T O P I C R E V I E W |
two reelers |
Posted - 09/14/2004 : 00:56:29 i heard it is called "is all over the map" or something. has anybody listened to it ? is it worth buying ? comparable to what other album ?
I joined the cult of this mouse / and now I occidentally tic-tac |
2 L A T E S T R E P L I E S (Newest First) |
Johnny Yen |
Posted - 09/14/2004 : 16:08:44 Do you like amp destroying feedback, cocktail lounge piano, desert fried Leonard Cohen vocals, shimmering acoustic guitar, jazzy brushed drums that get the hell beat outta them, and songs that can completly shift midway? Does the idea of a Sex Pistols/Waylon Jennings medly sound like fun? What if it's sung by the lead singer's 16 year old daughter? I'm big into it myself. It sums up what Howe Gelb has been doing for the past 3 years quite nicely. 4 outta 5. GO here to see what giant sand fans have been saying about it: http://www.giantsand.com/comments/index.shtml |
Ten Percenter |
Posted - 09/14/2004 : 01:29:24 I've not heard it yet, but it was reviewed (briefly) in Sunday's Observer:
Giant Sand It's All Over the Map (Thrill Jockey) Howe Gelb, the doyen of alt.country, continues his ridiculously prolific career (Giant Sand releases are into the dozens these days) with this pleasant selection of skewed ditties. At times, the songwriting falls down - there's something glib, for instance, about the lyrics to 'NYC of Time' - but there's a great range of textures crammed into the ramshackle country framework. The above track features a piercing solo which sounds like a guitar but is, in fact, a scream. There is some fine slide work and on several tracks the strings of Gelb's piano are struck or plucked while he plays to provide strange, hammer dulcimer-like accompaniment.
"Fried food, cigarettes, no exercise, chest pain..." (Excerpt from the Angina Monologues) |
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