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No Matter How Long the Line Is at the Cafeteria, ...

No Matter How Long the Line Is at the Cafeteria, ... in Franklin, TN

Current price: $27.49
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No Matter How Long the Line Is at the Cafeteria, ...

Barnes and Noble

No Matter How Long the Line Is at the Cafeteria, ... in Franklin, TN

Current price: $27.49
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Size: OS

The Big Boys
' final album, once again produced by
Spot
and featuring their now-regular horn section, has the foursome bowing out with erratic style and constantly predicting the future. Having already pioneered a punk and funk combination just by existing, playing with a guest turntablist on the heavy funk of
"Common Beat"
beats most late-'90s sports-metal acts to the punch by 15 years, not to mention doing so with rather more talent and brains! Still, of the band's three full studio records,
No Matter...
is the most fractured, if wide-ranging. Whether it was the individual interests of the members pulling the group in various directions or a group decision to try anything and see what stuck, sometimes there's less of
the Big Boys
here and more stuff that other bands could have done just as easily. Other times, though, trying something else had beneficial effects; though it sounds like
the Boys
had spun some
Husker Du
before recording it,
"Which Way to Go"
is still an underrated gem, and it's also the closest the band every got to power pop.
Turner
continues to serve up vocal fire throughout the album without hesitation, though sometimes he sounds more like a hoarser imitator. Everything sounds fine as always, if just not quite as distinct as before.
Washam
's drumming is faultless, happily, and
Gates
and
Kerr
never sound too bad. As always, the songs drawing more on the funk side of things are the more memorable pieces, and sometimes for more reasons than one. Hearing
take the spoken/sung lead on
"I Do Care,"
for example, instead of
is a slight surprise, but it still works.
"What's the Word"
revives the funky call-and-response fire of many an earlier
Big Boys
song, while
"Work"
wraps up the album and
' recording career with one last sharp groove blast, going down against the nine-to-five world fighting. ~ Ned Raggett
The Big Boys
' final album, once again produced by
Spot
and featuring their now-regular horn section, has the foursome bowing out with erratic style and constantly predicting the future. Having already pioneered a punk and funk combination just by existing, playing with a guest turntablist on the heavy funk of
"Common Beat"
beats most late-'90s sports-metal acts to the punch by 15 years, not to mention doing so with rather more talent and brains! Still, of the band's three full studio records,
No Matter...
is the most fractured, if wide-ranging. Whether it was the individual interests of the members pulling the group in various directions or a group decision to try anything and see what stuck, sometimes there's less of
the Big Boys
here and more stuff that other bands could have done just as easily. Other times, though, trying something else had beneficial effects; though it sounds like
the Boys
had spun some
Husker Du
before recording it,
"Which Way to Go"
is still an underrated gem, and it's also the closest the band every got to power pop.
Turner
continues to serve up vocal fire throughout the album without hesitation, though sometimes he sounds more like a hoarser imitator. Everything sounds fine as always, if just not quite as distinct as before.
Washam
's drumming is faultless, happily, and
Gates
and
Kerr
never sound too bad. As always, the songs drawing more on the funk side of things are the more memorable pieces, and sometimes for more reasons than one. Hearing
take the spoken/sung lead on
"I Do Care,"
for example, instead of
is a slight surprise, but it still works.
"What's the Word"
revives the funky call-and-response fire of many an earlier
Big Boys
song, while
"Work"
wraps up the album and
' recording career with one last sharp groove blast, going down against the nine-to-five world fighting. ~ Ned Raggett

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1800 Galleria Blvd #1310, Franklin, TN 37067, United States

Find Barnes and Noble at CoolSprings Galleria in Franklin, TN

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