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List Price: $11.98 | | Label: Metal Blade
Salesrank: 59334
Released: October 16, 2007 |
| Our Price: $7.39 |
| Used Price: $6.86 |
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| Media: Audio CD |
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Danza II: The Electric Boogaloo Track Listing:
1. T.R.O.U.B.L.E. (Intro Skit)
2. You Gonna Buy the Beers or the Whole Damn Bar
3. I Don't Mean to Impose, But I Am the Ocean
4. Go Greyhound
5. Top English (Midget Pool Skit)
6. The Electric Boogaloo
7. Crunchy Black Did Me in at Midnight Madness
8. Mad Max Beyond Superdome
9. Carroll 14 Wossman 7
10. Nobody Eats BBQ Two Days in a Row
11. Shot of Whiskey (Beginning of the End Barfight Skit)
12. Rollin' and Tumblin' on Satan's Rotisserie
13. The Louisiana Dive Bar Massacre (Sawin' Bones and Chuggin' Brew Outro Skit)
Danza II: The Electric Boogaloo Reviews:
Tapdancing into our hearts! 
2007-12-30 - Nashville truly is Music City, a band like this could only come from a city such as this.
This album marks another maturity in TDTE's evolution. Such a great album by a great band!
The Best Thing Since Sliced Bread 
2007-12-15 - This album is unspeakably amazing. Danza punish their instruments like they caught them breaking into their practice space. The title track has one of the strongest grooves I've ever heard. True, the production is a lot cleaner than the last "album" (which was their demo + 3 new songs at the beginning, I believe), but this happens when a label is willing to throw up some cash for a band to record themselves properly. The only "bad" thing about this CD, is that it makes all of the other crazy music I listen to sound tame in comparison. Seriously.
Aggression,rage and fury manifests itself 
2007-11-04 - Wow. This is what it would sound like if those zombies from 28 weeks later with the rage virus would sound like if they made a band. Pure fricken chaos. This CD is adrenaline purified. Even makes Ion Dissonance, which I like, seem tamer in comparison. Gotta love the song titles. You must get this now.
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2007-10-22 - On their debut they had their own style of tech groove riffs and production that set a new benchmark for crusty heaviness. So what happened? It sounds like they discovered Meshuggah between albums and made this follow-up as a tribute to them. The riffs are totally derivitive and the production is boringly cleaned up. The only glimpse of creativity is the goth bit at the end of track 4. Forget this album and buy the self-titled if you haven't heard it.