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It's a little surprising to realize that things like the Load Records coterie and Andrew W.K. have been around long enough to become influences on later bands, but I Love You -- no relation to the failed hair-metallish band of the early '90s -- demonstrate this readily enough in both their sweat-soaked scraggly-haired image, and in their rough-sounding party music that's more electronic than rock & roll, per se, though guitars and feedback are present nonetheless. (At one point it almost results in something that could have been a lost Batcave club track from London 1983, thanks to the early U2-isms crossed with near Sex Gang Children-level wailing.) The semi-sneer/semi-chant vocals are mostly incomprehensible by design, but as the music takes precedence throughout, it all seems to make sense on that front.- ALLMUSIC User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.
The Colloquialism Is Simply "Gas"
I Love You
This is the Best Birthday Ever
I Love You
Freelance Pedestrian
I Love You
Cliff Dr. Nights
I Love You
Making Snow Angles In Angel Dust
I Love You
Graceland is Better Without Elvis
I Love You
Pillow Talk
I Love You
Sorry I Drank Your Soda
I Love You