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The Auntie Winnie Album
Barnes and Noble
The Auntie Winnie Album
Current price: $13.99
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Barnes and Noble
The Auntie Winnie Album
Current price: $13.99
Size: OS
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A companion piece to 1987's
Bevis Through the Looking Glass
, 1989's
Auntie Winnie Album
effectively ends
Nick Saloman
's career as a one-man-band making D.I.Y. records on a bedroom four-track. (Beginning with 1990's excellent
Any Gas Faster
, subsequent
Bevis Frond
records would be recorded in real studios with other musicians.) Like the earlier compilation, this set pulls together outtakes and extra tracks from
Saloman
's early days. Oddly, however, the overall quality of these tracks is much higher than on the earlier set, and the album actually hangs together quite well as a whole. Opening and closing with extended instrumentals, the grinding
acid rock
of
"Malvolio's Dream Journey to Pikes"
and the lyrical and lovely
"City of the Sun,"
the album covers a lot of ground in between. Most of the album is devoted to proper three-minute
pop
songs, ranging from the dark-hued
"Will to Lose"
(one of
's most personal-sounding tunes) to the almost bouncy,
Kinks-like
"Repressor."
The
Reckless
CD adds a track apiece from
and the forgettable
Acid Jam
. ~ Stewart Mason
Bevis Through the Looking Glass
, 1989's
Auntie Winnie Album
effectively ends
Nick Saloman
's career as a one-man-band making D.I.Y. records on a bedroom four-track. (Beginning with 1990's excellent
Any Gas Faster
, subsequent
Bevis Frond
records would be recorded in real studios with other musicians.) Like the earlier compilation, this set pulls together outtakes and extra tracks from
Saloman
's early days. Oddly, however, the overall quality of these tracks is much higher than on the earlier set, and the album actually hangs together quite well as a whole. Opening and closing with extended instrumentals, the grinding
acid rock
of
"Malvolio's Dream Journey to Pikes"
and the lyrical and lovely
"City of the Sun,"
the album covers a lot of ground in between. Most of the album is devoted to proper three-minute
pop
songs, ranging from the dark-hued
"Will to Lose"
(one of
's most personal-sounding tunes) to the almost bouncy,
Kinks-like
"Repressor."
The
Reckless
CD adds a track apiece from
and the forgettable
Acid Jam
. ~ Stewart Mason