PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • It's Alive (Buckethead album)
rdfs:comment
  • It's Alive is the thirty-first studio album by guitarist Buckethead, and the first installment in the Buckethead Pikes Series. It is named so after the kiosk inside Bucketheadland that sells albums not yet available at the regular store. The album was announced and released on May 15, 2011, through the board of Buckethead's site, making this the first album since Kaleidoscalp (2005) to be advertised on the site. Along with the announcement, samples from most of the tracks from the album were made available, excluding samples from the tracks "Peeling Out" and "Barnyard Banties".
owl:sameAs
Length
  • 15.0
  • 149.0
  • 241.0
  • 294.0
  • 384.0
  • 1871.0
  • 198.0
  • 308.0
  • 280.0
dcterms:subject
dbkwik:music/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Label
  • Bucketheadland
Producer
  • Dan Monti and Albert
Name
  • It's Alive
Genre
Type
  • studio
Border
  • yes
Title
  • The Hatch
  • Tonka
  • Barnyard Banties
  • Brooding Peeps
  • Crack the Sky
  • Lebrontron
  • Peeling Out
  • Picking the Feathers
Last album
  • 3
This Album
  • It's Alive
Total Length
  • 1871.0
Next album
  • Empty Space
Released
  • 2011-05-15
Artist
abstract
  • It's Alive is the thirty-first studio album by guitarist Buckethead, and the first installment in the Buckethead Pikes Series. It is named so after the kiosk inside Bucketheadland that sells albums not yet available at the regular store. The album was announced and released on May 15, 2011, through the board of Buckethead's site, making this the first album since Kaleidoscalp (2005) to be advertised on the site. Along with the announcement, samples from most of the tracks from the album were made available, excluding samples from the tracks "Peeling Out" and "Barnyard Banties". The album features two tracks originally released for free on Buckethead's website. The track "Crack the Sky", dedicated to basketball player Blake Griffin, was originally released on February 17, 2011. "Lebrontron", the fourth Buckethead track dedicated to LeBron James, was originally posted on March 10, 2011.