Monkeysdad (Sunny Simi) | | Posted: Jun 01, 2006 - 22:23 | |
Heard the name, now heard the music.
Not disappointed at all.
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artmaven (A cultural wasteland by the sea . . .) | | Posted: May 26, 2006 - 19:39 | |
flyfree wrote:Much love to Neko et al., but did anyone else think that this NP outing was not as good as the first two?
Nah, this whole CD is good. Really.
I think it was Pat Robertson who called music "the new pornography." The band thought it only appropriate to call themselves The New Pornographers.
Edit: I've been corrected. It was Jimmy Swaggart, not Pat Robertson.
gillespp wrote:Jimmy Swaggart. See http://ask.metafilter.com/mefi/23230 |
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flyfree (West Egg) | | Posted: May 12, 2006 - 13:25 | |
Much love to Neko et al., but did anyone else think that this NP outing was not as good as the first two?
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gillespp (Portland, OR) | | Posted: May 12, 2006 - 13:24 | |
Great album all the way through.
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gregortheblue
| | Posted: May 08, 2006 - 11:25 | |
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ElSupreme (ATL) | | Posted: May 08, 2006 - 11:23 | |
wondertoofar wrote:the New Pornographers same as the Old Pornographers. WE won't get fooled again!
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nick_valensi (Charlotte, NC) | | Posted: May 08, 2006 - 11:21 | |
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miamizsun (Miami Beach (3285.3 Miles SE of RP), FL) | | Posted: May 03, 2006 - 18:23 | |
something about this song.
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houstoib (Cincinnati, OH) | | Posted: May 02, 2006 - 13:43 | |
voice reminds me of Neko Case.....oh wait....
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michaelc (Walnut Creek, CA) | | Posted: May 02, 2006 - 13:37 | |
voice reminds me of Kristy MacColl for some reason
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Dylan76 (government office cubicle) | | Posted: May 02, 2006 - 13:37 | |
Are you getting paid to promote this or something?!
catmaven wrote:This cut is pseudo-country for sure. Or did country-music stations play it?
In either case, if you liked this but want something better musically, give a listen to this:
http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,1622132,00.html
and from www.popmatters.com/music/reviews:
Various Artists
From Hell to Breakfast: A Taste of Sugar Hill's Texas Singer-Songwriters
(Sugar Hill)
US release date: 5 February 2002
by Andrew Gilstrap
PopMatters Associate Music Editor
:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article
Texas claims to be the best at a lot of things, and quite frankly, it annoys nearly every other state in the Union. One thing that's hard to argue with, though, is the stunning amount of songwriting talent the state produces. Maybe it's the flipside of Minnesota, where a thriving artistic community stems from the fact that, in the winters, there's little you can do besides sit in the basement and create. The wide open spaces of Texas and its border-influenced culture must do something similar to the heart and mind. Only Nashville rivals Texas for songwriting prowess, but only because everyone moves there from somewhere else.
Lyle Lovett's from Texas. So are Joe Ely, Willie Nelson, Radney Foster, and Freddy Fender. Nanci Griffith and Tish Hinojosa? Texas. Doug Sahm, Buddy Holly, and Waylon Jennings? Drinking Shiner Bock and raising a Texas flag in the hereafter. Roll the dice on any significant form of American songwriting, and Texas is likely to show its face.
The Sugar Hill label does a good job of documenting some of the depth and breadth of the Lone Star State's musical terrain. Offering up cuts from legends like Townes Van Zandt, obscure-but-seminal acts like Bad Livers, and up-and-coming artists like The Gourds, From Hell to Breakfast is a satisfying listen. At first, the song choices might seem a little strange -- with few exceptions, these are hardly each artist's best-known songs -- but they make sense after a while. "For the Sake of a Song" began Townes Van Zandt's career and "Snowin' on Raton" perfectly evokes a Texas winter. Terry Allen's "Gone to Texas" and The Gourds' "El Paso" have obvious Texas links, and Robert Earl Keen's "The Road Goes on Forever" (overplayed though it is) closes the disc in grand storytelling style.
In fact, storytelling is probably the disc's greatest theme. Folks like Guy Clark, James McMurtry (novelist Larry McMurtry's son but an accomplished artist in his own right), and Rodney Crowell definitely know how to inject the feel of the open road, the open plains, or an open seat at the bar with considerable skill. The artists on From Hell to Breakfast created a sub-genre all their own, so completely that imitators have left a bucket full of cliches in their wake. Perhaps that's why the Austin Lounge Lizards' "Old Blevins" works so well. Starting off like a poignant story-song about a wizened old man, the song quickly takes a different tack, summing up Blevins' wisdom as "blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah".
The stories on From Hell to Breakfast run the gamut from quiet meditations that are so private you feel like an intruder for hearing them, to honky tonk rave-ups that skewer their subjects with such gleeful precision that you can't help but laugh along. Van Zandt's "For the Sake of a Song" is so layered and subtle that only the passing of years and the accumulation of experiences help you get inside it, while no explanation is needed for Terry Allen's full-throttle Lone Star celebration "Amarillo Highway".
From Hell to Breakfast delivers exactly what it promises: a taste of some of the finest songwriting in Texas. Van Zandt, Allen, Keen, Clark, McMurtry, The Gourds, the Austin Lounge Lizards, and others have all found unique niches reflecting their home's reputation for individuality and self-reliance. If you're not familiar with many of these artists, expect From Hell to Breakfast to whet your appetite for the rest that they have to offer. |
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RichardPrins
| | Posted: May 02, 2006 - 13:36 | |
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glassjawgrlxxx (Boston) | | Posted: May 02, 2006 - 13:35 | |
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muskrat-toast (Sunlandia) | | Posted: Apr 21, 2006 - 14:08 | |
Danny_G wrote:Not bad 
actually I belive the term is VERY GOOD |
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distantshore (in a van, down by the river) | | Posted: Apr 13, 2006 - 10:37 | |
doasfu wrote:I discovered these guys a couple of weeks ago when they opened for Belle and Sebastian and I've been listening to them non-stop since.
Belle and Sebastian, and this. Yeah, makes sense. In a not-making-sense sort of way. |
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doasfu (Portland, OR) | | Posted: Apr 04, 2006 - 14:05 | |
I discovered these guys a couple of weeks ago when they opened for Belle and Sebastian and I've been listening to them non-stop since.
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th3boon (chicago) | | Posted: Apr 03, 2006 - 09:06 | |
Case sings on new porno albums and often tours with them. The band was formed by Carl AC Newman and friends. Mostly from Vancouver, and oh, they're great live.
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rKokon (Colesville, MD) | | Posted: Apr 03, 2006 - 09:05 | |
This cut is pseudo-country for sure. Or did country-music stations play it?
In either case, if you liked this but want something better musically, give a listen to this:
http://www.artistdirect.com/nad/store/artist/album/0,,1622132,00.html
and from www.popmatters.com/music/reviews:
Various Artists
From Hell to Breakfast: A Taste of Sugar Hill's Texas Singer-Songwriters
(Sugar Hill)
US release date: 5 February 2002
by Andrew Gilstrap
PopMatters Associate Music Editor
:. e-mail this article
:. print this article
:. comment on this article
Texas claims to be the best at a lot of things, and quite frankly, it annoys nearly every other state in the Union. One thing that's hard to argue with, though, is the stunning amount of songwriting talent the state produces. Maybe it's the flipside of Minnesota, where a thriving artistic community stems from the fact that, in the winters, there's little you can do besides sit in the basement and create. The wide open spaces of Texas and its border-influenced culture must do something similar to the heart and mind. Only Nashville rivals Texas for songwriting prowess, but only because everyone moves there from somewhere else.
Lyle Lovett's from Texas. So are Joe Ely, Willie Nelson, Radney Foster, and Freddy Fender. Nanci Griffith and Tish Hinojosa? Texas. Doug Sahm, Buddy Holly, and Waylon Jennings? Drinking Shiner Bock and raising a Texas flag in the hereafter. Roll the dice on any significant form of American songwriting, and Texas is likely to show its face.
The Sugar Hill label does a good job of documenting some of the depth and breadth of the Lone Star State's musical terrain. Offering up cuts from legends like Townes Van Zandt, obscure-but-seminal acts like Bad Livers, and up-and-coming artists like The Gourds, From Hell to Breakfast is a satisfying listen. At first, the song choices might seem a little strange -- with few exceptions, these are hardly each artist's best-known songs -- but they make sense after a while. "For the Sake of a Song" began Townes Van Zandt's career and "Snowin' on Raton" perfectly evokes a Texas winter. Terry Allen's "Gone to Texas" and The Gourds' "El Paso" have obvious Texas links, and Robert Earl Keen's "The Road Goes on Forever" (overplayed though it is) closes the disc in grand storytelling style.
In fact, storytelling is probably the disc's greatest theme. Folks like Guy Clark, James McMurtry (novelist Larry McMurtry's son but an accomplished artist in his own right), and Rodney Crowell definitely know how to inject the feel of the open road, the open plains, or an open seat at the bar with considerable skill. The artists on From Hell to Breakfast created a sub-genre all their own, so completely that imitators have left a bucket full of cliches in their wake. Perhaps that's why the Austin Lounge Lizards' "Old Blevins" works so well. Starting off like a poignant story-song about a wizened old man, the song quickly takes a different tack, summing up Blevins' wisdom as "blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah blah".
The stories on From Hell to Breakfast run the gamut from quiet meditations that are so private you feel like an intruder for hearing them, to honky tonk rave-ups that skewer their subjects with such gleeful precision that you can't help but laugh along. Van Zandt's "For the Sake of a Song" is so layered and subtle that only the passing of years and the accumulation of experiences help you get inside it, while no explanation is needed for Terry Allen's full-throttle Lone Star celebration "Amarillo Highway".
From Hell to Breakfast delivers exactly what it promises: a taste of some of the finest songwriting in Texas. Van Zandt, Allen, Keen, Clark, McMurtry, The Gourds, the Austin Lounge Lizards, and others have all found unique niches reflecting their home's reputation for individuality and self-reliance. If you're not familiar with many of these artists, expect From Hell to Breakfast to whet your appetite for the rest that they have to offer.
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calray (Decatur, GA) | | Posted: Apr 03, 2006 - 09:05 | |
I want to hear the Old Pornographers! Does this seem derivative of Bowie at all?
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ScottN (100 miles south of Lake Wobegon) | | Posted: Mar 29, 2006 - 18:44 | |
Another RP turn on for me. Thanks, Bill. This time a double. Neko Case solo and now TNP... is this her side project or??
Very good song.
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nshifley
| | Posted: Mar 29, 2006 - 18:43 | |
I love the subdued but melodic feeling this song has. I can imagine hearing this while hanging out near the ocean just before dusk as a comfortable cool breeze blows.
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Danny_G (Lima) | | Posted: Mar 19, 2006 - 15:25 | |
Not bad  |
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Lkw (Amsterdam, The Netherlands) | | Posted: Mar 19, 2006 - 15:25 | |
Thought this was Earth & Fire (without 'Wind' yes, that's another band).
I like it.
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wondertoofar (There and back again) | | Posted: Mar 10, 2006 - 20:38 | |
the New Pornographers same as the Old Pornographers. WE won't get fooled again! |
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kars (Washington, DC) | | Posted: Feb 28, 2006 - 07:03 | |
love this band - several cuts from this album are worth a listen
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AlanCE (Des Moines, IA) | | Posted: Feb 09, 2006 - 11:46 | |
finally, some -new- pornographers! the old ones are in such a rut.
i like it.
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crockydile (The swamps of Houston) | | Posted: Feb 03, 2006 - 12:17 | |
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chinchita (in the middle of the Pacific) | | Posted: Jan 25, 2006 - 19:15 | |
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iMacomania (Bavaria - Germany) | | Posted: Jan 21, 2006 - 01:30 | |
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am (The Ozarks) | | Posted: Jan 06, 2006 - 12:07 | |
iMacomania wrote:Like it!
Love it.... |
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