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10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A completely untypical YLT album, but one I dearly love, January 25, 2004
OK, I'm going to have to defend this album. This is widely considered to be one of Yo La Tengo's weakest albums, and is unquestionably one of their least popular. I have always been perplexed by this take on it. Perhaps my liking for the album stems from the fact that the first time I saw them live (I've seen them about 15 times since) was immediately before this album was released, so that the songs on this album comprised most of the set that they were performing. Since then I have seen them perform fewer and fewer songs off the album, with the exception of "Mushroom Cloud of Hiss," which is a near staple of every performance (and who can forget all three members of the band shoving guitars or basses against amplifiers, creating the greatest amount of feedback and distortion recorded in human history?).But I think part of my liking for this album stems from the fact that I am more into pure garage rock rather than electronic experimentation. I have to confess a preference for driving drums, a solid bass line, and a withering guitar to a gentle synthesizer that is tape looped that characterizes so much of the rest of the Yo La Tengo catalogue (though I like that as well, and in fact own over a dozen YLT albums--it is not "either/or" for me, more "both/and" though I prefer the grittier, rarer garage side of YLT). I love YLT wild and out of control. I love Ira Kaplan's guitar work (I use "work" advisedly, because it isn't so clear that he can play the guitar as that he is a master at manipulating it--listen to his guitar on "Mushroom Cloud of Hiss" and tell me that you would describe that as "playing" the guitar). I love many, many Yo La Tengo albums, but this is the only one that gets my adrenaline going. I like nearly song on this album. "Some Kinda Fatigue" is one of my all time favorite YLT songs and actually one of my all time favorite hard rock songs period. I love the thick layering of sound, all so dense that it doesn't seem possible that it is a mere trio. I also love the weird guitar line that drives "Out the Window." "Five-Cornered Hat" actually sounds more like something their buddies in Chicago's Eleventh Dream Day would play. (For those outside New York and Chicago, or perhaps not even in New York, there is a pretty solid connection between Yo La Tengo and Eleventh Dream Day. I have seen them perform together on several occasions. On more than a couple of occasions Ira Kaplan has joined Eleventh Dream Day to provide a second lead guitar to Rick Rizzo. And on several occasions when I have seen Yo La Tengo in Chicago, I have seen either Rick Rizzo or Janet Bean jump on stage to guest for a song or two, perhaps most memorably at the Metro in Chicago a couple of years ago when Rick Rizzo joined them for a number, and his ex-wife and ongoing bandmate Janet Bean jumped up on stage and undid his pants during a blistering guitar solo--for the ladies in the audience, Rick wears boxers.) And there are several lighter songs as well, like "Always Something" and "Satellite." The only song that really disappoints me is the long, dull "Sleeping Pill." It is possible that this is an album that some fans of harder alternative rock might like more than the rest of the Yo La Tengo albums. Myself, I like them all, but although not at all fashionable, I will nonetheless confess that this remains my favorite YLT album, and the one that I have played the most over the past decade or so.
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