Chords for Pungent Stench on Hinch.. My ROTTING FLESH.. \m/
Tempo:
101.15 bpm
Chords used:
Eb
E
Ab
D
Gb
Tuning:Standard Tuning (EADGBE)Capo:+0fret
Start Jamming...
prophecy
about another smelly subject, a putrid visiting rock and roll band called Pungent Stench.
They call it death metal music.
The lyrics, designed to shock, glorify murder and sexual mutilation.
The music is in fact banned in Australia.
The group's CDs are listed as prohibited imports.
But as Lincoln Howe reports tonight, the CDs may be banned, but the band can still perform here live.
And they will again this weekend.
Good evening ladies and gentlemen.
[Eb] We are Pungent Stench from Austria.
[E] [Eb] [Gb]
Welcome to the world [Ab] of death metal [Gm] music.
[Bb] [Ab] [Eb] A world of mayhem, murder and [Fm] sexual mutilation.
It's all in the music, and the fans [Ab] lap it up.
Slutters make me laugh.
[N] It's another side of humanity that people don't like to accept, and it's there.
[B] They sing about real life issues, murder, serial killers.
[E] That's what's going on in the world, everyone should know.
[Eb] I did it on purpose, to bring the bloody sick, and I don't think it's time for some other pissing round.
The band is Pungent Stench, currently on a national tour of Australia,
feeding local fans a [F] strict diet of death and destruction.
[Eb]
We have a lot of fun doing lyrics like this.
[Ab] We have a lot of fun reading books like this, we have a lot of fun seeing films like that.
And the worse it gets, the sicker it gets, the more love I have, you know what I mean?
But Australian censors don't [Gb] share Pungent Stench's [Bbm] sense of humour.
The very music being dished out live to local audiences was banned less than six [Db] months ago,
when released on this album, [Ab] being caught buttering, featuring [D] rotten corpses [Eb] kissing on the cover.
[E] The content of the lyric sheets of some of these songs dealt with [N] sexual violence, mutilation, torture of women.
Customs officials raided music stores in Canberra, Melbourne and Wollongong,
and seized it and other death metal albums.
It really glorifies sexual violence, and that could be anything to do with, say, rape.
In the case of some recent CDs we seized, they'd go as far as cannibalism.
So we're talking about things that really basically are totally offensive.
On their current Australian tour, Pungent Stench perform most of the songs from their band album.
They argue that at a live performance, the offensive lyrics are virtually indecipherable.
But when we attended last night's gig here in Sydney's inner west, young fans were singing along to every word.
Songs like Happy Rebirthday, in which a teenager mutilates his own mother.
[Dbm] Mother, you'll be very nice.
[E] Slowly I dissect her torso with my fingernails.
Gluttonous, I start to eat her flesh and entrails.
It's a very nice rhyme.
I mean, we got probably a bad taste for you guys,
[Eb] but first, all our people who listen to our stuff, like the stuff, so we got like, kind of same bad taste.
It's ridiculous that a band's CDs and records are banned in Australia, yet they're able to appear live.
That's a chronic anomaly in the law that has to be cured.
New South Wales Shadow Attorney General Paul Whelan has called on the State Police Minister
to investigate how Pungent [E] Stench were able to appear.
[Ab] If the censor says that they should be banned, then surely they have to be banned from live performances.
The band who hail from Vienna are angry about their album's Australian [Gb] censorship,
the only country in which it was banned.
They deny claims their message of [D] death can influence young minds.
[Eb] It will never happen, I'm sure, because nobody will say,
yeah, I just killed three people because I heard Pungent Stench.
I mean
That won't happen?
That won't happen.
My father buys every record and plays it to his friends.
He's proud of it, anyway.
He don't care about the lyrics or the cover artwork.
It's just music.
For him, it's a reason to be proud of his son.
In any case, fans say the ban had little effect.
Pirate copies of the album are readily available throughout the country.
Censorship, it's too harsh.
Most of the things [Db] that I've heard on these [C] albums I see on TV anyway, on the news.
Dead [Bm] people, [E] it's what's going on.
It's what everyone wants to hear.
[Bb] Sick.
Who cares?
If sick people want to get off on [Eb] sick music, it's all right.
[D]
But a ban [Eb] will
Pathetic, isn't it?
Yeah.
I reckon they shouldn't have been [D] there.
What for?
Yeah.
Music's music, my rotten [Abm] flesh.
Pungent Stench ends its assault on [B] Australian shores this weekend,
but [Bb] is set to taunt our senses again with the release of a new album in November.
[Eb] Does it contain [C] similar sort of stuff?
Uh, yeah.
Even worse.
And a warning for Brisbane parents tonight.
Pungent Stench are putting on a matinee performance for fans under 18 tomorrow.
So I guess you've been warned.
about another smelly subject, a putrid visiting rock and roll band called Pungent Stench.
They call it death metal music.
The lyrics, designed to shock, glorify murder and sexual mutilation.
The music is in fact banned in Australia.
The group's CDs are listed as prohibited imports.
But as Lincoln Howe reports tonight, the CDs may be banned, but the band can still perform here live.
And they will again this weekend.
Good evening ladies and gentlemen.
[Eb] We are Pungent Stench from Austria.
[E] [Eb] [Gb]
Welcome to the world [Ab] of death metal [Gm] music.
[Bb] [Ab] [Eb] A world of mayhem, murder and [Fm] sexual mutilation.
It's all in the music, and the fans [Ab] lap it up.
Slutters make me laugh.
[N] It's another side of humanity that people don't like to accept, and it's there.
[B] They sing about real life issues, murder, serial killers.
[E] That's what's going on in the world, everyone should know.
[Eb] I did it on purpose, to bring the bloody sick, and I don't think it's time for some other pissing round.
The band is Pungent Stench, currently on a national tour of Australia,
feeding local fans a [F] strict diet of death and destruction.
[Eb]
We have a lot of fun doing lyrics like this.
[Ab] We have a lot of fun reading books like this, we have a lot of fun seeing films like that.
And the worse it gets, the sicker it gets, the more love I have, you know what I mean?
But Australian censors don't [Gb] share Pungent Stench's [Bbm] sense of humour.
The very music being dished out live to local audiences was banned less than six [Db] months ago,
when released on this album, [Ab] being caught buttering, featuring [D] rotten corpses [Eb] kissing on the cover.
[E] The content of the lyric sheets of some of these songs dealt with [N] sexual violence, mutilation, torture of women.
Customs officials raided music stores in Canberra, Melbourne and Wollongong,
and seized it and other death metal albums.
It really glorifies sexual violence, and that could be anything to do with, say, rape.
In the case of some recent CDs we seized, they'd go as far as cannibalism.
So we're talking about things that really basically are totally offensive.
On their current Australian tour, Pungent Stench perform most of the songs from their band album.
They argue that at a live performance, the offensive lyrics are virtually indecipherable.
But when we attended last night's gig here in Sydney's inner west, young fans were singing along to every word.
Songs like Happy Rebirthday, in which a teenager mutilates his own mother.
[Dbm] Mother, you'll be very nice.
[E] Slowly I dissect her torso with my fingernails.
Gluttonous, I start to eat her flesh and entrails.
It's a very nice rhyme.
I mean, we got probably a bad taste for you guys,
[Eb] but first, all our people who listen to our stuff, like the stuff, so we got like, kind of same bad taste.
It's ridiculous that a band's CDs and records are banned in Australia, yet they're able to appear live.
That's a chronic anomaly in the law that has to be cured.
New South Wales Shadow Attorney General Paul Whelan has called on the State Police Minister
to investigate how Pungent [E] Stench were able to appear.
[Ab] If the censor says that they should be banned, then surely they have to be banned from live performances.
The band who hail from Vienna are angry about their album's Australian [Gb] censorship,
the only country in which it was banned.
They deny claims their message of [D] death can influence young minds.
[Eb] It will never happen, I'm sure, because nobody will say,
yeah, I just killed three people because I heard Pungent Stench.
I mean
That won't happen?
That won't happen.
My father buys every record and plays it to his friends.
He's proud of it, anyway.
He don't care about the lyrics or the cover artwork.
It's just music.
For him, it's a reason to be proud of his son.
In any case, fans say the ban had little effect.
Pirate copies of the album are readily available throughout the country.
Censorship, it's too harsh.
Most of the things [Db] that I've heard on these [C] albums I see on TV anyway, on the news.
Dead [Bm] people, [E] it's what's going on.
It's what everyone wants to hear.
[Bb] Sick.
Who cares?
If sick people want to get off on [Eb] sick music, it's all right.
[D]
But a ban [Eb] will
Pathetic, isn't it?
Yeah.
I reckon they shouldn't have been [D] there.
What for?
Yeah.
Music's music, my rotten [Abm] flesh.
Pungent Stench ends its assault on [B] Australian shores this weekend,
but [Bb] is set to taunt our senses again with the release of a new album in November.
[Eb] Does it contain [C] similar sort of stuff?
Uh, yeah.
Even worse.
And a warning for Brisbane parents tonight.
Pungent Stench are putting on a matinee performance for fans under 18 tomorrow.
So I guess you've been warned.
Key:
Eb
E
Ab
D
Gb
Eb
E
Ab
_prophecy
about another smelly subject, a putrid visiting rock and roll band called Pungent Stench.
They call it death metal music.
The lyrics, designed to shock, glorify murder and sexual mutilation.
The music is in fact banned in Australia.
The group's CDs are listed as prohibited imports.
But as Lincoln Howe reports tonight, the CDs may be banned, but the band can still perform here live.
And they will again this weekend.
_ _ _ _ _ _ Good evening ladies and gentlemen.
[Eb] We are Pungent Stench from Austria.
_ [E] _ _ _ _ [Eb] _ _ [Gb] _
_ Welcome to the world [Ab] of death metal [Gm] music.
_ [Bb] _ _ [Ab] _ _ [Eb] _ A world of mayhem, murder and [Fm] sexual mutilation.
It's all in the music, and the fans [Ab] lap it up. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ Slutters make me laugh.
[N] It's another side of humanity that people don't like to accept, and it's there.
[B] They sing about real life issues, murder, serial killers.
[E] That's what's going on in the world, everyone should know.
[Eb] I did it on purpose, to bring the bloody sick, and I don't think it's time for some other pissing round.
The band is Pungent Stench, currently on a national tour of Australia,
feeding local fans a [F] strict diet of death and destruction.
[Eb] _
_ _ We have a lot of fun doing lyrics like this.
_ [Ab] We have a lot of fun reading books like this, we have a lot of fun seeing films like that.
_ And _ the worse it gets, the sicker it gets, the more love I have, you know what I mean?
But _ Australian censors don't [Gb] share Pungent Stench's [Bbm] sense of humour.
The very music being dished out live to local audiences was banned less than six [Db] months ago,
when released on this album, [Ab] being caught buttering, featuring [D] rotten corpses [Eb] kissing on the cover.
[E] The content of the lyric sheets of some of these songs dealt with [N] _ sexual violence, mutilation, torture of women.
_ Customs officials raided music stores in Canberra, Melbourne and Wollongong,
and seized it and other death metal albums.
It really glorifies sexual violence, and that could be anything to do with, say, rape.
In the case of some recent CDs we seized, they'd go as far as cannibalism.
So we're talking about things that really basically are totally offensive.
On their current Australian tour, Pungent Stench perform most of the songs from their band album.
They argue that at a live performance, the offensive lyrics are virtually indecipherable.
But when we attended last night's gig here in Sydney's inner west, young fans were singing along to every word.
Songs like Happy Rebirthday, in which a teenager mutilates his own mother.
[Dbm] Mother, you'll be very nice.
[E] Slowly I dissect her torso with my fingernails.
Gluttonous, I start to eat her flesh and entrails.
_ It's a very nice rhyme.
_ I mean, we got probably a bad taste for you guys,
_ [Eb] but first, all our people who listen to our stuff, like the stuff, so we got like, kind of same bad taste.
It's ridiculous that a band's CDs and records are banned in Australia, yet they're able to appear live.
That's a chronic anomaly in the law that has to be cured.
New South Wales Shadow Attorney General Paul Whelan has called on the State Police Minister
to investigate how Pungent [E] Stench were able to appear.
[Ab] If the censor says that they should be banned, then surely they have to be banned from live performances. _ _ _ _
The band who hail from Vienna are angry about their album's Australian [Gb] censorship,
the only country in which it was banned.
They deny claims their message of [D] death can influence young minds.
[Eb] It will never happen, I'm sure, because nobody will say,
yeah, I just killed three people because I heard Pungent Stench.
I mean_
That won't happen?
That won't happen.
My father buys every record and plays it to his friends.
He's proud of it, anyway.
He don't care about the lyrics or the cover artwork.
It's just music.
For him, it's a reason to be proud of his son. _ _
_ _ In any case, fans say the ban had little effect.
Pirate copies of the album are readily available throughout the country.
Censorship, it's too harsh.
Most of the things [Db] that I've heard on these [C] albums I see on TV anyway, on the news.
Dead [Bm] people, [E] it's what's going on.
It's what everyone wants to hear.
[Bb] Sick.
Who cares?
If sick people want to get off on [Eb] sick music, it's all right.
[D]
But a ban [Eb] will_
Pathetic, isn't it?
Yeah.
I reckon they shouldn't have been [D] there.
What for?
Yeah.
Music's music, my rotten [Abm] flesh.
_ _ _ _ _ _ Pungent Stench ends its assault on [B] Australian shores this weekend,
but [Bb] is set to taunt our senses again with the release of a new album in November.
[Eb] Does it contain [C] similar sort of stuff?
Uh, yeah.
Even worse. _
And a warning for Brisbane parents tonight.
Pungent Stench are putting on a matinee performance for fans under 18 tomorrow.
So I guess you've been warned. _
about another smelly subject, a putrid visiting rock and roll band called Pungent Stench.
They call it death metal music.
The lyrics, designed to shock, glorify murder and sexual mutilation.
The music is in fact banned in Australia.
The group's CDs are listed as prohibited imports.
But as Lincoln Howe reports tonight, the CDs may be banned, but the band can still perform here live.
And they will again this weekend.
_ _ _ _ _ _ Good evening ladies and gentlemen.
[Eb] We are Pungent Stench from Austria.
_ [E] _ _ _ _ [Eb] _ _ [Gb] _
_ Welcome to the world [Ab] of death metal [Gm] music.
_ [Bb] _ _ [Ab] _ _ [Eb] _ A world of mayhem, murder and [Fm] sexual mutilation.
It's all in the music, and the fans [Ab] lap it up. _ _ _ _ _ _
_ _ _ _ _ Slutters make me laugh.
[N] It's another side of humanity that people don't like to accept, and it's there.
[B] They sing about real life issues, murder, serial killers.
[E] That's what's going on in the world, everyone should know.
[Eb] I did it on purpose, to bring the bloody sick, and I don't think it's time for some other pissing round.
The band is Pungent Stench, currently on a national tour of Australia,
feeding local fans a [F] strict diet of death and destruction.
[Eb] _
_ _ We have a lot of fun doing lyrics like this.
_ [Ab] We have a lot of fun reading books like this, we have a lot of fun seeing films like that.
_ And _ the worse it gets, the sicker it gets, the more love I have, you know what I mean?
But _ Australian censors don't [Gb] share Pungent Stench's [Bbm] sense of humour.
The very music being dished out live to local audiences was banned less than six [Db] months ago,
when released on this album, [Ab] being caught buttering, featuring [D] rotten corpses [Eb] kissing on the cover.
[E] The content of the lyric sheets of some of these songs dealt with [N] _ sexual violence, mutilation, torture of women.
_ Customs officials raided music stores in Canberra, Melbourne and Wollongong,
and seized it and other death metal albums.
It really glorifies sexual violence, and that could be anything to do with, say, rape.
In the case of some recent CDs we seized, they'd go as far as cannibalism.
So we're talking about things that really basically are totally offensive.
On their current Australian tour, Pungent Stench perform most of the songs from their band album.
They argue that at a live performance, the offensive lyrics are virtually indecipherable.
But when we attended last night's gig here in Sydney's inner west, young fans were singing along to every word.
Songs like Happy Rebirthday, in which a teenager mutilates his own mother.
[Dbm] Mother, you'll be very nice.
[E] Slowly I dissect her torso with my fingernails.
Gluttonous, I start to eat her flesh and entrails.
_ It's a very nice rhyme.
_ I mean, we got probably a bad taste for you guys,
_ [Eb] but first, all our people who listen to our stuff, like the stuff, so we got like, kind of same bad taste.
It's ridiculous that a band's CDs and records are banned in Australia, yet they're able to appear live.
That's a chronic anomaly in the law that has to be cured.
New South Wales Shadow Attorney General Paul Whelan has called on the State Police Minister
to investigate how Pungent [E] Stench were able to appear.
[Ab] If the censor says that they should be banned, then surely they have to be banned from live performances. _ _ _ _
The band who hail from Vienna are angry about their album's Australian [Gb] censorship,
the only country in which it was banned.
They deny claims their message of [D] death can influence young minds.
[Eb] It will never happen, I'm sure, because nobody will say,
yeah, I just killed three people because I heard Pungent Stench.
I mean_
That won't happen?
That won't happen.
My father buys every record and plays it to his friends.
He's proud of it, anyway.
He don't care about the lyrics or the cover artwork.
It's just music.
For him, it's a reason to be proud of his son. _ _
_ _ In any case, fans say the ban had little effect.
Pirate copies of the album are readily available throughout the country.
Censorship, it's too harsh.
Most of the things [Db] that I've heard on these [C] albums I see on TV anyway, on the news.
Dead [Bm] people, [E] it's what's going on.
It's what everyone wants to hear.
[Bb] Sick.
Who cares?
If sick people want to get off on [Eb] sick music, it's all right.
[D]
But a ban [Eb] will_
Pathetic, isn't it?
Yeah.
I reckon they shouldn't have been [D] there.
What for?
Yeah.
Music's music, my rotten [Abm] flesh.
_ _ _ _ _ _ Pungent Stench ends its assault on [B] Australian shores this weekend,
but [Bb] is set to taunt our senses again with the release of a new album in November.
[Eb] Does it contain [C] similar sort of stuff?
Uh, yeah.
Even worse. _
And a warning for Brisbane parents tonight.
Pungent Stench are putting on a matinee performance for fans under 18 tomorrow.
So I guess you've been warned. _