Difference between revisions of "Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (Album)"

no edit summary
Line 12: Line 12:
'''The following is taken from Wikipedia.org.  It's intended to be a "starting point" for this HITS Wiki entry and should be edited to suite the more informative, detailed nature of the HITS Wiki.'''
'''The following is taken from Wikipedia.org.  It's intended to be a "starting point" for this HITS Wiki entry and should be edited to suite the more informative, detailed nature of the HITS Wiki.'''


Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (M.M.M.M.) is Tally Hall's debut studio album. Their previous recordings were all independently produced and distributed demos. All of the tracks on the album are fleshed-out, finished versions of their demo tracks, with the exception of "Haiku," which is a completely new song. The album gets its name from a museum of mechanized curiosities of the same name located in Farmington Hills, Michigan.
Marvin's Marvelous Mechanical Museum (M.M.M.M.) is [[Tally Hall]]'s debut studio album. Their previous recordings were all independently produced and distributed demos. All of the tracks on the album are fleshed-out, finished versions of their demo tracks, with the exception of "Haiku," which is a completely new song. The album gets its name from a museum of mechanized curiosities of the same name located in Farmington Hills, Michigan.


The album was officially re-released on September 12, 2006 under the Quack! Media label.[1] This re-release coincided with additional publicity on MTV, national distribution in all major retail stores, and various other TV appearances including The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[1] The music video for "Good Day" was first shown at Tally Hall's two Ann Arbor concerts, on September 23, 2006.
The album was officially re-released on September 12, 2006 under the Quack! Media label.[1] This re-release coincided with additional publicity on MTV, national distribution in all major retail stores, and various other TV appearances including The Late Late Show with Craig Ferguson.[1] The music video for "Good Day" was first shown at Tally Hall's two Ann Arbor concerts, on September 23, 2006.
Anonymous user