Members of 'Afghan Whigs':


 
Greg Dulli
 
vocals 0000 - 0000  delete



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'Afghan Whigs' History: 




Too alt-identified (or complicated) for the mainstream, too straightforward (or cock-rockish) for many indie lifers, the Afghan Whigs never found the mass audience to which their cinematic, oddly addictive soul-rock infernos aspired.


Much of the admiration they did inspire centered on frontman Greg Dulli, an inspirationally pudgy, manic-depressive cad who would have creeped out Don Giovanni. Dulli’s a Catholic boy blessed with a filmmaker’s sense of story, a robust, overly industrious voice that can’t quite stay on key, sexual hang-ups for days, and the seeming conviction he may, in fact, be black. Dulli could introduce a song “Ladies/Let me tell you about myself/I’ve got a dick for a brain/And my brain is gonna sell my ass to you” and let his corrosive charisma and charred voice do the rest. After a fetal 1988 debut called Big Top Halloween they’ve longed to forget, Up in It showed some signs of ambition beyond the Sub Pop Singles Club, but thudding production hides the band’s latent smarts in sludge. The quantum leap that is Congregation shows they ditched grunge for soul because they were no damn good at the former and ladies dig the lat-ter. Dulli’s sex-god persona is coming into focus. Convinced submission (“I’m Her Slave”), predation (“Tonight”), and absolution (“This Is My Confession”) are all necessary to balance out the guilt and pleasure, and he macks like an expert at all of them. The hidden track, “Miles Iz Dead,” brings a terrific faux-funk riff to life and sums up Dulli’s seduction strategy thus: “Don’t forget the alcohol.” The placeholding Uptown Avondale dives into soul covers such as Freda Payne’s “Band of Gold” and the Supremes’ “Come See About Me.” It’d be nice if Dulli stayed on key the whole time, but the band’s hearts and hips are in the right place.


But Gentlemen they will take to their grave. A brilliant, knowing record sleeve hides one of ’90s rock’s messiest psychodramas. Reportedly written after a particularly nasty breakup, the Gentlemen song cycle portrays the artist as a grandmaster headfucker, the kind of guy you would keep your slightly obsessive sister away from at all costs even as she is, once again, climbing into his car. Dulli chronicles the melodramatic chess of maximum codependence with vengeful loathing, self- and otherwise, while the band—guitarist Rick McCollum in particular—pounds out complex, almost proggy R&B. From the howling single “Debonair” and the subtle, savage fuck-off “Be Sweet” to the plaintive “What Jail Is Like” and the astoundingly bitter “When We Two Parted,” Gentlemen dissects the sort of emotional train wreck few bands have ever documented as unflinchingly. Gentlemen is toxic and cunning, hopelessly arrogant and just plain hopeless. (What Jail Is Like is more soul covers and killer live tracks, demonstrating that almost any live bootleg from here forward is worth a spin.) “Tonight I say goodbye/To everyone that loves me,” opens Black Love, a smoother, more flagrantly soulful, and somehow even darker album. Where Gentlemen at least felt like the catharsis of vibrant autobiography, Black Love’s noir-novel vibe balls up in the pit of your stomach and eats right through. The album’s overtly cinematic feel works like a distancing effect until you realize just how fucked up Dulli sounds. The opening “Crime Scene Part One” is thunderously dramatic, but the funk on “Going to Town” and the “Honky’s Ladder” jive feels more shticky than sticky.


Created after an increasingly ill Dulli received treatment he clearly really, really needed for clinical depression, 1965 is the headfucker on Zoloft. Instead of hating himself and the world, Dulli, who’s never sung better, sounds like he’s actually enjoying sex because sex is fun and not just a power trip he can’t escape. He shouts out Nas on “Omerta,” and “John the Baptist” and “Somethin’ Hot” shake what his mama gave him, while “Neglekted” is just plain dirty. At the time, 1965’s groove thang felt like a mild letdown from the previous trilogy’s relentlessness, but in hindsight it’s clear Dulli wasn’t as used to joy as pain, and probably had as much to say about the former as the latter. Having been almost famous for a little too long, the Afghan Whigs called it a day in February 2001.
source: http://www.rollingstone.com/artists/afghanwhigs/biography





Tracks by 'Afghan Whigs' 


66 
Lyrics
66 (Live - Radio Brussels) 
66 (Radio Version #1) 
Album Version 
Amphetamines and Coffee 
Lyrics
band of gold 
(Banter) 
Beast Of Burden (19-02-99, NYC) 
Be Sweet 
Lyrics
Beware 
Lyrics
Big Top Halloween 
Blame, Etc. 
Bonus Track 
Brother Woodrow, Closing Prayer 
Bulletproof 
Lyrics
Bulletproof-Where Did Our Love Go 
Callout Hook #1 
Callout Hook #2 
Chalk Outline 
Citi Soleil 
Lyrics
Closing Medley (Live) 
Come See About Me 
Lyrics
Come See About Me (Live) 
Come See About Me (Supremes) 
Congregation 
Conjure Me 
Lyrics
The Conversation 1 
The Conversation 2 
Crazy 
Lyrics
Crazy (18-02-99, NYC) 
Crazy (Live - Radio Brussels) 
Creep 
Lyrics
Creep (TLC Cover) 
Crime Scene 
Crime Scene, Part 1 
Lyrics
The Dark End Of The Street 
Lyrics
Debonair 
Lyrics
Debonair (Live) 
Dedicate It 
Lyrics
Delta Kong 
Disappointed 
Double Day 
Lyrics
Easily Persuaded 
Faded 
Lyrics
Fountain and Fairfax 
Lyrics
Foxy Lady (20-02-99, NYC) 
Frere Jacques (Live) 
Gentlemen 
Lyrics
Gentlemen (Live) 
Going to Town 
Going to Town 
Lyrics
Going to Town (Live) 
Happy Birthday 
Hated 
Lyrics
Her Against Me 
Lyrics
Hey Cuz 
Honky's Ladder 
Lyrics
Honky's Ladder 
Honky's Ladder (Radio Edit) 
I Am The Sticks 
If I Only Had A Heart 
Lyrics
If I Were Going 
Lyrics
If There's Hell Below (We're All Going To Go) 
I Keep Coming Back 
I Know Your Little Secret 
Lyrics
I'm Her Slave 
Lyrics
I'm Her Slave (Live) 
In My Town 
Intro 
I want to go to sleep 
John The Baptist 
Lyrics
King Only (20-02-99, NYC) 
King Only (Live - Radio Brussels) 
Kiss The Floor 
Lyrics
Kiss The Floor (Live) 
Let Me Lie To You 
Let Me Lie To You (Live) 
Little Girl Blue 
Lyrics
Little Surfer Girl 
Live Version 
long tall sally 
lost in the supermarket (clash cover) bonus 
Miles Iz Dead 
Miles Iz Ded 
Milez is Dead 
Milez Is Ded 
Milez Iz Ded (20-02-99, NYC) 
Miss World 
money 
Moon River 
Mr. Superlove 
Lyrics
My Curse 
Lyrics
My Enemy 
Lyrics
My World Is Empty (Live) 
My World is Empty without You 
My World Is Empty Without You, I Hear a Symphony (live) 
Neglekted 
Lyrics
Never Get Out of Here 
Night by Candlelight 
Lyrics
Nightime 
Now You Know 
Lyrics
Now You Know (Live) 
Omerta 
Lyrics
Omerta (Live - Radio Brussels) 
Papa Was A Rascal 
Papa Was A Rascal (19-02-99, NYC) 
Papa Was a Rascal (Live - Radio Brussels) 
Radio Version #1 
Radio Version #2 
Ready 
Rebirth Of The Cool 
Lyrics
Regret (New Order) 
Retarded 
Lyrics
Retarded (Live) 
Retarted 
Revenge 
Rip This Joint (20-02-99, NYC) 
rot 
Run Rabbit Run 
Sammy 
The Slide Song 
Lyrics
The Slide Song (20-02-99, NYC) 
Something Hot (Live - Radio Brussels) 
Somethin' Hot 
Lyrics
Somethin Hot (12 Inch Remix) 
Somethin' Hot (12" Remix) 
Somethin Hot (Album Version) 
Somethin' Hot (Radio Remix) 
Somewhere Over The Rainbow (18-02-99, NYC) 
Son of the South 
Lyrics
Southpaw 
Lyrics
Step Into the Light 
Lyrics
Summer's Kiss 
Lyrics
Superstition, Going To Town 
sweet son of a bitch 
The Temple 
Lyrics
This Is My Confession 
Lyrics
Tonight 
Lyrics
Tonight (Live) 
true love travels on a gravel road 
Lyrics
Turn on the Water 
Lyrics
Turn On The Water (Live) 
Untie the Boat 
Uptown Again 
Lyrics
The Vampire Lanois 
What Jail Is Like 
Lyrics
What Jail Is Like (Live) 
When Doves Cry (Prince) 
When We Parted 
When We Two Parted 
Lyrics
Whe We Two Parted 
White Trash Party 
Lyrics
Will You Still Love me Tomorrow 
Wizard Of Oz (18-02-99, NYC) 
You My Flower 
Lyrics
You My Flower (Live) 
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