The Deviants (band) Albums
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The Deviants (band) Albums
The Deviants may refer to: * ''The Deviants'' (film), a 2004 independent comedy about a dating agency for sex deviants * The Deviants (band), a rock band formerly known as the Social Deviants * ''The Deviants 3'' (1969), the third and final 1960s album by The Deviants See also * Deviant (other) Deviant most commonly refers to deviant behavior, particularly in relation to social norms. Deviant may also refer to: * Deviant (comics), a fictional race of humanoids in the Marvel Comics universe * ''Deviant'' (film), a short film by Benjamin ...
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The Deviants (film)
''The Deviants'' is a comedy film about a matchmaker for people with unusual sexual deviations (all of which legal or borderline legal, except non statutory female on male rape). ''The Deviants'' was written by Doug Dezzani and Reid Waterer and directed by Reid Waterer. It was Waterer's first feature. The MPAA Rating for the film is R for strong sexual content, nudity (by the nudist character of Tiffany Shepis) and language. Acceptance This film was nominated for Best Feature of the 2003 Ohio Independent Film Festival. It received a rave review from Julie Washington in Cleveland's major newspaper, ''The Plain Dealer'', in which she called it "hilarious and more heartfelt than any of the gross-out fests filling the multiplexes. A celebration of sick humor". In North Carolina's ''Winston-Salem Journal'', Mark Burger wrote: "Slight but appealing romantic comedy, in which an unorthodox dating service tries to match people with sexual quirks. Director Reid Waterer may be a talen ...
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The Deviants (band)
The Deviants (formerly The Social Deviants) were an English rock band originally active from late 1966 to 1969, but later used as a vehicle for the musical work of writer Mick Farren until his death in 2013. Farren has stated that The Deviants were originally a community band which "did things every now and then—it was a total assault thing with a great deal of inter-relation and interdependence". Musically, Mick Farren described that they were influenced by The Who, Charles Mingus, Velvet Underground, and Frank Zappa. History 1960s The Social Deviants were founded by singer/writer Mick Farren in late 1966 out of the Ladbroke Grove UK Underground community, featuring Pete Munro on bass, Clive Muldoon on guitar, Mike Robinson on guitar, and Benny (surname unknown) on drums. This group played at UFO in Tottenham Court Road and opened the Alexandra Palace Love-In festival. Shortly thereafter Benny (surname unknown) was replaced by Phil Mari on drums for a few gigs. In the early ...
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The Deviants 3
''The Deviants 3'' is the third and final album by the UK underground group the Deviants, released in 1969. Lead vocalist Mick Farren regards the album as the beginning of a divergence between himself and his fellow musicians, stating "I had one idea and the rest of them wanted to be a kind of Led Zeppelin guitar band". Soon after the band would split, with Farren going on to record the ''Mona – The Carnivorous Circus'' album. Farren eventually left the music business, while his ex-bandmates continued as the Pink Fairies. Critical reception ''Trouser Press'' called ''3'' "harder-rocking and spacier" than the previous albums. '' Perfect Sound Forever'' called the album "a much more consistent collection of songs than ''Disposable''", writing that "musically, it tends to be more focused and you can hear that the playing is more solid, which can be good at times, but it also means that the musicians occasionally slip into bland '60's electric blues formalities". ''Uncut'' wrote ...
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