more: http://thephoenix.com/boston/music/133908-weeks-neglected-press-releases/#ixzz1mh42HEjO
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