ZK
It seemed to him, as he silenced the TV and hurried into the kitchen, that he was failing even at the miserable task of falling properly apart. The Corrections, p.77.
47. Belle&Sebastian--The Boy With the Arab Strap
48. Belle&Sebastian--Fold your hands, child, you walk like a peasant
49. Belle&Sebastian--Legal Man EP
50. Belle&Sebastian--This is just a modern rock song EP
51. Belle&Sebastian--3.6.9 Seconds of light EP
52. Belle&Sebastian--Lazy Line, Painter Jane EP
53. Belle&Sebastian--Dog on Wheels EP
One big package from England brought this whole list to me. Some inexpensive thing at the time that now seems extravagant. You could put the good songs from these discs on 1 full length and have maybe 2 or 3 left over. In other words, there isn't much substance. Quanity not Quality.
Jeff Magnum=Good. How many live albums have a baby crying in the background for the majority of the recording? Good songs, annoying crowd. Your typical live album.
New End Original=Lukewarm***1***
505/568 on the Corrections. Don't want to finish it, it's so good.
The kid next to me in the computer lab hits the space bar with a force not quite like anything I've ever seen. He's sweating, from hitting it so hard. He is also using an electrical outlet underneath the computer to charge his cell phone. Cheap and fascist bastard.
Five of the best rock songs ever written are all on the Same EP. Spoon. "Waiting for the kid to come out" makes me want to turn back time, pick up my crappy guitar, and dance in circles stomping my foot to the beat. Ala Michael J. in Back to the Future. Or Ted Leo. Aren't they the same person?
Next five: "oh comely" by Neutral milk hotel; "lukewarm" by new end original; "passenger side" by wilco; "I could see the dude" by spoon; and "Pabst Blue Ribbon (ain't goin outta bisness without a fucking fight)" by lois lane featuring Dan herzing on trombone.
In the stereo: Jeff Magnum
***1***Ha ha. But seriously, the only thing (so far) that sticks out is "Lukewarm", and even that is seriously reminding me of 1998. I think these guys missed their window of opportunity by about 16 months.
It seemed to him, as he silenced the TV and hurried into the kitchen, that he was failing even at the miserable task of falling properly apart. The Corrections, p.77.
47. Belle&Sebastian--The Boy With the Arab Strap
48. Belle&Sebastian--Fold your hands, child, you walk like a peasant
49. Belle&Sebastian--Legal Man EP
50. Belle&Sebastian--This is just a modern rock song EP
51. Belle&Sebastian--3.6.9 Seconds of light EP
52. Belle&Sebastian--Lazy Line, Painter Jane EP
53. Belle&Sebastian--Dog on Wheels EP
One big package from England brought this whole list to me. Some inexpensive thing at the time that now seems extravagant. You could put the good songs from these discs on 1 full length and have maybe 2 or 3 left over. In other words, there isn't much substance. Quanity not Quality.
Jeff Magnum=Good. How many live albums have a baby crying in the background for the majority of the recording? Good songs, annoying crowd. Your typical live album.
New End Original=Lukewarm***1***
505/568 on the Corrections. Don't want to finish it, it's so good.
The kid next to me in the computer lab hits the space bar with a force not quite like anything I've ever seen. He's sweating, from hitting it so hard. He is also using an electrical outlet underneath the computer to charge his cell phone. Cheap and fascist bastard.
Five of the best rock songs ever written are all on the Same EP. Spoon. "Waiting for the kid to come out" makes me want to turn back time, pick up my crappy guitar, and dance in circles stomping my foot to the beat. Ala Michael J. in Back to the Future. Or Ted Leo. Aren't they the same person?
Next five: "oh comely" by Neutral milk hotel; "lukewarm" by new end original; "passenger side" by wilco; "I could see the dude" by spoon; and "Pabst Blue Ribbon (ain't goin outta bisness without a fucking fight)" by lois lane featuring Dan herzing on trombone.
In the stereo: Jeff Magnum
***1***Ha ha. But seriously, the only thing (so far) that sticks out is "Lukewarm", and even that is seriously reminding me of 1998. I think these guys missed their window of opportunity by about 16 months.
0 Comments:
Post a Comment
<< Home