Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 16, 2026

Deep Chills

Deep Chills is the fifth studio album from Belgian electro-industrial band Lords of Acid. It was released on 10 April 2012 on Metropolis Records and marks the band's first studio album in 12 years. It is also their first studio album to be released on Metropolis. With the exception of Praga Khan, who founded the band, Deep Chills features an entirely new lineup from previous releases and marks the first time an American vocalist to take on vocal duties for an album.

Last revised
Jun 16, 2026
Read time
≈ 4 min
Length
893 w
Citations
16
Source
Deep Chills
Studio album by
Released10 April 2012
Recorded2011
GenreElectro-industrial, electronic rock, acid techno1
Length1:12:06
LabelLektroland, Metropolis Records, dpulse recordings
ProducerLords of Acid
Lords of Acid chronology
Greatest T*ts
(2003)
Deep Chills
(2012)
Smoking Hot
(2016)
Singles from Deep Chills
  1. "Little Mighty Rabbit"
    Released: 27 September 20112
  2. "Pop That Tooshie"
    Released: 16 March 20123
  3. "Paranormal Energy"
    Released: 1 May 20124
Audio
"Album" playlist on YouTube

Deep Chills is the fifth studio album from Belgian electro-industrial band Lords of Acid.56 It was released on 10 April 2012 on Metropolis Records and marks the band's first studio album in 12 years.7 It is also their first studio album to be released on Metropolis. With the exception of Praga Khan, who founded the band, Deep Chills features an entirely new lineup from previous releases and marks the first time an American vocalist to take on vocal duties for an album.

The album features guest vocals from porn star Alana Evans on "Pop That Tooshie", as well as vocals from Zak Bagans, star of Ghost Adventures and host of Paranormal Challenge, on the track "Paranormal Energy". The collaboration with Zak Bagans has spawned a collaborative side project between Bagans and Khan titled Necrofusion.8 In addition, there is also a song dedicated to the official Lords of Acid fan club and online community, Children of Acid.

The album's cover art was designed by Karl Kotas and is a spoof of Cheap Thrills by Big Brother and the Holding Company.9

Production

The album's production was halted on 19 April 2011 when a recording session at Lords of Acid's Belgium-based recording studio was interrupted by a police raid.10 Neighbors had complained of "hedonistic chantings" coming from the studio. Khan and the studio staff were detained and questioned for three hours by the police. Following their release, police refused to release Khan's ID card to him until he agreed to submit to a drug test.

The album's production also took an unexpected turn during a May recording session when Khan's studio computer took on a life of its own and began writing its own music.11 Khan described the experience, stating "While working on a new Lords of Acid track tremendous fear shook my heart as I tried to edit a melody line on my cubase. All of a sudden it felt like the computer came to life, notes started to change position creating a new melody, completely different from the original one." He went on to say there was no way his computer could have been hacked as it was not connected to the Internet. This "ghost track" was turned into the song "Paranormal Energy".

Deep Chills is the first album to take to social media outlets asking fans what subject matter they wanted on the album. Fans were allowed to vote and name songs on polls through Facebook.

Critical reception

Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
AllMusicStarStarStarHalf star12
PopMattersStarStarStarStarStarStar13
ReGen MagazineStarStarStar14
Spin3/1015

Allmusic gave the album a three and a half star rating, saying that "Deep Chills is an odd comeback, filled with that cheeky, whip-crack spirit one minute and a squeaky-clean '90s soundtrack attitude the next."12

Track listing

All tracks are written by Praga Khan & Erhan Kurkun, except where noted.

No.TitleWriter(s)Length
1."Little Mighty Rabbit" 4:37
2."Drowning in Ecstasy" 4:54
3."Long Johns"Praga Khan, Glenn Engelen4:56
4."Sole Sucker"Praga Khan, Glenn Engelen4:16
5."Pop That Tooshie" (featuring Alana Evans)Praga Khan, Glenn Engelen4:35
6."The Love Bus" 3:20
7."Children of Acid" 5:34
8."Hot Magma"Praga Khan, Erhan Kurkun, Glenn Engelen4:23
9."Medicine Man" 7:06
10."Censorship Blows" 4:33
11."Slip 'n Slide" 3:31
12."Mary, Queen of Slots" 3:10
13."Paranormal Energy" (featuring Zak Bagans)Praga Khan, Glenn Engelen4:34
14."Surfin' Hedgehog" 12:47
Hidden track
No.TitleWriter(s)Length
15.Untitled (silence) 4:01
16."Paranormal Energy" (Remix)Praga Khan, Glenn Engelen4:52
Total length:72:06

Music videos

Three videos were officially released in support of the album. The first was "Little Mighty Rabbit", followed by "Pop That Tooshie" (both of which have "remix" videos) and finally the "banned" video "Long Johns". "Long Johns" almost didn't see a release after it was originally rejected by the Apple TV censors. It appeared on the adult video site XTube on May 15, 2013, nearly one year after the video was finished.

Personnel

  • Murv Douglas – bass
  • Maurice Engelen (aka Praga Khan) – vocals, synthesizers and programming
  • Mea Fisher (a.k.a. DJ Mea) – vocals
  • Andre Karkos (a.k.a. Virus) – guitars
  • Kirk Salvador – drums and electronic percussion
  • Glenn Engelen – additional music and arrangements
  • Erhan Kurkun – additional music and arrangements
References

References