Andrew Jackson Jihad – People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World
Tracklist
Rejoice | 3:16 | ||
Brave As A Noun | 1:15 | ||
Survival Song | 2:28 | ||
Bad Bad Things | 2:00 | ||
No More Tears | 1:02 | ||
Bells & Whistles | 1:28 | ||
Randy's House | 1:24 | ||
A Song Dedicated To The Memory Of Stormy The Rabbit | 3:05 | ||
People II: The Reckoning | 4:09 | ||
Personal Space Invader | 2:59 | ||
People | 2:18 |
Credits (14)
- Teague CullenAccordion, Violin [Pianolin], Cello [Cello Noise], Saw [Singing Saw]
- Andrew JemsekAccordion, Vocals
- Ryan PiscitelliArtwork, Layout
- Owen EvansBanjo
- Ben GallatyBass, Vocals, Slide Guitar, Electric Guitar
- John De La CruzDrums
Notes
CD releases:
Jewel case with eight-page booklet and color Asian Man Records logo
Jewel case with eight-page booklet and black-and-white Asian Man Records logo
Jewel case with folded four-panel insert
Digipak (New Cyberian pressing)
Digipak (other pressing)
Vinyl releases:
1st pressing (brown jacket):
100 on black vinyl (color labels)
400 on brown vinyl (color labels)
10 test pressings on black vinyl
2nd pressing (blue jacket):
500 on black and dark blue swirl vinyl (color labels)
500 on maroon vinyl (color labels)
3rd pressing:
300 on translucent blue vinyl (black-and-white labels)
4th pressing:
300 on white vinyl (black-and-white labels)
5th pressing:
500 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
6th pressing:
500 on translucent red vinyl (black-and-white labels)
7th pressing:
550 on black vinyl (black-and-white labels)
8th pressing:
600 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
9th pressing:
700 on translucent green vinyl with black smoke (black-and-white labels)
10th pressing:
800 on translucent gold vinyl with black smoke (black-and-white labels)
11th pressing:
800 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
12th pressing:
1,000 on picture disc vinyl
5 test pressings on white picture disc vinyl
13th pressing:
500 on black vinyl (black-and-white labels)
14th pressing:
500 on random-colored vinyl (color labels)
15th pressing:
800 on half random-colored / half random-colored vinyl (color labels)
16th pressing:
1,000 on random-colored vinyl (color labels)
17th pressing:
500 on purple vinyl (color labels)
Jewel case with eight-page booklet and color Asian Man Records logo
Jewel case with eight-page booklet and black-and-white Asian Man Records logo
Jewel case with folded four-panel insert
Digipak (New Cyberian pressing)
Digipak (other pressing)
Vinyl releases:
1st pressing (brown jacket):
100 on black vinyl (color labels)
400 on brown vinyl (color labels)
10 test pressings on black vinyl
2nd pressing (blue jacket):
500 on black and dark blue swirl vinyl (color labels)
500 on maroon vinyl (color labels)
3rd pressing:
300 on translucent blue vinyl (black-and-white labels)
4th pressing:
300 on white vinyl (black-and-white labels)
5th pressing:
500 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
6th pressing:
500 on translucent red vinyl (black-and-white labels)
7th pressing:
550 on black vinyl (black-and-white labels)
8th pressing:
600 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
9th pressing:
700 on translucent green vinyl with black smoke (black-and-white labels)
10th pressing:
800 on translucent gold vinyl with black smoke (black-and-white labels)
11th pressing:
800 on random-colored vinyl (black-and-white labels)
12th pressing:
1,000 on picture disc vinyl
5 test pressings on white picture disc vinyl
13th pressing:
500 on black vinyl (black-and-white labels)
14th pressing:
500 on random-colored vinyl (color labels)
15th pressing:
800 on half random-colored / half random-colored vinyl (color labels)
16th pressing:
1,000 on random-colored vinyl (color labels)
17th pressing:
500 on purple vinyl (color labels)
Versions
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27 versions
Recommendations
Reviews
referencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (LP, 45 RPM, Album, Repress) 153
one of the best sounding pressings in my collection. 15 bucks for this is a steal!- Man, I've been looking everywhere for a copy of this colored pressing. Too bad it ain't here, I love AJJ and this particular album holds a special place in my heart.
- Edited 4 years ago
referencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (LP, 45 RPM, Album, Repress) 153
assuming this is the copy asian man records is selling right now, my copy is decent. it has some weird visual issues (looks like there's some nonfill and a few marks) but it sounds generally fine. the nonfill is sorta intrusive, but that's the only real issue. HEAVY record too, easily 180. referencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (LP, 45 RPM, Album, Repress) 153
is this the same pressing that asian man is currently selling on their website?referencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (LP, 45 RPM, Album, Repress) 153
Sounds perfect. It’s dark and beautiful at the same timereferencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (CD, Album) Asian Man 153
It's impossible to tell which Random Color vinyl pressing I have with no matrices uploaded. 5th? 11th? 14th? If anyone knows what's going on with this mess of a release can you please update?referencing People Who Eat People (12", 45 RPM, Album, Limited Edition, Numbered, Test Pressing, White Label) 153
If anyone is willing to part with this please contact me.referencing People Who Can Eat People Are The Luckiest People In The World (CD, Album) Asian Man 153
People Who Can Eat People are the Luckiest People in the World by Andrew Jackson Jihad (AJJ) already has a pretty jarring name, and I admit it is slightly off putting. This album can be described as a really fun combination of folk and punk, with all instrumentation being non-electric. One clear inspiration being Neutral Milk Hotel’s In the Aeroplane Over the Sea. Other than the album being sonically very catchy, what I love the most is the amazingly written lyrics and themes. People Who Can Eat People is a study of the deepest and darkest parts of the human mind. The album is basically those fucked up thoughts you have sometimes in an album form. Whether your questioning “If a pregnant woman is decapitated will the baby survive?” or imagining how you would kill a family. Yet nearing the end of the album the pathos shifts to something of a more hopeful tone as lead singer Sean Bonnette sings about his faith in humanity as a whole and how humanity has the ability to rid of pain in the world. The album is a truly weird and fun exploration of the human psyche. Something that I will always keep coming back to listen to.
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