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Hinten

Hinten in Franklin, TN

Current price: $17.99
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Hinten

Barnes and Noble

Hinten in Franklin, TN

Current price: $17.99
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Size: CD

Guru Guru
's second album starts off on a chaotic note, but
"Electric Junk"
soon resolves itself into a full-on band jam and takes it from there, showing again that the band readily trod the fine line between merely skilled and truly inspired. There's always a nagging sense on this album that the group is but one step away from
prog rock
wank of the worst kind, but then there'll be a thick blast of righteous noise or a suddenly lovely dark chime that feels more
Blue Oyster Cult
than
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
, say. This can even happen out of nowhere, like the odd
spoken word
pronouncements interrupting the attempted drum solo on
or the open-ended
electronic
moans and echoed calls during the floating midsection of
"Space Ship."
"The Meaning of Meanings"
has the most "way deep, man" feeling on the whole album, as the title perhaps demonstrates, but even it has room for a rather bizarre midsection where the lyrics aren't sung or shouted as much as groaningly sighed over a slowly building full-band burst.
Neumeier
's drumming here is actually some of his best, while
Genrich
sounds like he's inventing some of
Daniel Ash
's feedback freakouts years in advance. The oddest number of the four mostly is such due to the name -- one would figure that calling a song
"Bo Diddley"
and clearly chanting the title at various points during the song would mean a full-on rave-up in the
rock
legend's vein. Anything but! There's enough of a smoky feel going on to suggest the influence the likes of
Quicksilver Messenger Service
incorporated, say, but a
Diddley
-beat workout this isn't, though there are a few game attempts here and there to try -- sort of. ~ Ned Raggett
Guru Guru
's second album starts off on a chaotic note, but
"Electric Junk"
soon resolves itself into a full-on band jam and takes it from there, showing again that the band readily trod the fine line between merely skilled and truly inspired. There's always a nagging sense on this album that the group is but one step away from
prog rock
wank of the worst kind, but then there'll be a thick blast of righteous noise or a suddenly lovely dark chime that feels more
Blue Oyster Cult
than
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
, say. This can even happen out of nowhere, like the odd
spoken word
pronouncements interrupting the attempted drum solo on
or the open-ended
electronic
moans and echoed calls during the floating midsection of
"Space Ship."
"The Meaning of Meanings"
has the most "way deep, man" feeling on the whole album, as the title perhaps demonstrates, but even it has room for a rather bizarre midsection where the lyrics aren't sung or shouted as much as groaningly sighed over a slowly building full-band burst.
Neumeier
's drumming here is actually some of his best, while
Genrich
sounds like he's inventing some of
Daniel Ash
's feedback freakouts years in advance. The oddest number of the four mostly is such due to the name -- one would figure that calling a song
"Bo Diddley"
and clearly chanting the title at various points during the song would mean a full-on rave-up in the
rock
legend's vein. Anything but! There's enough of a smoky feel going on to suggest the influence the likes of
Quicksilver Messenger Service
incorporated, say, but a
Diddley
-beat workout this isn't, though there are a few game attempts here and there to try -- sort of. ~ Ned Raggett

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