Motel Murder Madness

Motel Murder Madness is the first album by Lollipop Lust Kill, released in 2000. The album is noted for having three distinctive versions. The original release, through MP3.com, contained the original track listing as indicated below. The second (independent) release featured a radio-edited version of "Knee Deep in the Dead" following "Check-out Time", which was only distributed on that particular version of the album. A second MP3.com release contained the original track listing, minus "Knee Deep in the Dead" and "The Perfect Woman", which had to be removed due to copyright issues relating to samples from The Dark Half used in the two tracks.

Read more about Motel Murder Madness:  Track Listing

Famous quotes containing the words motel, murder and/or madness:

    The hotel was once where things coalesced, where you could meet both townspeople and travelers. Not so in a motel. No matter how you build it, the motel remains the haunt of the quick and dirty, where the only locals are Chamber of Commerce boys every fourth Thursday. Who ever heard the returning traveler exclaim over one of the great motels of the world he stayed in? Motels can be big, but never grand.
    William Least Heat Moon [William Trogdon] (b. 1939)

    It is my hope to be able to prove that television is the greatest step forward we have yet made in the preservation of humanity. It will make of this Earth the paradise we have all envisioned, but have never seen.
    —Joseph O’Donnell. Clifford Sanforth. Professor James Houghland, Murder by Television, just before he demonstrates his new television device (1935)

    How can anyone be interested in war?—that glorious pursuit of annihilation with its ceremonious bellowings and trumpetings over the mangling of human bones and muscles and organs and eyes, its inconceivable agonies which could have been prevented by a few well- chosen, reasonable words. How, why, did this unnecessary business begin? Why does anyone want to read about it—this redundant human madness which men accept as inevitable?
    Margaret Anderson (1886–1973)