Volume 1, Track 17, Drunken Tiger's "취권 vs. 당렁권" (which Google translate can't make heads or tails of) was on The Great Rebirth, the album reviewed near the end of Real Punks.
(That review, by the way, which is — if I say so myself — a brilliant example of how to write a review when you have no idea what you're talking about, does contain a few factual errors, though is presented with enough honest uncertainty that the readers wouldn't have gotten the false impression that they were getting the straight dope. In any event, Tiger JK, one half of Drunken Tiger, was born in Seoul not Los Angeles, it turns out, but according to Wikip did move to L.A. when he was 12. Also, when I wrote of Drunken Tiger's "exquisitely beautiful use of Korean pop music," I might have been very wrong in thinking the music they were appropriating was Korean. May well have been Chinese, to fit the martial arts theme. Or something else. I don't know.)
no subject
(That review, by the way, which is — if I say so myself — a brilliant example of how to write a review when you have no idea what you're talking about, does contain a few factual errors, though is presented with enough honest uncertainty that the readers wouldn't have gotten the false impression that they were getting the straight dope. In any event, Tiger JK, one half of Drunken Tiger, was born in Seoul not Los Angeles, it turns out, but according to Wikip did move to L.A. when he was 12. Also, when I wrote of Drunken Tiger's "exquisitely beautiful use of Korean pop music," I might have been very wrong in thinking the music they were appropriating was Korean. May well have been Chinese, to fit the martial arts theme. Or something else. I don't know.)