Sparks - A Woofer In Tweeter's Clothing (1973 Remaster) (2008)

  • 01 Apr, 15:51
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Artist:
Title: A Woofer In Tweeter's Clothing
Year Of Release: 1973 (2008)
Label: Bearsville
Genre: Pop Rock
Quality: FLAC (image+.cue,log,scans) / MP3 320 Kbps
Total Time: 39:30
Total Size: 247 Mb / 109 Mb
WebSite:

Tracklist:

01. Girl From Germany" (Russell Mael, Ron Mael) 3:26
02. "Beaver O'Lindy" (Ron Mael, Russell Mael, Earle Mankey, Jim Mankey, Harley Feinstein) 3:44
03. "Nothing is Sacred" (Ron Mael) 5:31
04. "Here Comes Bob" (Ron Mael, Russell Mael) 2:09
05. "Moon Over Kentucky" (Jim Mankey, Ron Mael) 4:08
06. "Do Re Mi" (Richard Rodgers and Oscar Hammerstein II) 3:38
07. "Angus Desire" (Ron Mael, Russell Mael) 3:25
08. "Underground" (Earle Mankey) 2:59
09. "The Louvre" (Ron Mael) 5:04
10. "Batteries Not Included" (Ron Mael) 0:47
11. "Whippings and Apologies" (Ron Mael) 5:05

Russell Mael, vocals
Ron Mael, keyboards
Earle Mankey, guitar
Jim Mankey, bass
Harley Feinstein, drums

Woofer... starts with another killer opening track, musically and lyrically, with "Girl From Germany," a chugging number detailing the problems the narrator has with his parents over his girlfriend, given their lingering wartime attitudes. The album builds upon the strengths of the debut to create an even better experience all around. The same five-person lineup offers more sharp performances. Album engineering veteran James Lowe takes over production reins from Rundgren, with, happily, no audible sense of trying to make the album more commercial. If anything, things are even wiggier this time around, from the naughtily-titled sea chanty which turns into a full-on rocker "Beaver O'Lindy" and the strings-plus-piano "Here Comes Bob," to the album's completely wacked-out, dramatic centerpiece "Moon Over Kentucky." Melodies start approaching the hyperactivity level which would flower completely on the band's subsequent releases. Ron and Earle Mankey trade off or play against each other, while the rhythm section of Jim Mankey and Feinstein executes the kind of sharp tempo changes which would become de rigueur for thrash-metal bands of the '80s, but fit in perfectly here with the spastic pop being played. Russell soars and croons over it all like an angel on deeply disturbing drugs, wrapping his vocals around such lines as "We surely will appreciate our newfound leisure time" from "Nothing is Sacred." The long-time live favorite "Do-Re-Mi" -- indeed a cover of the number from The Sound of Music -- first appears here as well, taking Rodgers and Hammerstein to a level Julie Andrews might be hardpressed to follow. Anyone wondering why Faith No More appeared on Sparks' self-tribute album Plagiarism need only listen to Woofer to understand -- as a full-on purée of musical styles in the service of twisted viewpoints, it's a perfect album.




  • mufty77
  •  20:18
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Many thanks for lossless.