- R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rarest
- R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rarely
- R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rarity
- R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rare
- Wagdug Futuristic Unity. Wagdug Futuristic Unity. Genres: Hardcore Punk; Techno; J Rock. More by Wagdug Futuristic Unity. More Wagdug Futuristic Unity. Listen to Hakai in full in the Spotify app. Wagdug Futuristic Unity was founded in 2007 by KYONO. The band is still active. Current and past members include. R.A.M: R.A.M (October 5, 2010) Over.
- Wagdug Futuristic Unity- R.A.M.: AA= released their new album earlier this year. Time for this other Mad Capsule Markets spinoff that sounds exactly the same to release theirs. Time for this other Mad Capsule Markets spinoff that sounds exactly the same to release theirs.
R.A.M, an album by Wagdug Futuristic Unity on Spotify. Our partners use cookies to personalize your experience, to show you ads based on your interests, and for measurement and analytics purposes. By using our website and our services, you agree to our use of cookies as descri.
This is one of the odder releases, period, that I've ever seen through a major label. AA='s fourth studio album, for some reason that I can't comprehend, was split into two albums which came out only a couple weeks after one another, each with only seven tracks comprising about 20 minutes of material per disc. Perhaps it was a move to get the fans a little more involved in picking up the album? To making more money? I don't know. But in any case, it's a 'split album', and I have both parts.The packaging of the two albums is pretty interesting, actually, particularly the second half's. Whereas # just comes in a normal jewel case with all the bells and whistles typical of Japanese CD releases, 4 is packaged in a liner notes booklet. Seriously. It's a liner notes booklet in a small mylar, with a cel of the album artwork in front of the blank white cover, as the CD itself sits inside the booklet in an LP-esque plastic disc protector. # is actually a 2-disc CD case with an empty spot in the back for the 4 disc, and the cel with 4's artwork is meant to go in front of #'s cover. (Scroll down all the way to the bottom of this article for the result.)
There are a couple disadvantages to this packaging, unfortunately, those being:
- The mylar and disc protector for 4 become absolutely disposable once you combine # and 4 into their intended shape. Personally, I just keep the remains next to it in my stash of Mad stuff, but I can imagine other people thinking it sucks that there's disposable unique packaging with it.
- When you do combine them, there's still the obi that only recognizes #. On the other spine is another #, and underneath the obi it only says 4 for some reason. If the obi had just said #4, that would have been alright.
In any case, the material here is really solid. It's a little poppier than #3, and the songs are a lot shorter than most of their prior material. The short length of the material, considering you have to buy both halves of the split album separately, may scare some people off, but that doesn't make it not worth buying or anything. It's also odd that the music videos of the material are shortened even further for YouTube... splitting it in half to make people go for the tour DVD? I dunno. I don't have that one, either, nor do I have any of AA='s other tour DVDs.
1. Drone
3. Viciousness
5. Distrap
7. Kilroy Was Here
8. HUMANITY2 (4 Mix)
10. The Jam
12. Lasts
R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rarest
R.a.m Wagdug Futuristic Unity Rarely
14. Endroll
NOTE: There was a recently released official #4 compilation that seems to combine the two albums into one disc. 'I'll just get that!' you might say, but don't. From the look of the official #4