Grandaddy - Sumday (Special Bonus Edition) (2003)

  • 30 Mar, 14:32
  • change text size:

Artist:
Title: Sumday
Year Of Release: 2003
Label: V2 Records, Inc.
Genre: Indie Rock, Space-Rock, Dream-Pop
Quality: FLAC (tracks+.cue,log,scans)
Total Time: 1:38:34
Total Size: 646 MB
WebSite:

Tracklist:

CD1 {52:27}
01. Now It's On (4:09)
02. I'm on Standby (3:12)
03. The Go in the Go-For-It (3:40)
04. The Group Who Couldn't Say (4:04)
05. Lost on Yer Merry Way (6:21)
06. El Caminos in the West (3:22)
07. Yeah Is What We Had (3:45)
08. Saddest Vacant Lot in All the World (3:52)
09. Stray Dog and the Chocolate Shake (3:44)
10. O.K. with My Decay (6:11)
11. The Warming Sun (5:44)
12. The Final Push to the Sum (4:23)

CD2 {46:07} - Bonus Disc
01. The Crystal Lake (4:52)
02. For the Dishwasher (5:44)
03. Yeah Is What We Had (4:32)
04. A.M. 180 (3:23)
05. Our Dying Brains (4:25)
06. Laughing Stock (5:17)
07. The Go in the Go-For-It (3:27)
08. Saddest Vacant Lot in All the World (4:34)
09. He's Simple, He's Dumb, He's the Pilot (9:53)

Three years after the critically acclaimed The Sophtware Slump, Grandaddy returns

with Sumday, which actually sounds more like a "sophtware slump" than their

previous effort did. Like The Sophtware Slump, on Sumday the band attempts to

reconcile the technological with the personal, both musically and lyrically.

Several of the songs seem inspired by the rise and fall of the dotcoms and the

Silicon Valley; this could have been a great opportunity for some interesting

musical commentary, which is why it's so disappointing that the results are bland

and complacent. Musically, the album's mix of chugging, fuzzy guitars; sparkly

synths; and tinny drum machines is pleasant enough -- it's a mix of country-rock,

soft rock, and new wave that suggests what a collaboration between Gram Parsons

and the Alan Parsons Project might sound like -- but it's a little dated, and

oddly enough, not as musically adventurous as The Sophtware Slump. Sumday's

sequencing emphasizes its failings; the album begins with eight similarly quirky,

mid-tempo songs that, on the first few listens, blend into each other so

seamlessly that the first two-thirds of the album sound almost like one 30-minute

track. That may have been Grandaddy's intention, but unfortunately it does their

songs a disservice. Yet it's the songwriting itself that makes Sumday so

frustrating. Songs like "The Go in the Go-For-It," "The Group Who Couldn't Say"

-- a tale of corporate overachievers so bent on success that they've forgotten

what it's like to be outdoors -- and "OK With My Decay" focus on feeling stuck,

bored, alienated, and dissipated to the point that they tend to sound that way

too. The resigned, cyber-slacker vibe that permeates the album also adds to the

impression that it's a relic from the recent past; the songs involving robots and

e-mail, such as "I'm on Standby" and "Stray Dog and the Chocolate Shake," feel

downright quaint. Sumday does feature some worthwhile songs, however: the opening

track, "Now It's On," is bouncy and engaging, while "Lost on Yr Merry Way" and

"El Caminos in the West" manage to make the emotional leap from resigned to

poignant. Not coincidentally, the few times when Grandaddy writes songs about

relationships rank among the album's highlights. Sumday's overall complacent

sound actually suits "Yeah Is What We Had," a lackadaisical look at a blasé

relationship; "The Warming Sun" is a sweet apology to an ex that is among the

most heartfelt songs the band has written; and "Saddest Vacant Lot in All the

World," with its rolling pianos, layered harmonies, and lovelorn vignettes, is

much more evocative than most of the album, and sounds a bit like the Abbey

Road-era Beatles performing "Mr. Bojangles" to boot. Even though the album

rallies in its second half, by the wannabe-epic closing track "The Final Push to

the Sum," it's hard to escape how much effort was expended on these mostly

disappointing songs about stagnation. It's also unfortunate that Sumday comes out

in the wake of the Flaming Lips' Yoshimi Battles the Pink Robots, an album that

handles similar, the-world-is-shutting-down themes much more poetically and

passionately. Thought-provoking and a bit of a downer in ways Grandaddy probably

didn't intend, Sumday isn't a totally empty experience, but its ambitions and

results don't add up as well as might have been expected.


  • mufty77
  •  13:02
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many thanks for lossless.
  • whiskers
  •  11:17
  • Пользователь offline
    • Нравится
    • 0
Many Thanks