Loose Fur - Born Again in teh USA

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Leaked. Great title. Anyone heard it?

Bombardment, Sunday, 22 January 2006 01:28 (eighteen years ago) link

Using "teh" = crap.

D00D.

Bay_Aryan, Sunday, 22 January 2006 02:33 (eighteen years ago) link

dled it
pretty good, more accessable than their first one, prolly cuz it sounds more Tweedy-esque than the first

J. Lamphere (WatchMeJumpStart), Sunday, 22 January 2006 02:35 (eighteen years ago) link

Awful. I never thought O'Rourke would let me down but he has. And can anyone be less relevant than Tweedy? I had high hopes but this just sucks.

jackieslegs, Sunday, 22 January 2006 03:46 (eighteen years ago) link

the title is terrible!

as for the tunes I've only heard "The Ruling Class" but I like it. Reminds me of John Prine.

Renard (Renard), Sunday, 22 January 2006 03:50 (eighteen years ago) link

Doesn't sound promising -- Jim O'Rourke has also produced the new Beth Orton album. What's all that about?

Wax Cat (Wax Cat), Sunday, 22 January 2006 15:25 (eighteen years ago) link

OK.
i love this record...it's completely fun. A fun record...who makes those anymore? There's some cool guitar acrobatics, and the usual funny O'Rourke lyrics...

for example, Jim starts a song with the lyric: "Now gather 'round and check this shit out."

laughs all around, everytime. If I had to give a quick description it'd be something like this: Insignificance pt. 2 mixed with the Dazed and Confused Soundtrack. A friend said, "What is this, Gerry Rafferty?"....where I'm from, that's good.

ALSO:
that Beth Orton record is great. I was never a fan before this album, and the production and accompaniment are totally on point. Anyone yearning for a continuation to classic Carly Simon look no further. "Conceived" is a great song and has a great video, too. Track it down.

bobby.lasers (bobby.lasers), Sunday, 22 January 2006 16:48 (eighteen years ago) link

i have this sitting on my desk but i have yet to listen to it. the first one was perfectly serviceable, and that's about it. i don't really have high expectations for this.

m.c. (clikatowi), Sunday, 22 January 2006 21:33 (eighteen years ago) link

more phun than phish

Palpatean Mists, Sunday, 22 January 2006 21:37 (eighteen years ago) link

who the fuck are all these people???

j blount (papa la bas), Sunday, 22 January 2006 21:41 (eighteen years ago) link

how does jim o-rourke manage to make a mix sound like a humid cardboard box on EVERY record he's involved with??

Palpatean Mists, Sunday, 22 January 2006 21:45 (eighteen years ago) link

who are what people?

Palpatean Mists, Sunday, 22 January 2006 21:56 (eighteen years ago) link

this album is perfect

jerry fakename, Sunday, 22 January 2006 22:24 (eighteen years ago) link

how does jim o-rourke manage to make a mix sound like a humid cardboard box on EVERY record he's involved with??

i take it by your inflection that that's somehow a bad thing.

brokeback titty sanskrit (sanskrit), Sunday, 22 January 2006 23:32 (eighteen years ago) link

Phish is a surprisingly accurate reference point... oh, and I love this album so far.

Mugged Outside the Jabberjaw, 1993 (Bent Over at the Arclight), Monday, 23 January 2006 08:01 (eighteen years ago) link

"Diarrhea of a Madman" would have been much... worse?

Czzy Csbourne, Monday, 23 January 2006 08:05 (eighteen years ago) link

four weeks pass...
it's a nice album, half songs tweedy,the other half by orourke (which are less good cause orourke lack the voice and the emotions of tweedy's preformance),but the problem is that it sounds exactly as you can expect - the tweedy stuff sounds like wilco,but more warm and "pavement"ly preindly,and the orourke songs sounds exactly like they always did. with touches of progressive sounds it is an enjoyeble enoug heffort but it makes tou think:
mayve tweedy should find yet another new ground to explore,cause it seems he kinda get stuck in place with jim orourke.
i hope he still have the courage,as he did back in the "foxtrot" days, to make anew turn.
oh,and the title is bad..

froyd, Monday, 20 February 2006 20:57 (eighteen years ago) link

i hope he still have the courage,as he did back in the "foxtrot" days, to make anew turn.

Lo, these 5 years ago. Them's were the good old days, not like today.

mayve tweedy should find yet another new ground to explore

Grime?

erklie (erklie), Tuesday, 21 February 2006 16:29 (eighteen years ago) link

it's really good. it's like CHEAP TRICK! all the fun pop rock parts of insignificance i liked are married to all the fun later-day wilco songs like "i'm a wheel."

is this first album like this at all? i had only downloaded one mp3 from that album and it was just this long, spare ten minute shoegazer nap. i never went any futher and i'm wondering if i ought to have.

ath (ath), Monday, 27 February 2006 18:31 (eighteen years ago) link

you can skip the 1st.
this one is way better.

sudokus, Monday, 27 February 2006 18:37 (eighteen years ago) link

i like the first album a lot (much more than any wilco album certainly), so that bodes well.

kyle (akmonday), Monday, 27 February 2006 18:40 (eighteen years ago) link

one month passes...
I just heard a song from this and surprisingly liked it a lot. I hear the Cheap Trick thing, also maybe a touch of Flying Burritos.

o. nate (onate), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 22:33 (seventeen years ago) link

I say surprisingly, because Insignificance didn't do much for me, and I've never been a huge Wilco fan, though I thought YHF was pretty good at the time.

o. nate (onate), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 22:42 (seventeen years ago) link

yeah i'm still liking this one. the "hey chicken" video is fun, too. it features an assemblage of japanese mighty morphin' power rangers fight choreography.

http://youtube.com/watch?v=sHTkTBqvPnQ&search=hey%20chicken

ath (ath), Wednesday, 26 April 2006 23:24 (seventeen years ago) link

For some reason, I tend to like Tweedy the best when he's singing about Jesus: "Jesus, etc." and now "Ruling Class".

o. nate (onate), Friday, 28 April 2006 16:07 (seventeen years ago) link

one month passes...
I've had this for a month or so now, and still enjoy each new time I listen to it. It takes a while to follow all the twists and turns in some of the more proggier songs - but they're proggy in a very compact way - no noodling - they tend to have lots of different sections that don't repeat, the songs are short, and they sound deceptively straightforward, due to the clean '70s rock sound and the simple riffs. You hear echoes of lots of great '70s bands on here (Steely Dan, Cheap Trick), but yet it sounds vital - it's not some stale museum piece - an example of re-imagining the tradition. Both singers have kind of thin voices, but O'Rourke's is still more of an acquired taste - also, his lyrics tend to be more distant, less direct, even when he's in confessional mode. But it seems like both songwriters were trying to aim for a similar zone on this, so it does feel like a cohesize band effort.

o. nate (onate), Friday, 2 June 2006 18:08 (seventeen years ago) link

sounds like they've been listening to Robert Fripp's League of Crafty Guitar Shop Gentlemen, or to Captain Beefheart. I like the instrumentals, and they also sound sort of like the Byrds or something like that. it's good fun.

It's similar, but not as good, as the new Lone Official CD "Tuckassee Take," which is out this month in England. Nashville beats Chicago in the make-a-'70s-record sweepstake, possibly because Lone Official actually has something to sing about and far as I can tell Loose Fur does not.

edd s hurt (ddduncan), Saturday, 3 June 2006 12:14 (seventeen years ago) link

two years pass...

Wreckroom is gorgeous, especially two minutes in when the bass starts ululating and those lovely guitars fall in.

Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 28 April 2009 08:45 (fourteen years ago) link

i think this is my favourite of all things Jeff Tweedy.

Ludo, Tuesday, 28 April 2009 11:39 (fourteen years ago) link

I keep meaning to get my hands on the Loose Fur records

sorry for british (country matters), Tuesday, 28 April 2009 13:04 (fourteen years ago) link

yeah played this earlier. it's pretty good. very tight and proggy but still lots of air in the production, in contrast to a lot of o'rourke solo stuff.

is the first album any good?

sonderangerbot, Tuesday, 28 April 2009 13:52 (fourteen years ago) link

i love the first two songs on this record so much. the whole thing is a fun listen. except for one of the o'rourke sung songs, which sucks.

mizzell, Tuesday, 28 April 2009 14:06 (fourteen years ago) link

is the first album any good?

totally different. more improv jammy intellectual whatever, not bad, i actually have it, but must admit hardly ever play it.

Ludo, Tuesday, 28 April 2009 14:42 (fourteen years ago) link

Finally just got rid of this after realizing that while I've apparently listened to it a couple of times, I don't remember it and have never wanted to put it on except out of vague duty to remember what the hell it sounds like.

(But I hate pretty much all the Wilco that's come out in the last ten years anyway.)

THESE ARE MY FEELINGS! FEEL MY FEELINGS! (I eat cannibals), Tuesday, 28 April 2009 21:14 (fourteen years ago) link

Sounds like the title of Bruce Springsteens 2020 album where he has just converted to some fundamentalist Christian sect :)

Geir Hongro, Tuesday, 28 April 2009 22:10 (fourteen years ago) link

Thanks for that.

Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 29 April 2009 06:48 (fourteen years ago) link

Don't think I'd realised that it referenced Springsteen AND fundamentalist Christianity.

Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 29 April 2009 06:49 (fourteen years ago) link

Oh, because fundamentalist Christians are "born again," and Springsteen had that "Born in the USA" album.

Huh.

THESE ARE MY FEELINGS! FEEL MY FEELINGS! (I eat cannibals), Wednesday, 29 April 2009 06:50 (fourteen years ago) link

I haven't listened to Born Again in the U.S.A. much, but I liked the first Loose Fur album quite a bit. It feels both more experimental and much more off-the-cuff and therefore less pretentious than the Wilco albums from the same period.

Eazy, Wednesday, 29 April 2009 07:30 (fourteen years ago) link

Born Again is nice, but is pretty much a straight indie rock record, albeit a bit more fun than you'dnormally get from Wilco over the last decade. The first one, though, is really quite different; the grooves and drone-y arrangements are awesome. Whatshisface is an awesome drummer.

Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 29 April 2009 09:32 (fourteen years ago) link

You Were Wrong is also really, really beautiful.

Sickamous Mouthall (Scik Mouthy), Wednesday, 29 April 2009 09:53 (fourteen years ago) link

Born Again is straight indie rock in the sense I don't listen to it much. but better than your average indie rock because singers have better vocals (imo) and the folk-rock aspect isn't diluted by having much more folk than rock. But yeah, I still don't find myself listening to this album much.

Mizzell, which O'Rourke sung song do you think sucks? hopefully not 8) Thou Shalt Wilt because the music "sounds like sesame street" (amazon reviewer). That's one of the more redeeming songs on the album.

I remember I downloaded Loose Fur doing a T.Rex cover once.. it was alright, bad sound quality.

Mulvaney, Thursday, 30 April 2009 00:09 (fourteen years ago) link

thirteen years pass...

It takes a while to follow all the twists and turns in some of the more proggier songs - but they're proggy in a very compact way - no noodling - they tend to have lots of different sections that don't repeat, the songs are short, and they sound deceptively straightforward, due to the clean '70s rock sound and the simple riffs. You hear echoes of lots of great '70s bands on here (Steely Dan, Cheap Trick), but yet it sounds vital - it's not some stale museum piece - an example of re-imagining the tradition.

This is so OTM. "Apostolic" in particular is a perfect piece of micro-prog.

I just revisited this album after several years, mainly in light of O'Rourke's reveal that every sound on it except for vocals was recorded with a Shure SM57 mic, just because he wanted to see how it would sound. And it sounds lovely--warm and cozy but it still rocks. And I love Kotche's vibraphone ornaments throughout. Apparently there's a third album in the can. Hope it comes out someday.

J. Sam, Tuesday, 16 August 2022 02:16 (one year ago) link


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