His trademark “yeah” and monotone hoedown growl are still front and center, the B-horror movie references are still plentiful (Frankenstein, martians, witches, and two songs about werewolves), and the chugging guitars and dark, sleek beats are still trashy enough to be stripclub staples. “Jesus Frankenstein,” “Sick Bubblegum,” and “Mars Needs Women” are the same schlocky grooves that made up his five previous solo records and six White Zombie records. This could be because it was his first outing to include help from his bandmates (longtime touring comrades guitarist John 5, bassist Piggy D, and drummer Tommy C) but it’s probably more attributed to the fact that making songs like these is old hat by now. Returning with his first album since 2006’s Educated Horses, after several delays following this record’s completion in 2008 - due to his work on Halloween 2, lack of promotion, and time spent shopping for a new label after 18 years of recording for Geffen - Zombie has since gone on to say that the songs on Hellbilly Deluxe 2 were his easiest to write. Curta este álbum nos aplicativos Qobuz com a sua assinaturaĪs a director or as a musician, Rob Zombie shows no signs of closing the door on either of his creative endeavors anytime soon.
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