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Up Home!

Up Home! in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $30.99
Get it at Barnes and Noble
Up Home!

Up Home! in Bloomington, MN

Current price: $30.99
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Size: OS

Get it at Barnes and Noble
"Baby Milk Snatcher,"
the lead cut, eventually surfaced on the wonderful
69
album but sounds just as good here, its very specifically
dub
-touched rhythm and echoes meshing with the more immediately familiar feedback scrapes and sonics of the band, not to mention
Rudi
's always lovely voice. The next number, the wittily and bitterly titled
"W.O.G.S.,"
has a soft loping rhythm to it "floating," to quote it directly -- while singing and
acoustic
&
electric
music both combine in another beautiful, uniquely
A.R. Kane
wash.
"One Way Mirror"
has a crisp but still funky groove to it, not quite the dance-friendly elements of future releases surfacing yet but hinting at it, while the band create more trademark oceanic
rock
over it. The best is saved for the last --
"Up,"
arguably the best song the band ever did, is a six-minute slow rise up, as the lyrics put it, "on a stairway to heaven." With a simple but heartbreaking series of electric guitar notes tracing a soft filigree throughout, and huge amounts of echo and effects fleshing out the overall mix,
sounds like he's being bodily assumed into paradise, and why not? ~ Ned Raggett
"Baby Milk Snatcher,"
the lead cut, eventually surfaced on the wonderful
69
album but sounds just as good here, its very specifically
dub
-touched rhythm and echoes meshing with the more immediately familiar feedback scrapes and sonics of the band, not to mention
Rudi
's always lovely voice. The next number, the wittily and bitterly titled
"W.O.G.S.,"
has a soft loping rhythm to it "floating," to quote it directly -- while singing and
acoustic
&
electric
music both combine in another beautiful, uniquely
A.R. Kane
wash.
"One Way Mirror"
has a crisp but still funky groove to it, not quite the dance-friendly elements of future releases surfacing yet but hinting at it, while the band create more trademark oceanic
rock
over it. The best is saved for the last --
"Up,"
arguably the best song the band ever did, is a six-minute slow rise up, as the lyrics put it, "on a stairway to heaven." With a simple but heartbreaking series of electric guitar notes tracing a soft filigree throughout, and huge amounts of echo and effects fleshing out the overall mix,
sounds like he's being bodily assumed into paradise, and why not? ~ Ned Raggett

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