Blood Circus

Trackimage Playbut Trackname Playbut Trackname
The Outback 03:39 Tools
Six Foot Under 03:52 Tools
Two Way Street 02:53 Tools
My Dad's Dead 02:27 Tools
Lime Green 03:00 Tools
Gnarly 03:25 Tools
Road To Hell 05:10 Tools
Electric Johnny 04:34 Tools
Part of the Crowd 03:17 Tools
White Dress 01:53 Tools
Bloodman 03:16 Tools
Sea Chanty 04:42 Tools
Green room 02:10 Tools
HUMANITY 04:48 Tools
SUCH IS LIFE 03:13 Tools
PARADISE DOG 03:48 Tools
FACELESS 02:52 Tools
IMAGINE 04:17 Tools
CONCRETE GARDEN 04:31 Tools
MAD CITY 03:04 Tools
MASK 03:13 Tools
Calling For Lisa 02:31 Tools
TV NATION 04:27 Tools
SAMURAI PIERROT 03:53 Tools
Outback 03:39 Tools
Blood Circus - The Outback 00:00 Tools
Six Feet Under 00:00 Tools
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Two bands use(d) the name 'Blood Circus'. 1) Blood Circus was an early, short-lived grunge band from Seattle, Washington. The band's first release was a single, 1988's "Six Foot Under"/"Two Way Street", on Sub Pop. Both Nirvana and Mudhoney performed their first-ever shows opening for Blood Circus at Seattle's Vogue club in 1988. In 1989 Sub Pop released the band's first and only twelve inch, a five-track EP called Primal Rock Therapy which was largely panned by critics and ignored by the public. This contributed to the split of the band in 1990 after a US tour with the French band Les Thugs. Both bands played in San Francisco in June 1989. They briefly reformed in 1992, when Sub Pop re-released Primal Rock Therapy on CD with five additional unreleased tracks. The re-release comprised almost all of the band's recorded output, except for the song The Outback, which can be found on the Sub Pop 200 compilation. The band also briefly appeared in the 1996 film Hype!, a documentary about the rise of the Seattle scene. Blood Circus performed a one-off reunion show at Seattle's Crocodile Café in 2007. 2) Japanese rock band, featuring Atsushi Yokozeki on guitar. In 2001, the band released "Born To Love". Read more on Last.fm. User-contributed text is available under the Creative Commons By-SA License; additional terms may apply.