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Ear Bleeding Country

Forums › Forums › Dinosaur Related Discussions › Dinosaur/J News & Discussions › Ear Bleeding Country

  • This topic has 0 replies, 1 voice, and was last updated 24 years ago by Cloud9.
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  • November 17, 2001 at 5:32 am #43692
    Cloud9
    Participant

      http://www.ihomedecor.com/cgi-bin/pagegen/ihomedecor/www/page.html?mode=itempage&file=/page/itempagev4/itempage.spl&prodID=1705145&catID=23239#desc

      Or As Said Before:

      Dinosaur Jr.: J. Mascis (vocals, guitar, piano, organ, keyboards, bass, drums, tympani, chimes, percussion); Mike Johnson (vocals, guitar, bass); Lou Barlow (vocals, ukulele, Casio, bass, tapes); Murph (drums). Additional personnel: Tiffany Anders, Kevin Shields, Bilinda Butcher (vocals); Don Fleming (guitar, background vocals); Greg Dwinell (pedal steel guitar); Donna Guager (piccolo, trumpet); Sean Slade (mellotron); Jay Spiegel (tom toms); Lee Renaldo (background vocals). Producers include: Dinosaur Jr., J. Mascis. Compilation producer: Hillary Bratton. Recorded between 1985 and 2000. Includes liner notes by Byron Coley. Digitally remastered by Dave Donnelly (DNA Mastering Studios). Dinosaur Jr. first emerged (as simply Dinosaur) from the Massachusetts punk scene in the mid-80’s with sonic, provoking, genre-bending-with-just-a-dollop-of-pop releases on stalwart indie labels Homestead and SST. With J. Mascis’ hauntingly off-key half-growl, half-howl lurking under layers and layers of distortion, fuzz and drone, they were locks to bend the ear of an adoring underground radio cult, but the longest of shots to garner million-selling records, let alone touch the pop charts. However, Dinosaur Jr. did all of the above, ruling college radio for almost a decade in the late-80s and early-90s, selling a ton of albums, even scoring a MTV Buzz bin aided Billboard pop hit in 1994 with "Feel The Pain." In true indie-rock fashion, after that hit Dinosaur Jr. faded out after one mostly forgettable final album. The aptly named EAR BENDING COUNTRY evenly collects cuts chronologically from Dinosaur Jr.’s seven albums, an EP, a single, while also including a couple tracks from J. Mascis’ more subtle, yet still oddball and compelling non-Dinosaur recordings. Of special note is the inclusion of the at first glance mocking, yet in reality furiously reverent cover of The Cure’s "Just Like Heaven" and the Beatlesque jagged-horn laden "I’m Insane" originally hidden on aforementioned final album.

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