mrbelfry
Well-Known Member
Surprised I didn't already know this album as 97 I was in my peak music snob stage so something not selling well would have been right in my wheel house.
First impression is that it is very Scouse sounding. There is something in the delivery and sound of Scouse vocalists that is distinctive. X Marks The Spot grabbed me the most mainly due to vocal delivery and it's untidy feel. It felt like the most unpolished song of an album that is aggressively competent and restrained.
On second listen it does feel less bland and i'm beginning to suspect this is the kind of album that becomes the favourite album of other bands that you prefer. The strings and flute are nice but even when they get a little intense and dramatic like at the end of The Prize I wanted them to be more so - it just feels very polite.
Undecided reminded me of Badly Drawn Boy but less grimy. Glynis and Jaqui and It's Harvest Time take us back to the jangly psychedelia pop stuff before Loaded Man marks the albums high point for me. It's probably the simplest song on the album but I enjoyed the nasally vulnerability and after last week's controversy ironically it's a song that i could imagine Radiohead writing.
Hockens Hay promptly dumps us back in a medieval market place before Fontilan brings back some atmosphere. It sounds like Hockens Hay if the banjo hadn't been invented and if it was recorded in a cave. Green Velvet Jacket ends the album with a little bit of tension but I wanted much more drama. Maybe it's too subtle for me.
I know nothing about these guys and their character but I imagine they'd turn up at a venue to play on time and be very good BUT the guitarist wouldn't have told you ahead of time that his guitar has a broken pick up. You'd think the gig had gone well but then they'd call me a dickhead on the way out and I'd be up all night trying to figure out why they hadn't liked me.
I'll give it a 6 out of 10 because it was fine. I think if I'd listened to it a few more times I think it might stretch to an 8 because at heart I'm still a music snob and unheralded competency is my jam. However should I get the urge to listen to it more i would probably be better served by playing Nick Drake instead.
Edit: strong suspicion that Radiohead totally ripped of Loaded Man when they wrote How to Disappear Completely
First impression is that it is very Scouse sounding. There is something in the delivery and sound of Scouse vocalists that is distinctive. X Marks The Spot grabbed me the most mainly due to vocal delivery and it's untidy feel. It felt like the most unpolished song of an album that is aggressively competent and restrained.
On second listen it does feel less bland and i'm beginning to suspect this is the kind of album that becomes the favourite album of other bands that you prefer. The strings and flute are nice but even when they get a little intense and dramatic like at the end of The Prize I wanted them to be more so - it just feels very polite.
Undecided reminded me of Badly Drawn Boy but less grimy. Glynis and Jaqui and It's Harvest Time take us back to the jangly psychedelia pop stuff before Loaded Man marks the albums high point for me. It's probably the simplest song on the album but I enjoyed the nasally vulnerability and after last week's controversy ironically it's a song that i could imagine Radiohead writing.
Hockens Hay promptly dumps us back in a medieval market place before Fontilan brings back some atmosphere. It sounds like Hockens Hay if the banjo hadn't been invented and if it was recorded in a cave. Green Velvet Jacket ends the album with a little bit of tension but I wanted much more drama. Maybe it's too subtle for me.
I know nothing about these guys and their character but I imagine they'd turn up at a venue to play on time and be very good BUT the guitarist wouldn't have told you ahead of time that his guitar has a broken pick up. You'd think the gig had gone well but then they'd call me a dickhead on the way out and I'd be up all night trying to figure out why they hadn't liked me.
I'll give it a 6 out of 10 because it was fine. I think if I'd listened to it a few more times I think it might stretch to an 8 because at heart I'm still a music snob and unheralded competency is my jam. However should I get the urge to listen to it more i would probably be better served by playing Nick Drake instead.
Edit: strong suspicion that Radiohead totally ripped of Loaded Man when they wrote How to Disappear Completely
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