Okay so somehow, I've never got round to listening to Modest Mouse, despite lots of people telling me I'd love them and despite all my good intentions to 'do it tomorrow'.
Now I'm determined to sit down and give them a go, and see if I like them as much as everyone else.
So what I'm asking of you, my fellow moggers, is to recommend an album or two of theirs that I should listen to first. A good place to start. I know you guys are good at this kind of thing so I'm awaiting any suggestions with bated breath.
Also, any background on the band/albums would be appreciated, just to give me some sort of mental framework. Thanks!
Posted on 01/10/2008
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My Trusted MOGs
This Is a Long Drive for Someone with Nothing to Think About(1996) and Good News for People Who Love Bad News(2004)
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Thanks :) any reason for picking those two?
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Good News For People Who Love Bad News is more accessible, but many would say that This is a Long Drive is their best. I'd say start with the accessible stuff first.
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Issaquah, WA, indie rock trio Modest Mouse was formed in 1993 by vocalist/guitarist Isaac Brock, bassist Eric Judy, and drummer Jeremiah Green. After honing their muscular sound in "The Shed" -- a makeshift practice space built by Brock on the land next to his mother's trailer -- Modest Mouse entered Calvin Johnson's Dub Narcotic Studios to cut their 1994 self-titled debut single, released on Johnson's K Records label. Following a move to the Up label, the trio issued two 1996 LPs, This Is a Long Drive for Someone With Nothing to Think About and Interstate 8. After returning to K, Modest Mouse released The Fruit That Ate Itself in 1997; its follow-up from later that year, The Lonesome Crowded West, was the band's breakthrough, and in the wake of a major-label bidding war, they signed to Sony. The rarities collection Building Nothing out of Something appeared on Up in early 2000, followed later that year by their long-awaited Epic debut, The Moon & Antarctica. In 2001, the band issued the Everywhere and His Nasty Parlor Tricks EP and K released Sad Sappy Sucker, a "lost album" that was intended to be the group's full-length debut back in 1994. Brock kept busy with his Ugly Casanova side project, which delivered Sharpen Your Teeth in 2002. Modest Mouse finally returned in 2004 with Good News for People Who Love Bad News, their best-received record and a Top 40 hit as well. For their next record, Brock enlisted the help of former Smiths guitarist Johnny Marr, who not only added his songwriting and playing skills to We Were Dead Before the Ship Even Sank -- which was released in early 2007 -- but also toured with the band as a member.
I SUGGEST: The Moon & Antarctica,my favorite Modest Mouse's Epic debut, The Moon & Antarctica, finds them strangely subdued, focusing on mortality as well as the moody, acoustic side of their music and downplaying the edgy, spastic rock that helped make them indie stars. Not that their first major-label release sounds like a sellout -- actually, the slight sheen of Brian Deck's production enhances the album's introspective tone -- but occasionally The Moon & Antarctica's melancholy becomes ponderous. Unfortunately, the album's middle stretch contains three such songs, "The Cold Part," "Alone Down There," and "The Stars Are Projectors," which tend to blur together into one 17-minute-long piece that bogs down the album's momentum. Individually, each of these songs is sweeping and haunting in its own right, but grouping them together blunts their impact. However, this trilogy does provide a sharp contrast to, as well as a bridge across, The Moon & Antarctica's more vibrant beginning and end. Though it explores death and the afterlife, The Moon & Antarctica's liveliest moments are its most effective. "3rd Planet"'s simple, ramshackle melody and strange, moving lyrics ("Your heart felt good"), the elastic guitars on "Gravity Rides Everything," and the angular, jumpy "Tiny Cities Made of Ashes" and "A Different City" get the album off to a strong start, while the fresh, unaffected "Wild Packs of Family Dogs," "Paper Thin Walls," and "Lives" bring it to an atmospheric, affecting peak before "What People Are Made Of" closes the album with a climactic burst of noise. Their most cohesive collection of songs to date, The Moon & Antarctica is an impressive, if flawed, map of Modest Mouse's ambitions and fears.
and Lonesome Crowded West Talk about original -- this band has something for just about everyone. They can do quiet, brooding acoustics like "Bankrupt on Selling," dark and pounding thrashers like "Cowboy Dan," funky jump-around emo like "Jesus Christ Was an Only Child" -- just about anything. Throughout the whole album is a white-trash feeling and a sort of down-to-earth analysis of the state of the world, without sounding pretentious. Give this album a listen and you can be sure that you will be singing the rambling, catchy, almost whiny vocals in no time. If you dig indie rock at its very best, go pick this album up.
all info from allmusic.com cause all i can say is it RAWKS or it don't. when they gave out adjectives n adverbs that day i was absent ;)
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damned HTML
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Thanks Pimp (haha, just wanted to say that), that was a good review right there, even if you didn't write it yourself lol. I think I'll probably try the Good News one (sounds like a bible when you abbreviate it like that) and the Moon and Anarctica for starters :)
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good deal-ee-o!
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laura, since you recommended an album for me, I wanted to recommend one back to you, or not so much recommend, as echo what R&R Pimp had to say. "The Moon and Antarctica" is what got me hooked on them, and "The Lonesome Crowded West" has been getting a lot of play for me lately, perhaps it's the cloudy weather? heh.
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ok, thanks brittany :) I'm about to listen to The Moon and Antarctica.
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a little late, but i'm still putting my 2 cents in. gotta say "good news" and their new one "we were dead before the ship even sank". everything else is just icing...perfect, perfect icing :)