Eleven tracks are present on Indivisible, and five of them are instrumentals. In artwork and mood, this is very much Lungfish's "black" album. An emotional release is frozen in the active grieving anger that is Indivisible. Sonic Youth-like, distorted but trebly guitar sounds united with a rock-and-brooding rhythm section. Lungfish's art-rock catharsis is marked by dissonance or simplicity for a melody and sparseness or heavy hurtling from drums and warm bass. The male vocals are voiced from the head and mix to sound far away for the feel of eavesdropping on a poor soul working out a personal therapy inside a tenement window. Finely conceived for its prevailing atmosphere, Indivisible is a true album for its even texture and direction.
In the taxi license class they would always harp on that a taxi is PUBLIC transportation, you must pick up all passengers. And be careful because the police sometimes dress up as homeless people to catch offending drivers. So I'm out on a Tuesday (?) slow night. I got my cab and started to drive around North Chicago (I should have been downtown - newbie!). So I stop at a light and bathing in th