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the Judybloom
Zoe Goes Crazy CD
Tic Toc.
by Scott Zimmerman. December 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
Zoe Goes Crazy has an unusually nice trait, one that I
appreciate immensely, particularly when I'm feeling lazy. It is
pretty much no problem to listen to this album straight
through a few times in succession without going completely
mad. I put the CD player on repeat, and I'm set! That
would tend to suggest that this is not a musically challenging
experience, and I would agree. However, anybody can
create a musically challenging experience. Put a two
year old at a piano, and you've got one. Zoe Goes Crazy
instead offers a bunch of good natured, gratifying
guitar-pop songs, none that are likely to set you screaming,
running down the street with a "Everybody, you've got to
hear this!," but certainly good enough to keep you smiling!
There's a nice balance of the upbeat ("Every Month is May,",
"Donna Maria Way," "Nothing Now") with the downbeat
("Devastation," "A Buddha Song") with the cool croon ("Lemon &
Lime") and the haven't heard that since the mid-1980s (a cover
of Ozzy Osbourne's "Crazy Train"). So if you're looking only
for noisy Trent Reznor produced teen angst MTV buzz clip rock,
forget this record, but if you want to simply locate a batch
of original pop songs, with quirky lyrics that even your mother
might approve of, pick up this completely agreeable offering
by the Judybloom!
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Magnetic Fields
"All The Umbrellas In London" 7" vinyl
Merge. MRG 073.
by Scott Zimmerman. December 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
Stephin can't sing, but like, that's so cool. I think he wakes up in the
middle of night, and records vocals when he's at his groggiest. Brilliant
concept! His voice totally falls within his down tunes, and at the same
time, that voice starts to pull you down and within, too. His brand of
ding-dong synthesizer pop is so alien, so odd, that I'm not sure I'll
ever be able to fully appreciate it. But hey, I'll keep buying it. And
there's that certain something in the vocals. With great lines like "All
the umbrellas in London couldn't stop this rain, and all the dope in New
York couldn't kill this pain" delivered with such matter-of-factness,
Stephin's drollness is hard to top. He's the Steven Wright of the music
world.
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the Cat's Miaow
This Is All I Ever Wanted 7" vinyl
Quiddity. Quiddity 004.
by Scott Zimmerman. December 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
Maybe the reverb on "I Fall to Pieces" is just a little bit excessive,
but, gosh, what a beautiful song! It's a Patsy Cline cover, and it sounds
like it, seeing as how she was given so much sorrowful, lyrically
brilliant material to work with in her day. The second song on this record
ends almost as quickly as it begins, which is sort of the Cat's Miaow
trademark for both the A-side and B-side of their 7" singles--first a
normal length song, then a really short one.
Turning the record over, "Portland, Oregon" brings
the pace up a bit, and features male lead vocals instead of female leads.
Great song! And the next track is also snappy, and it finishes in about
30 seconds. Now that is concise song writing!!
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Aberdeen
"Snapdragon" 7" vinyl
Sunday. Sunday 035.
by Scott Zimmerman. December 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
If you're looking for light and flowerly non-abrasive female vocaled
atmospheric music, these two tracks provide that throughout, but
if you're looking for engaging pop, you had better listen beyond
the opening couple of minutes because it's not until each song's
finish that you'll catch the full musical experience.
The spirited jangling of the last minute of
"Snapdragon" is what makes that song finally take off.
The flip-side "I think I'm falling" isn't
particularly notable until towards the wrap up when that title lyric
finally emerges and snugly grabs hold. It's here when you realize "Gee,
what a nice little song! Not quite a rock anthem, but who needs
those anyways?"
And if you are looking for hot and sweaty rock and
roll, try elsewhere!
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Tarnation
Gentle Creatures CD
4ad. 9 45961-2.
by Scott Zimmerman. December 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
What in Tarnation!? After I faintly caught the last bit of that rich,
glorious voice coming out of a "Rock Over London" tuned radio faintly
heard arising out of the kitchen of a Pembroke, Wales bed & breakfast,
I struggled to remember where I had heard it before. Oh yes, that was
Paula Frazer. That was a Tarnation song. Well, that was an easy
mystery to ...solve... No wait, couldn't have been! Not a possibility!
Self, what were you thinking? They're just an obscure little half-way
across the world San Francisco country band, certainly beyond the
scope of what the Rock Over London folks have possibly ever scoped
out previously. Not to mention it being an un-new song. After those
few seconds of thought on the matter, I forgot about it, trying not to
become distressed at my obvious mistake at identifying a song.
Then a couple of weeks later, after returning from
my European vacation, I found sufficient proof that my identification was
right. A new Tarnation album, lots of them, on sale. The label:
4AD. Ah! My long forgotten minor overseas
trauma came back to me. It really was them on the radio! The secret was
out!
Tarnation: a gem of a group. There's not much good
about country, but what is good about country is what is good about
Tarnation. The spooky, sentimental qualities of this group are unlike
that of the popular country artists of the present that I almost
universally loath. So, no, I am not trying to convert anybody to Garth
Brooks. I'm not trying to convert anybody to new country hits. I'm just
telling you about a new record by a band I like. And there ends the
disclaimer.
The fifteen songs on this album for the most part
flow by quite pleasantly. "Game of Broken Hearts" is the quiet, lo-fi
number that begins the album. It features just Paula with her guitar, and
it has a recorded-through-a-telephone quality, but that's not a bad thing.
A
certain mysterious, ravaged-by-time authenticity results from the
recording technique. "Game of Broken Hearts" is one of about a half
dozen songs on this album that were originally released on Tarnation's
debut LP I'll Give You Something to Cry About.
The album then traverses through more fully
instrumented songs of which most are new to me. Crying guitars are firmly
in place, and Paula's vocals are heartbreaking, while not hokey. "The
Hand" stands in most contrast to the rest of the album, having wonderful
surf and western guitar overtones throughout. It's something you'd almost
expect to be an instrumental, but then the vocals come, and that is,
yes, quite grand.
Song fourteen "Stranger in the Mirror" is perhaps
the track which hits most directly on country elements that challenge my
tastes. It also represents a switch from female lead vocals to male lead.
That's not bad in itself, however, as a strong finish is made with the
Wendell lead "It's Not Easy," a track on which Paula does great sky
reaching accompanying vocals, wonderfully summarizing the splendorous
trip on which the album has taken you.
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Helen Love
"Bubblegum" 7" vinyl
Damaged Goods. Damgood 61.
by Aurore Bacmann. October 31, 1995.
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Out of Stock. |
After a few singles, a mini-LP and then a compilation CD containing
the songs of the singles and the ones on the mini-LP (for those who'd
missed the beginning), Helen Love comes back with a new 7", faithful
to the style that was featured in her previous releases. Lo-Fi punky
guitars and radiopop keyboards, lots of good mood and lyrics
reflecting the preoccupations of a 14-year-old are the main
ingredients that she mixes for her catchy songs with so much savour.
Bubblegum and Let's Go both have that lightness generally associated
with "pop-music" and are, just like the "Radio Hits" compilation, the
perfect soundtrack for teenage summer holiday, sunshine and water at
the seaside. These two new songs have the power to put a piece of blue
sky into the dull greyness of bad days and some youth into sad,
cynical hearts.
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