Rock/Pop
CDアルバム

Number Seven Uptown

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フォーマット CDアルバム
発売日 2000年10月24日
国内/輸入 輸入
レーベルSecretly Canadian
構成数 1
パッケージ仕様 -
規格品番 SC32
SKU 656605003221

構成数 : 1枚
合計収録時間 : 00:26:58

  1. 1.[CDアルバム]
    1. 1.
      Flying Pizza
    2. 2.
      Inadvertant Christmas Song
    3. 3.
      Thin Man from North Main
    4. 4.
      Prelude to a Miss
    5. 5.
      Numbers Have Too Many Meanings to Me
    6. 6.
      Dog with the Lampshade Head
    7. 7.
      Bullet
    8. 8.
      Calgon Take Me Away
    9. 9.
      Maybe Zorro
    10. 10.
      Talking Pictures
    11. 11.
      Flying Pizza
    12. 12.
      Left on Forest
    13. 13.
      Three Wishes
    14. 14.
      Drunk on Monday
    15. 15.
      One More Next Time

作品の情報

メイン
アーティスト: Swearing At Motorists

その他
プロデューサー: Dave Doughman
エンジニア: Dave Doughman; Dave Przybylo

商品の紹介

here's something about suburban basements that breeds intimate, warm, miserably hopeful singer/songwriters. They come to the surface from time to time offering heartfelt, stark, quirky four-track demos to the world. With his early odd homebrew, Beck was a pioneer of the recent era, and Canadian gloom-folkie Hayden and Palace Brother Will Oldham have continued down a similar road. They all make recordings that offer a private snapshot of fragile psyches and inner maladjustment. Now, Swearing at Motorists from Dayton, OH, exudes this same subterranean feel. On their second major release Number Seven Uptown, drummer Don Thrasher (Guided by Voices) and singer/multi-instrumentalist Dave Doughman punch through 15 short songs about TV shows, talking on the phone, and unrequited love. Richly layered and overdubbed with dissonant harmonies, the songs are striking in the way that Doughman doubles his vocals, producing a lo-fi version of the kind of high harmony one might hear in Irish folk (or perhaps similar to how it might sound if Built to Spill covered an entire Varnaline album). The heavy-rock sea shanty "Flying Pizza" and the Tortoise-influenced "Talking Pictures" capture the diverse songcrafting of this team, and the bouncing horn section on "Calgon Take Me Away" brightens what would otherwise be a crushingly depressing song. Released in late 2000 on Secretly Canadian records, Number Seven Uptown is like finding a long forgotten crate of Dylan records in your mom's basement. ~ Zac Johnson|
Rovi

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