Nee Lewman
बैस्टर्ड
Laughing - man, Out of Time is all right here in this song. They emerged as such as realized force.
Yeah, I am a big Wilco fan and enjoy the Billy Bragg I’ve heard though I haven’t explored his stuff too much. There are a few tracks on each of the the Mermaid Ave. albums that are fantastic but as whole albums they don’t do a ton for me.I think I'm going to have somewhat of a hot take for folks around these parts on this album. It's just ok. I've listened to it at least a dozen times over the years and I would go so far as to say I lean toward enjoying the album, but it's nothing special for me. Birds and Ships with Natalie Merchant is the track that most stands out to me stylistically. Lyrically I enjoy the whole album, but I prefer Wilco on their own and only the occasional Billy Bragg song.
I could see this being an album that might grow on you if you dug deep and kept it spinning for a few sessions close together, perhaps aided by some mind relaxing substances. But it feels like work to love this and the appeal to do that work is not there for me.
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I do really like the first one a lot.Yeah, I am a big Wilco fan and enjoy the Billy Bragg I’ve heard though I haven’t explored his stuff too much. There are a few tracks on each of the the Mermaid Ave. albums that are fantastic but as whole albums they don’t do a ton for me.
I just picked up a Quiex II pressing of Chronic Town just a few weeks ago to go with my Quiex II pressings of Murmur and Reckoning. R.E.M. is a band that was highly influential on a bunch of other bands I loved and one that I have grown to love over time. The issue for me initially was that my introduction to them was “Losing My Religion “ which is a great song but felt very adult during the early 90s and I was in Junior high and while I enjoyed Automatic For The People and Monster a decent amount it wasn't until college that I really began exploring their back catalog probably after I came to the realization that Kurt Cobain and Thom Yorke were huge fans. Seeing there evolution is quite outstanding. Think I enjoy the early stuff the most but their discography is peppered with excellent albums and even their “bad” albums are better and more interesting than most. I recently finished reading Our Band Could Be Your Life which is an excellent history of many of the 80s Underground bands that would be highly influential to the 90s Alternative explosion; and even though the book doesn’t cover R.E.M. directly, it’s astounding how often they are referenced as the the first truly underground band to achieve mainstream success and none of the bands thought of R.E.M. as “sell outs”. They saw them more as aspirational.From the allmusic review: “Leaving behind the garagey jangle pop of their first recordings” wuh? I should probably listen to Chronic Town Again but this isn’t garagey and jangly?
Pilgrimage - like the way it builds and stops to start over again…
another one i am very familiar with. i was first exposed to burning spear at bonnaroo 2004, and getting into his records as a result helped me understand there was more to reggae music than bob marley. i mean, i was aware enough to know that, but i'd never really explored much beyond marley and toots. marcus garvey was one of those records that broadened my horizons. i've never listened to the original mix of this album, so maybe i will do that for this challenge.
here's one of my favorite ever performances from that roo show, african postman from the hail h.i.m. album:
stellar start for me.this is a great idea, I'm in!
my first album is probably one of my favorite ever.
Dusty is the fifth I own on vinyl.Day 4 is the first one I already own on vinyl so far (thanks to @jamieanderson1968!), as such I'm spinning it rather than streaming it.
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