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Post by MikeMusic on Sept 20, 2019 16:09:15 GMT
Music and lyrics to make you smile
Grabbed all their albums and started playing with the first from 1985 Telephone Free Landslide Victory
They are mental. From California so no huge surprise there.
I like David Lowery's vocals, love the violin with a sense of humour, Jonathan Segel Love the deliberate off key note
First track is The day Lassie went to the moon
You may know Take the skinheads bowling
Give them a go. Might as well start with this one
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Post by MikeMusic on Sept 21, 2019 10:40:30 GMT
More of the same and a development of their style in II & III (1986)
I like it
Well worth a punt punters !
The first few albums available in Cigarettes & Carrot Juice: The Santa Cruz Years fm Wikipedia Five-disc compilation album by American alternative rock group Camper Van Beethoven released in 2002 on the label Cooking Vinyl. It contains previously released material compiled from several studio albums as well as unreleased works.
I have it
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Post by MikeMusic on Sept 21, 2019 11:00:48 GMT
The first CVB album I bought and my favourite, so far at least This brings in different styles and underlines their talent Appealing to musos everywhere Attention ChrisB and Slinger ! Wikipedia agrees With the six then CVB members joined in the studio by acid-folk eccentric Eugene Chadbourne, the album is arguably the zenith of the band's musical experimentation, with surreal lyrics, backwards, sped-up and slowed down parts; the entire track "Stairway To Heavan" is itself a musical palindrome. A great number of ethnic instruments are used in addition to the usual violin parts played by member Jonathan Segel; the album also features pedal steel, banjo, tablas and sitar. While the album features the band's trademark absurdist lyrics by leader David Lowery and Segel, with CVB staples like affectionate parodies of counterculture and references to drugs and alien abduction, it also features some satirical political lyrics and social commentary on tracks like "Good Guys and Bad Guys", "Joe Stalin's Cadillac" and "We Love You"'. The songs cover a bewildering range of musical styles: garage punk on "Shut Us Down"', acid-rock jamming on the Pink Floyd cover "Interstellar Overdrive", bluegrass jamming on "Hoe Yourself Down", folk-ska on "Good Guys and Bad Guys", gentle tabla beats on "Une Fois" and "Folly", psychedelic pop on "We Saw Jerry's Daughter", ominous desert-rock spoken word on "Peace and Love" and grinding raga-rock on "Stairway to Heavan" (sic). While earlier CVB albums had featured influences of Eastern European and Mexican musical styles, this album has more noticeable elements of Indian and Arabic musics, done in the usual irreverent Camper style. These combine with the elements of psychedelic music that dominate the album. There are also more elements of Americana than on their previous albums. The American Southwest looms large in the music and lyrics as well, especially on songs like "The History of Utah" and "Peace and Love". There are a number of classic rock references too: "We Saw Jerry's Daughter" is a parody of Deadheads; "Stairway to Heavan" (sic), "Five Sticks" and "Joe Stalin's Cadillac" all contain song titles or lyrics modified from Led Zeppelin; and the cover of "Interstellar Overdrive" and several of the album's songs are reminiscent of Syd Barrett-era Pink Floyd. "We Love You" also contains a parody of the Charlie Daniels Band song "The Devil Went Down to Georgia". In the original "The Devil Went Down to Georgia", the Devil was portrayed as a negative being who is defeated in a fiddle-playing contest by the song's protagonist, but in "We Love You", the devil, presumably Jonathan Segel, so impresses the band with his violin playing that they allow him to become a band member. The classic-rock influences are a contrast from their first two albums, which contained covers of other contemporary underground bands like Sonic Youth and Black Flag. A number of the album's tracks remain staples of the reunited Camper Van Beethoven's live sets, including "Good Guys and Bad Guys", "The History of Utah", "Interstellar Overdrive" and "Shut Us Down". In an Oct. 4, 2010, entry on Lowery's "300 Songs" blog, devoted to explaining the genesis and meaning behind the songs he has written throughout his career, the band's leader claimed that this album had a hidden title, concealed in the liner notes and etched onto initial vinyl pressings: "Soviet Spies Swim Upstream Disguised as Trout." Lowery wrote that this title was inspired by "an obsessive fan that would write us nearly everyday." The Ziggens' song "I Got Me a Girlfriend" is partially a cover of "Joe Stalin's Cadillac."
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Post by ChrisB on Sept 21, 2019 11:14:21 GMT
Yes, I have had a copy of that for years, Mike. I like them but a couple of their albums is more than enough for me.
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Post by MikeMusic on Sept 21, 2019 12:43:47 GMT
Their self titled is the most varied of their output and the must have album - so far in my chronological playing. All their albums have appeal for me
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