On Sat, 10 Apr 1999 00:06:42 +0100, Stevie Simkin wrote:
(Max is doing a fine job in the Gourds
With Freakwater as well.
I hereby nominate Max Johnston as Sideperson of the Decade.
~Greg
___
Get your free, private email at
Damn man, just say what you really feelg
- Original Message -
From: Stevie Simkin [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: passenger side [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Saturday, April 10, 1999 6:30 PM
Subject: Re: Wilco's new horizon
Well, Sam summed it up pretty well for me. I can't stand any pink floyd
At 01:01 PM 4/10/1999 Terry Smith wrote:
So how's that new Wilco record?
Couldn't resist. Anyhow, I haven't heard it, but there's a formula that I
understand applies to this record, and establishes, in my mind, whether
it's any damn good. It goes like this: "Summerteeth" = ELO.
and I replied
Bill just loves to disagree with me:
Hmm, for a small hypothetical, if you removed the vocal track from all
three Wilco records, and just listened to the instrumentals, you wouldn't
find each record different from the other? (What's the degree of difference
significant to your mini-analysis
PS: For the record, I don't hate ELO nearly as much as many others around
these parts seem to; I love early (i.e. Syd Barrett-era) Pink Floyd, and
though Sgt. Pepper is my least favorite Beatles record, I can't say I hate
it either. Nonetheless, I still don't like Summerteeth.
--Amy
I can't stand any pink floyd or sgt. peppers
Stevie
Stevie my man, the Floyd I ain't even gonna touch, but The Pepper? As
overrated as I think the album truly is, "A Day in the Life" is why rock
means a damn thing (and may redeem the mediocrity which preceded it). If
nothing else, McCartney's
At 08:13 AM 4/11/1999 Mike Hays wrote:
b.s.
n.p. Marty Brown WILD KENTUCKY SKIES
Weird, I had a listener call and request Marty Friday morning. In
particular, anything from that CD.
It's funny, because I've looked for that record for ages and couldn't find
it, used even. Wasting time before I
At 08:13 AM 4/11/1999 Mike Hays wrote:
b.s.
n.p. Marty Brown WILD KENTUCKY SKIES
Weird, I had a listener call and request Marty Friday morning. In
particular, anything from that CD.
It's funny, because I've looked for that record for ages and couldn't find
it, used even. Wasting time
So how's that new Wilco record?
Couldn't resist. Anyhow, I haven't heard it, but there's a formula that I
understand applies to this record, and establishes, in my mind, whether
it's any damn good. It goes like this: "Summerteeth" = ELO. And since ELO
= Crappy, pretentious, classical rock,
At 01:38 PM 4/10/1999 Amy Haugesag wrote:
So how's that new Wilco record?
I rilly, rilly don't like what I've heard, and as others have said, I don't
see how the record can be called a breakthrough, since it's not drastically
different from Being There (which wasn't as drastically different
Terry, your ELO premise is wrong. While the band's original records were
equal, more or less, to crappy, pretentious, classical rock, the ELO period
that Summerteeth is inarguably borowing from, and borrowing heavily--I say
inarguably, because you only have to listen to A New World Record to hear
ObWilco: I'm quite taken with Via Chicago. Yet to pass judgement on
the rest of the record -- some nice sounds, though no songs have grabbed
me.
ObNorton, Amy sez:
Primal Fear is
the first and most striking example of that: a mediocre thriller with a
more-than-usually smug and simpering
i wonder how many people who like this album actually liked anything done by
elo, or the sgt. peppers, or late period pink floyd. i mean, that's my
problem in a nutshell. i can't stand "summerteeth" cause it sounds so much
like an attempt to duplicate those things, which i loathe. big
I have lurked around this lovely P2 land of make believe for long
enough-now I must speak! I just picked up SummerTeeth and I am amazed
the closed mindedness of many of the "critical reviewers" that make
this place their cyber home.
If musical maturation is worthy of disdain, well then I say
On Fri, 9 Apr 1999, Jezzy Larue wrote:
I have lurked around this lovely P2 land of make believe for long
enough-now I must speak! I just picked up SummerTeeth and I am amazed
the closed mindedness of many of the "critical reviewers" that make
this place their cyber home.
Sometimes I
What Don said.
But what has really got my simple little mind all a-twist is how a band
rehashing many old sounds (Beach Boys, Pink Floyd, Beatles, etc.) can be
used to accuse people of being too static to accept a new horizon??
remember i am a Wilco sympathizer and applaud the new
I'll repeat: sonically, I've found the new Wilco album to be one of the
most interesting recordings of the year. It is amzingly intricate and
just damned, interesting. Now you all know by now how much I like pop
music and overproduction. So, it would be a natural that I would take to
this
In a message dated 4/9/99 3:51:21 PM Central Daylight Time,
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes:
I just picked up SummerTeeth and I am amazed
the closed mindedness of many of the "critical reviewers" that make
this place their cyber home.
Maybe we just don't like Wilco.
Slim
How do you get from this:
A sprinkle of Pink Floyd , just enough to mellow out the strong
flavor of Beatles, and finish it off with big dollop of eighties pop
to this:
there are new and uncharted territories yet to be discovered and
Jeff Tweedy and Wilco are just the guys to prove it.
in
Maybe we just don't like Wilco.
speak for yourself, bub.
NW
In a message dated 4/9/99 5:36:05 PM Central Daylight Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
writes:
Maybe we just don't like Wilco.
speak for yourself, bub.
I am, bub #2. Multiple personality disorder.
G
Slim
Tom Baker wrote:
For me, Summerteeth just sort of lays there. When I have
it on in the office, I oftentimes go for a long period of time
after it has finished before I notice that there is nothing playing.
It is, perhaps, the perfect background music - it stays in the
On Sat, 10 Apr 1999, Stevie Simkin wrote:
Never have I had such a strong impression of critics' band-wagon-jumping
as I have done with this cd.
Instead of maligning those who have a different opinion about the CD, you
might just wanna chalk it up to different tastes. I very much doubt the
On Sat, 10 Apr 1999, Stevie Simkin wrote:
Never have I had such a strong impression of critics' band-wagon-jumping
as I have done with this cd.
Instead of maligning those who have a different opinion about the CD, you
might just wanna chalk it up to different tastes. I very much doubt the
On Fri, 9 Apr 1999, JP Riedie wrote:
Don, my love, you must admit there's a creepy unanimity among the critics
regarding this release. There a definitely lemmings afoot.
Hmmm. Well, I always find it interesting when folks perceive a "lemmings"
affect when the music in question is
Don Yates wrote:
And to put the shoe on the other foot -- I've no doubt that
Stevie saw absolutely no lemmings when Trace was being praised to the
skies,
Hmm. I posted on this topic on The Other List just a day or two ago. I think
Trace would have slipped under the radar if the label
On Fri, 9 Apr 1999, JP Riedie wrote:
Don, my love, you must admit there's a creepy unanimity among the critics
regarding this release. There a definitely lemmings afoot.
Hmmm. Well, I always find it interesting when folks perceive a "lemmings"
affect when the music in question is something
Don, my love, you must admit there's a creepy unanimity among the critics
regarding this release. There a definitely lemmings afoot.
Like this is anything new? Critics tend to think like critics. Most of us
have that same chip in our heads that makes us like music that most sensible
At 01:27 PM 4/9/99 -0700, you wrote:
I have lurked around this lovely P2 land of make believe for long
enough-now I must speak! I just picked up SummerTeeth and I am amazed
the closed mindedness of many of the "critical reviewers" that make
this place their cyber home.
While I am a regular
LOL, Jeff. Very nice response with a true P2 flair
--junior
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