Urge Overkill Lyrics — by Popularity
83 songs · Page 1 of 2
| 1 | Positive Bleeding |
| 2 | Dropout |
| 3 | Back on Me |
| 4 | Bottle of Fur |
| 5 | Woman 2 Woman |
| 6 | Erica Kane |
| 7 | Crackbabies |
| 8 | The Stalker |
| 9 | Somebody Else’s Body |
| 10 | The Break |
| 11 | Nite and Grey |
| 12 | View of the Rain |
| 13 | Need Some Air |
| 14 | Heaven 90210 / [silence] / Operation Kissinger |
| 15 | Effigy |
| 16 | Jaywalkin’ |
| 17 | Take a Walk |
| 18 | And You’ll Say |
| 19 | Take Me |
| 20 | This Is No Place |
| 21 | The Mistake |
| 22 | Honesty Files |
| 23 | Monopoly |
| 24 | Last Night / Tomorrow |
| 25 | Tin Foil |
| 26 | Digital Black Epilogue |
| 27 | Mason/Dixon |
| 28 | The Candidate |
| 29 | The Kids Are Insane |
| 30 | (Now That's) The Barclords |
| 31 | Emmaline |
| 32 | Poison Flower |
| 33 | Goodbye to Guyville |
| 34 | Stitches |
| 35 | What Is Artane? |
| 36 | (Today Is) Blackie's Birthday |
| 37 | Vacation in Tokyo |
| 38 | Bionic Revolution |
| 39 | Faroutski |
| 40 | Henhough: The Greatest Story Ever Told |
| 41 | God Flintstone |
| 42 | Blow Chopper |
| 43 | 76 Ball |
| 44 | Very Sad Trousers |
| 45 | Empire Builder |
| 46 | Ticket to L.A. |
| 47 | The Polaroid Doll |
| 48 | Head On |
| 49 | Your Friend Is Insane |
| 50 | Crown of Laffs |
Urge Overkill Albums
EPs
Singles
About Urge Overkill
Urge Overkill is a Chicago rock band formed in 1985 who became cult heroes of the alternative rock scene with their glam-influenced sound and ironic swagger. Their breakthrough came with the cover of Neil Diamond's "Girl, You'll Be a Woman Soon" for the "Pulp Fiction" soundtrack, which brought their theatrical rock style to mainstream audiences. Albums like "Saturation" and "Exit the Dragon" showcased their ability to blend classic rock bombast with 90s alternative sensibilities, while songs like "Sister Havana" and "Positive Bleeding" demonstrated their knack for catchy hooks wrapped in tongue-in-cheek attitude. Though they never achieved massive commercial success, Urge Overkill's influence on the Chicago rock scene and their role in bridging glam rock with grunge-era alternative made them an essential part of 90s rock culture.