Machines of Loving Grace Lyrics — by Popularity
| 1 | Golgotha Tenement Blues |
| 2 | Butterfly Wings |
| 3 | Richest Junkie Still Alive |
| 4 | Suicide King |
| 5 | Perfect Tan (Bikini Atoll) |
| 6 | Lilith/Eve |
| 7 | Limiter |
| 8 | If I Should Explode |
| 9 | Albert Speer |
| 10 | Kiss Destroyer |
| 11 | Shake |
| 12 | The Soft Collision |
| 13 | Solar Temple |
| 14 | Acceleration |
| 15 | Tryst |
| 16 | Ancestor Cult |
| 17 | Cheap |
| 18 | Casual Users |
| 19 | Animal Mass |
| 20 | Serpico |
| 21 | Twofold Godhead |
| 22 | Rite of Shiva |
| 23 | Last |
| 24 | Cicciolina |
| 25 | Burn Like Brilliant Trash (At Jackie’s Funeral) |
| 26 | X‐Insurrection |
| 27 | Lipstick 66 |
| 28 | Number Nine |
| 29 | Terminal City |
| 30 | Weatherman |
| 31 | All I Really Need |
| 32 | Trigger for Happiness / [untitled] |
| 33 | Trigger for Happiness |
| 34 | Content? |
| 35 | Perfect Tan |
Machines of Loving Grace Albums
Singles
About Machines of Loving Grace
Machines Of Loving Grace was an American industrial rock band from Tucson formed in 1989 who blended heavy guitar riffs with electronic programming and provocative lyrics exploring themes of technology, sexuality, and societal decay. Their breakthrough came with songs like "Golgotha Tenement Blues" and "Cicciolina," which showcased their ability to merge Nine Inch Nails-style industrial aggression with accessible rock hooks and darkly poetic storytelling. Albums like "Concentration" helped define the mid-90s alternative metal scene, while tracks such as "Suicide King" demonstrated their knack for crafting both radio-friendly anthems and underground cult classics. Though they disbanded in 1997, their fusion of cyberpunk aesthetics with guitar-driven industrial rock influenced a generation of bands exploring the intersection of human emotion and technological alienation.