Maximum The Hormone - Discography -2001-2011- Flac -
(literally "Shit Disc"), signaled their refusal to conform to industry standards while honing their "Menkata Kotteri" (hardcore and "thick" like ramen) aesthetic.
The turning point where their sense of humor and genre-bending solidified. Maximum the Hormone - Discography -2001-2011- FLAC
Widely considered their masterpiece, this gold-certified album reached Number 5 on the Oricon charts. It contains "What’s Up, People?!" and "Zetsubou Billy," which gained global fame as the opening and ending themes for the anime Death Note (literally "Shit Disc"), signaled their refusal to conform
Maximum the Hormone’s 2001–2011 era is an essential, exhilarating decade of work—visceral, clever, and irresistibly unpredictable. In FLAC, the discography’s power, tonal clarity, and chaotic charm are all preserved: it’s an intense, rewarding listening experience that showcases why the band stands out in modern heavy music. It contains "What’s Up, People
He scrolled down to Koi no Megalover . The funk breakdown hit, and for a moment, the aggression subsided into a groove so infectious that Kenji found himself moving involuntarily. The clarity of the FLAC revealed layers he had never heard on Spotify—background vocal harmonies buried deep in the mix, a shaker keeping time in the far left channel. It was like cleaning a dirty window and realizing there was a city on the other side.
A significant EP featuring their early aggressive sound. Kusoban (2004): Their first major-label EP.
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