Now that some time has passed: Lemonheads "It's A Shame About Ray" C/D?

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Classic with a bullet. Catchy pop album, dumb lyrics, still virginal Juliana Hatfield skulking around: awesome.

Spir, Monday, 10 January 2005 17:36 (twenty years ago)

I'M LOVIN' IT!

M@tt He1geson (Matt Helgeson), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:40 (twenty years ago)

Classic, I say. As I do of about half of each record to either side of it.

Dark Horse, Monday, 10 January 2005 17:43 (twenty years ago)

My Drug Buddy is like reliving my high school experience in 3 minutes

so, Classic

rentboy (rentboy), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:47 (twenty years ago)

"Confetti".

'Nuff said.

Tantrum The Cat (Tantrum The Cat), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:48 (twenty years ago)

i listened to some lemonheads today, but it was the album which followed this one, "come on feel..."

those two records ("it's a shame..." and "come on feel...") are among my most played of the last few years. there's something effortlessly brilliant about them. brevity definitely a good thing: what does it matter if an album is over quickly, if it sounds just as great when you flip it over and play it again straight after?

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:54 (twenty years ago)

Good God, utterly classic from the day it was released. Who on Earth thought they were too cool for Dando in his prime?

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:55 (twenty years ago)

it's wrong to start this thread while the australian ILM contingent is asleep.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:58 (twenty years ago)

xposts: does anyone feel otherwise? "Kitchen" (not a Dando song) is among my all time favorites. Personally, I'm against the addition of "Mrs. Robinson", as the album winds down so cutely with "Frank Mills".

I'm not sure about the description of Juliana Hatfield as "virginal", though.

Also, Lovey is horribly underappreciated.

john'n'chicago, Monday, 10 January 2005 17:59 (twenty years ago)

(x-post to myself)
but in any case, this album gets many bonus points from me for introducing me to sneeze.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 10 January 2005 17:59 (twenty years ago)

j'n'c:

http://www.blakebabies.com/archive/jul_nme93.htm

Spir, Monday, 10 January 2005 18:05 (twenty years ago)

Ultrasupermegaclassic. It's like an alternate take on The Replacements that actually works for me.

The Ghost of Dan Perry (Dan Perry), Monday, 10 January 2005 18:06 (twenty years ago)

Q: Which indie rock star was it who said: "I knew Juliana Hatfield before she was a virgin"?

I haven't listened to this album in a long time, but I think it is still great. I remember why I haven't got a copy - I had it taped off a friend, then that horrible 'Mrs Robinson' cover got tacked on the end and as a result I refused to buy it. I kept looking in second-hand shops for an original issue, but never found one. God, I had a fascinating youth.

Alba (Alba), Monday, 10 January 2005 18:09 (twenty years ago)

Punch-ins/edits that ruin your day made me like this album even more.

Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Monday, 10 January 2005 18:15 (twenty years ago)

Original copy bought day of release, in hand. I'm a complete elitist about this and the Stone Roses' debut.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Monday, 10 January 2005 19:17 (twenty years ago)

Never ever seen an original copy sans Mrs Robinson, but even with that unwanted edition this is a classic all the way for me. Neither Lovey or Come on Feel have the same consistency despite both containing their fair share of pop gems. I don't hate Mrs R nearly as much as most Lemonheads fans, in fact I thought it was a good single but it sounds completely out of place on the LP. A shame because the preceding 29 minutes or so are damn near perfection.

And, like the fact checkin' cuz I have the Lemonheads to thank for discovering the various musical projects of Tom Morgan and Nic Dalton.

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:32 (twenty years ago)

oops - 'addition'

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:35 (twenty years ago)

i had a cassette copy (without mrs.robinson) that i bought second hand, then lost it, so bought the cd version with it.

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:37 (twenty years ago)

I'm not sure about the description of Juliana Hatfield as "virginal", though.

Yeah. Aside from the fact that it's condescending and moronic, it also doesn't really make any contextual sense.

I kept looking in second-hand shops for an original issue, but never found one.

Originals fetchin' some kinda extra dough on ebay now or what? That's what I want to know...

martin m. (mushrush), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:38 (twenty years ago)

why is it condescending to call someone virginal when she's using her own publicists to boast about her virginity?

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:42 (twenty years ago)

It's spiffy. Barely a weak moment on it. That said, even though "Come On Feel" is a lot spottier, its high points for me ("I'll Do It Anyway," "Into Your Arms," both versions of "Style") trump the best stuff on Ray. What I need to do is a disc with all of Ray and about 6 songs from Feel -- that would be double-classic.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Monday, 10 January 2005 21:56 (twenty years ago)

to make it triple classic, why not add "if i could talk i'd tell you" and a couple other high points off car button cloth?

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:00 (twenty years ago)

"Hospital" and "Break Me" were quality orange-leaves snifflers.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:01 (twenty years ago)

why is it condescending to call someone virginal when she's using her own publicists to boast about her virginity?

Maybe that's the wrong choice of words... Did you intentionally not find issue with my calling it "moronic" as well? Regardless of what was true or not true or whatever, it just leaves an intensely bad taste in my mouth whenever anybody has to drag that out again like it makes a damn difference. In this context especially it's fucked up. Cause it's equated with things that make sense in the context of the actual question being posed:

Q: Is this album any good now that we're distanced from it by some time?

A: Yes.
Reasons:
a) Catchy pop
b) Dumb lyrics
c) Bass player is a skulking virgin

Uhhh. Alright.

martin m. (mushrush), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:05 (twenty years ago)

xpost:

i'm also not sure about the characterisation of the lyrics as "dumb" in the original posting. i'll grant that they are seemingly simplistic takes on their subjects, but "rudderless", "kitchen", "rockin' stroll", "the turnpike down" ... geez, the whole thing, are filled with nice insights and observations.

if i can't take issue with the description of juliana hatfield as "virginal" (as was pointed out), then how about "skulking around"? there wasn't much, if any, attempt to hiding her input.

john'n'chicago, Monday, 10 January 2005 22:10 (twenty years ago)

Yeah I didn't bother calling out "dumb lyrics" because I figured it would weaken my argument re: the characterization of Ms. Hatfield, but that's a pretty moronic thing to say as well. It kinda makes me go, uh, did you ever actually listen to the lyrics? I mean, they aren't the most astounding insights nor are they mindblowing or what have you, but I think they're certainly above "dumb."

I've no idea who the anon is who started this thread, but I get the distinct impression that he's very much like quite a few folks I met in college radio in the mid 90s...

martin m. (mushrush), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:17 (twenty years ago)

A ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder

genius!

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:20 (twenty years ago)

Is 'Ceiling Fan in my Spoon' about shooting heroin? Like, he's 'cooking up' and seeing the reflection of the fan in his spoon? Or is it just abstract imagery?

wombatX (wombatX), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:22 (twenty years ago)

A ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder's
like a ship without a rudder

genius!

Do you work for Fox News?

john'n'chicago, Monday, 10 January 2005 22:26 (twenty years ago)

Ultrasupermegaclassic

Exactly and then some!

Je4nne Ć’ury (Jeanne Fury), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:30 (twenty years ago)

Did you intentionally not find issue with my calling it "moronic" as well? Regardless of what was true or not true or whatever, it just leaves an intensely bad taste in my mouth whenever anybody has to drag that out again like it makes a damn difference.

i just think it's completely pointless and silly. i was taking issue only with the choice of the word condescending, that's all.

fact checking cuz (fcc), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:51 (twenty years ago)

i had no idea about this virgin bassist thing til i read this thread, but it's given me a fresh new perspective on this release - for sure!

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Monday, 10 January 2005 22:55 (twenty years ago)

"i just want a bit part in your life!!"

reo, Monday, 10 January 2005 22:58 (twenty years ago)

hey! i fucking hated it when it came out. mind you, i've not heard it since. and you're all going to whale on me now, so i'm running away. fast.

grimly fiendish (grimlord), Monday, 10 January 2005 23:07 (twenty years ago)

i was being sarcastic with my last post - or at least, i think i was...

weasel diesel (K1l14n), Monday, 10 January 2005 23:08 (twenty years ago)

It's weird: I didn't think it was good at all at the time but I still remember most of the hooks from it with something resembling fondness.

I'm going to start downloading.

I don't think I actually knew that Juliana Hatfield was in the band.

sundar subramanian (sundar), Monday, 10 January 2005 23:16 (twenty years ago)

I hated it when it came out too. I imagine I'm likely to hate it even more now, if that's possible.

KeithW (kmw), Monday, 10 January 2005 23:20 (twenty years ago)

*"I love my drug buddy" repeated ad naus.

*"Alison's gettin' her tit pierced, Alison's growing a mohawk, Alison's starting to happen to me" ??!!!??

*"Takes me on a rockin' stroll" ???

*Screamed beginning of 'Bit Part'

Those are off the top of my head. How are they not dumb? They are dumb in the best sense of the word, naive and oblivious, but I thought that was implied by the fact I catagorized it as a classic.

As for the virgin and skulking comment:

I read a lot of trash alt. mags in the year I turned fourteen. Every single one of them mentioned Juliana's pristine hymen. As a young woman this fascinated me and made me feel weird about how bad I totally wanted to bone. It seemed like such a surreal rock star quality, that could only be really a selling point for a chick. I mean, M. Faithfull was touted by Loog as fresh out of convent school, later B. Spears, etc.

None of the bands I liked when I was that age had any girls in them
except Sonic Youth, and a cursory look at the cassette sleve to "It's a Shame About Ray" revealed a bunch of dudes sitting around backstage. Then I read the liner notes and Juliana Hatfied is credited. I had to stare at the picture to realize a girl was in it, and I was totally stoked that she was drinking a brew and not wearing a dress. Later, inn press stuff she seemed prominant but wee me did not even notice her on the album. I will say this: skulking may be subjective.

Spir, Monday, 10 January 2005 23:37 (twenty years ago)

Alright well I take back sounding so knee-jerkily angry about it. Also for assuming Spir is a dude....

For the record I pretty much thought the record was shit when it came out, and I'm a very big fan of both Juliana and the Lemonheads. For me "Ray" wasn't just the beginning of the end for the Lemonheads. As far as I was concerned, it might as well have been called "Automatic for the People..."

martin m. (mushrush), Monday, 10 January 2005 23:56 (twenty years ago)

But Martin, the plaintive strains of Rudderless laying on the floor of your bedroom as a freshman, Mike Kennedy STILL not calling you, getting your period and yet not getting boobs, cutting out pictures from alternative press, wishing your teeth weren't so big; that might be the only way to hear that album and like it. Oh yeah and the way all these other people somehow heard it and liked it.

Spir, Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:09 (twenty years ago)

I liked it because I could listen to 'My Drug Buddy' and it was nothing like my life at all but I quite envied those for whom it was. And it was short and full of great tunes and he hadn't started writing annoying songs like 'Big Gay Heart' and being all gentle giant comfy dude yet.

Alba (Alba), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:20 (twenty years ago)

Ray was one of the first albums I bought so there's definitely an element of nostalgia affecting my judgement - but I still listen to it more that almost any other album of that era. I know some folks prefer Lovey (the 'crossroads' album) but I always found it patchy and I disliked the rockier tracks (Lil Seed, Ballarat, The Door etc) whereas I love the breeziness, consistency and pure indie-POP thrills of Ray.

wombatX (wombatX), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:24 (twenty years ago)

Nah, I get it... Unfortunately I was a bit older when it came out, and I had already had a pretty personal identification period with Hate Your Friends. Apples and Oranges, I know, but for me it was like "Shit, how can you like apples? Oranges are sooooo much better."

I have listened to the record since, and I do like a lot more of it now. I don't know how much my overall opinion of it is still tainted by negative nostalgia... Probably some even if I won't admit it.

martin m. (mushrush), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:34 (twenty years ago)

The cover's cut off, but the virgin is stil there.

ihttp://julianas.phpwebhosting.com/heavy/pix/pix3/mag10.jpg

Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:35 (twenty years ago)

Man, I used to love Spin magazine

Magic City (ano ano), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 00:39 (twenty years ago)

Man, I used to hate Spin magazine

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 01:36 (twenty years ago)

my favorite moment of the album is probably in the title song when they stretch out the word Ray for like an unnaturally long time and they over dub in a deep inhalation and make it go on for even longer. hilarity!

john'n'chicago, Tuesday, 11 January 2005 01:50 (twenty years ago)

AKA "hhhhhhhhhraaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaayyyyyyyyyyyyyy..."

It was and is hilarious, shameless, and most importantly, fearless.

Chris Ott (Chris Ott), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 02:06 (twenty years ago)

This album and Slanted & Enchanted make the idea of being American and not really doing much because hey it's sunny and y' know whatever seem like the greatest most amazingly exotic beautiful thing ever.

elwisty, Tuesday, 11 January 2005 02:40 (twenty years ago)

i have a mrs.robinson-less version. signed by evan, too. great album. he never came close to its greatness again, although 'come on feel' had its moments.

my favourite bit on this album: "though it wasn't hard or far, i walked you to your car"..

the surface noise (slight return) (electricsound), Tuesday, 11 January 2005 04:35 (twenty years ago)

Same album. Sheesh.

Pleasant Plains /// (Pleasant Plains ///), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 00:25 (twenty years ago)

Lick is my second favourite album, despite the song recycling (and if I'm not mistaken, those recycled tracks didn't appear on the original version of Hate Your Friends, only as CD bonus tracks.)

Dando did spend some time living in Oz, I think he lived above the Tote Hotel in Collingwood for a while.

wombatX (wombatX), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 00:42 (twenty years ago)

he also lived on Tom's sofa for extended stretches through the '90s (and at one time intended to buy a house [to share with him and get paid back through Tom's L'heads royalties]) and be a permanent resident)

see also the Lemonheads Two Weeks In Australia video
and what's more Evan played bass and some drums and BVs on the first album by Tom's third (of four) current band the GiveGoods (video with Evan in, video without)
(he's also on the first Sneeze album and wrote a song on the third)

Bill Gibson played guitar and bass and perc and bvs in Lemonheads (and is now in Sneeze too!), Murph was the drummer at the time. He's gotten up at Sydney shows on the last two Evan solo tours too.

nb. Into Your Arms was written by Robyn Humm!ngb!rd when she was in the Love Positions with Dalton, and wasn't a H'birds song. But R0ck!n' Stro11 off Ray is about her and S!m0n Humm!ngb!rd's then-toddler Mi10 (the video is in fact footage of him in his stroller!)

kit brash (kit brash), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 11:58 (twenty years ago)

absolute timeless classic

all 29 minutes of it, or whatever. 'Turnpike down'.just love the tune.

Am I one of the few who actually liked early Lemonheads too? That stuff seemed to get universally dismissed. I'm referring more to the 2nd? Lp (was it Creator?- that fantastic I can't remember the title!) rather than hate yr Friends

Lairy Hair (hullcity), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 13:05 (twenty years ago)

Btw, I love 'that' bit in 'Ray'; the ''RRAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAaaAAAAAAYYYYYY bit. Always try and sing along and it gets my goosebumps going until I open my mouth

Lairy Hair (hullcity), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 13:08 (twenty years ago)

classig goofy pop, can't fault it.

and i'll even give props to "mrs robinson", if only because its hit status precipitated probably my all-time favourite top of the pops performance: anyone else remember red furry coat-clad dando's spot-on morrissey impression for the "where have you gone, joe dimaggio/our nation holds its lonely eyes to you...oh no!" line?

CharlieNo4 (Charlie), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 13:35 (twenty years ago)

I'm going to have to play this album Right Now.
Original version, bought it the week it came out.

Favourite song is Rockin' Stroll (which is only 'dumb' in some bizarro world since the lyrics are from the perspective of a bloody BABY IN A PRAM).

People's knees and trunks of trees... smile at me!

Koens (Koens), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 15:51 (twenty years ago)

Ha, I didn't realise they did Mrs Robinson on TOTP. I thought that gloriously shambolic performance on The Word was the only time they played it live. (Dando in red furry coat, added expletive, rapid degeneration into noise culminating with Nic balancing his bass on one hand with Evan singing the first few lines of Being Around.)

Dang, I miss that 2 Weeks in Oz video ("I've discovered I have a great talent for.. lying down on the ground..") - must try and locate my copy.

wombatX (wombatX), Wednesday, 12 January 2005 22:15 (twenty years ago)

unfort. the 13-yr-old Ben Lee in his bedroom bits were not included in the mersh versh (PAGING BULBS!)

kit brash (kit brash), Thursday, 13 January 2005 02:56 (twenty years ago)

Mersh versh?

wombatX (wombatX), Thursday, 13 January 2005 03:19 (twenty years ago)

commercial version: vhs tape available in shops as opposed to different cut previously broadcast on ess bee ess

...if memory serves. and it mightn't.

kit brash (kit brash), Thursday, 13 January 2005 11:42 (twenty years ago)

ah, righty-o - well, they definitely weren't on my copy (bought in the uk)

wombatX (wombatX), Thursday, 13 January 2005 12:50 (twenty years ago)

There'd be a lot more great albums if they were all 29 minutes.

Dr Morbius (Dr Morbius), Thursday, 13 January 2005 14:22 (twenty years ago)

two years pass...

Come on Feel...

is MILES better.

pisces, Monday, 3 September 2007 16:34 (seventeen years ago)

Classic album.

I somehow didn't realize that Juliana Hatfield played all the bass, even though I followed the virgin thing as much as any other 17-year-old at the time. I thought she just did some backing vocals.

Anyways- between Ray and Hatfield's Hey Babe, you pretty much got my senior year of high school covered.

yussel, Monday, 3 September 2007 21:29 (seventeen years ago)

four weeks pass...

It's weird, but I think I've owned and enjoyed every single Lemonheads album besides this one, which seems by all accounts to be the favorite of some and definitely the most popular. All I remember about it are the title track and the lame "Mrs. Robinson" cover. I shall fix this promptly.

No matter how good it turns out to be, though, it won't top Lovey. OMGODDAM is that album amazing.

Johnny Fever, Monday, 1 October 2007 05:23 (seventeen years ago)

so does no one other than 'tantrum the cat' really think confetti is far & away the best track on this album??

deeznuts, Monday, 1 October 2007 05:26 (seventeen years ago)

I know some folks prefer Lovey (the 'crossroads' album) but I always found it patchy and I disliked the rockier tracks (Lil Seed, Ballarat, The Door etc) whereas I love the breeziness, consistency and pure indie-POP thrills of Ray.

^this

marmotwolof, Monday, 1 October 2007 05:38 (seventeen years ago)

I still think "Stove" on Lovey is untouchably great.

Alex in NYC, Monday, 1 October 2007 12:40 (seventeen years ago)

I like about half the songs on Lovey and that is one of them.

marmotwolof, Monday, 1 October 2007 12:51 (seventeen years ago)

I still think "Stove" on Lovey is untouchably great.

-- Alex in NYC, Monday, October 1, 2007 12:40 PM (1 hour ago)

Well - that makes two of us ... I tear up every time.
Here's another reason to tear up - I don't own a copy/burn/etc. of 'Lovey' - I can never find a copy at the record store - looks like this post may influence me to go to amazon and buy one of the money used copies.

BlackIronPrison, Monday, 1 October 2007 14:19 (seventeen years ago)

I think "Rudderless" and "Bit Part" are my favorites.

The trick is that Dando and Hatfield both sound best when the music stays plain and strummy and just cruises along behind them; they both sound cool, calm, and collected, but in a way that lets the songs move a lot. Half the songs on this album do that Dando thing where he sings the first verse in his calm lower voice, then picks things up by singing the same thing a register higher. You'd think this would be lame, but it always always works. (In "Rudderless" he seems like he's trying to do it twice, so a bunch of lines -- "slipped my mind that I could use my brain" -- are kinda straining at how far he can go without having to leap up again.)

The new Lemonheads record from this year was not bad! It was maybe too big on the guitar stuff to recapture that ... gracefulness that Ray has, but if you happen to be a Dando-lover, it's got that "pleasant visit from old friend" quality.

nabisco, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:18 (seventeen years ago)

Funny, when I think about why those two songs are my favorites, the first bits I think of are the vocal jumps! The one in "Bit Part" really gets me.

nabisco, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:20 (seventeen years ago)

This genre rarely fails. This album doesn't either. Even though there are at least 100 powerpop albums that are way better.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:25 (seventeen years ago)

It's kinda powerpop without the power, though -- a lot like Australian indiepop/twee, which people never really call "powerpop." I think, umm ... the "power" part of that is what differentiates this record from, say, something like the Posies' Frosting on the Beater.

nabisco, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:36 (seventeen years ago)

Without the power? I would rather say the problem about some early 90s powerpop such as Lemonheads and Posies is there is too much power, in a very grunge-ey way.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:37 (seventeen years ago)

At this time, powerpop went in two different directions, and I feel the direction started by Jellyfish is a lot more faithful to Powerpop's roots and ideals. That is, unless you look upon Cheap Trick as the one and only blueprint.

Geir Hongro, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:39 (seventeen years ago)

Geir, you should listen to this new band Vampire Weekend.

nabisco, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:40 (seventeen years ago)

haha, the band that made Geir's brain explode

gabbneb, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:52 (seventeen years ago)

powerpop has roots and ideals? who knew?!

fact checking cuz, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:55 (seventeen years ago)

the record is way more folky than powerpop.

Dandy Don Weiner, Monday, 1 October 2007 17:58 (seventeen years ago)

Folky/twee! I can't think of things as "powerpop" unless they have some kind of nervy teenage energy in them. This is just all "I have been listening to lots of strummy Australian bands." I'm surprised Randall Lee isn't on it.

nabisco, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:02 (seventeen years ago)

On the strummy Aussie tip, I didn't even know until a couple years ago that "Into Your Arms" was a Love Positions cover.

Johnny Fever, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:05 (seventeen years ago)

they've called it 'pop underground' since about 1990.

andi, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:06 (seventeen years ago)

anything with robyn st. clare will kill evan dad-rock.

andi, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:07 (seventeen years ago)

And, ummm, 'loveBUZZ', by The Hummingbirds, does everything Evan Dando ever did at his best, 10 x better.

That's just a tip. I love the Lemonheads, but, um. . .

andi, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:34 (seventeen years ago)

i dig lots of posts here, though! ah, nabisco's a good writer. wish i could just contribute a bit more here. wish we could still ysi. i'm telling you, get that hummingbirds album on slsk or something. it's oop, anyway.

andi, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:36 (seventeen years ago)

Do The Hummingbirds at least have a bit of a kick? The Love Positions stuff is so delicate it really stresses me out.

Johnny Fever, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:39 (seventeen years ago)

YES!

It's a standard rock set-up, ya know. Ummm. . .

andi, Monday, 1 October 2007 18:50 (seventeen years ago)

simon from the hummingbirds fancied himself as a bit of a guitar hero so yeah there's kick, as much as mitch easter tried to gloss it out of them

electricsound, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 00:17 (seventeen years ago)

This just came up in a conversation with a friend the other day. Strange.

I don't need any time to pass to say how much I detested it.

I liked the other guy in the Lemonheads (discussed in some other thread here, I never can remember his name but someone always does) and I was into their Taang releases.

I promised my friend I would listen to it again.

Saxby D. Elder, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:08 (seventeen years ago)

THis album is fucking terrible. No passion, no power, no tunes. Just a style. See Pavement had all of those. These guys were like a slightly hipper Buffalo Tom. The only song they wrote with a decent tune was Mrs Robinson.

paulhw, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:14 (seventeen years ago)

The only song they wrote with a decent tune was Mrs Robinson.

Can we assume that's a joke?

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:29 (seventeen years ago)

Also, comparing The Lemonheads to Pavement is a little bit WTF

Johnny Fever, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:29 (seventeen years ago)

the only thing they have in common is that they both played in australia about a zillion times

electricsound, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:34 (seventeen years ago)

These guys were like a slightly hipper Buffalo Tom.

i don't necessarily disagree with this, but then i love buffalo tom

electricsound, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 01:38 (seventeen years ago)

These guys were like a slightly hipper Buffalo Tom.

this is so wrong... don't know where to begin.

Saxby D. Elder, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 07:24 (seventeen years ago)

All I remember about it are the title track and the lame "Mrs. Robinson" cover. I shall fix this promptly.

if you haven't picked up from this thread, Mrs Robinson isn't really part of the album, and should not be included if you're ripping this for listening.

energy flash gordon, Tuesday, 2 October 2007 11:10 (seventeen years ago)

three years pass...

Just got back from seeing them perform It's A Shame About Ray in Sydney. Jesus they were incredibly tight and Dando's voice was in pitch perfect form. After playing the album in full, they pretty much did every other great song they're known for. People were dancing and everyone was singing along.....one of the best gigs I've ever been to. So much love <3

Tim. E "LazRus" Lucas (Prose b4 Hoes...and Big Hoos), Wednesday, 1 December 2010 14:48 (fourteen years ago)

i would have gone to that show if i were home.

charlie h, Thursday, 2 December 2010 04:19 (fourteen years ago)


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