Wednesday, October 8, 2008

CD Reviews

n/a
OASIS & r & & r & Dig Out Your Soul & r & & r & 2-1/2 STARS & r & & r & & lt;span class= & quot;dropcap & quot; & "U & lt;/span & nless you're eight beers deep at a rugby party, Oasis pretty much sucks," my girlfriend remarked during a recent discussion regarding the English pop-rock band.





And she's right. Oasis pretty much sucks not because their music is bad, but because they make the listener feel unworthy. The band is sort of like that know-it-all in philosophy class -- obviously gifted, but pompous and obnoxiously self-important. Your thoughts are eternally humdrum. You are a mortal in his presence. You need alcohol to tolerate him.





In Dig Out, Oasis reaches new heights of self-aggrandizement. With track names like "Waiting for the Rapture" and "The Shock of Lightning," and an album title as audacious it is, Oasis doesn't want you to just listen to their music -- they want to recalibrate your soul.





There are the usual Oasis bright spots, the poppy melodies and English croon that made "Wonderwall" and "Champagne Supernova" smashing hits. But my advice? Ready your spirits.





-- TIM BROSS





DOWNLOAD: "The Shock of Lightning"





THE REPLACEMENTS


Tim


4 STARS


& lt;span class= & quot;dropcap & quot; & O & lt;/span & ne of my favorite albums from the '80s has just gotten the Rhino re-release treatment, with six bonus tracks and new liner notes. The original recording is pretty rough, so remastering isn't much help -- but relaunching the Replacements on America, now that's a great idea.





Not part of the glam excesses of that decade, the boys from Minneapolis started out a little bit punk but wound up playing it down the middle as a solid party-rock band. And for me, Tim was the best of their seven albums. It careens between screeching guitars ("Little Mascara") and tuneful little ditties ("Waitress in the Sky"). The overall effect is like a visit to a beer-soaked tavern with a house band that blows you away -- they even make you think with borderline "deep" songs like "Here Comes a Regular."





If you thought the '80s were all about Madonna and metal hair, check these guys out.





-- TED S. McGREGOR JR.





DOWNLOAD: "Here Comes a Regular"

Also in Opinion

Sound Advice

Inlander Staff |
Monday, November 17,2008

Core Work

ISAMU JORDAN |
Monday, November 17,2008

Bomb Garden

n/a |
Monday, November 17,2008

Glittering Flecks

Michael Bowen |
Monday, November 17,2008

Choking the Spaceman

n/a |
Wednesday, November 5,2008

Also By n/a

Buzz Bin

n/a |
Wednesday, September 26,2007

Nightlife Listings

n/a |
Thursday, February 20,2003

Phiring Phil?

n/a |
Wednesday, June 21,2006

McCarthy Lives!

n/a |
Thursday, July 31,2003

Recently Reviewed

n/a |
Thursday, August 29,2002


 
 
Close
Close
Close