Tall Dwarfs - The Sky Above The Mud Below (2002)
Artist: Tall Dwarfs
Title: The Sky Above The Mud Below
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Merge Records
Genre: Lo-Fi, Indie Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:07:18
Total Size: 168/407 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: The Sky Above The Mud Below
Year Of Release: 2002
Label: Merge Records
Genre: Lo-Fi, Indie Rock
Quality: Mp3 320 / Flac (tracks)
Total Time: 01:07:18
Total Size: 168/407 Mb
WebSite: Album Preview
01. Meet the Beatle
02. Beached Boy
03. Deodorant
04. Michael Hillbilly
05. Room to Breathe
06. Right at Home
07. Time to Wait
08. Melancholy
09. We Are the Chosen Few
10. Baby It's Over
11. Cascade
12. The Beautiful Invader
13. Big Brain of the World
14. You Want Me Shimmy
15. How the West Was Won
16. Ok Forever
17. Your Unmade Eye
18. Seduced by Rock n Roll
19. Amniotic Love
20. Carsick
21. Wax
22. Open Wide Your Pretty Mouths
23. Possum Born
24. Over the Waves
25. The Runout Groove
The Sky Above the Mud Below is an album by New Zealand band Tall Dwarfs released in 2002. It includes an International Tall Dwarfs EP called The Weidenhaüsen Impediment ("FREE!!!"), but it remains unclear whether this was also released separately. Friends of the band recorded sounds for this EP, which were then turned into songs by Bathgate and Knox (similar to the way Stumpy had come about). The Sky Above the Mud Below (not The Sky Above, the Mud Below as Allmusic spells it), is the most recent album released by the Tall Dwarfs.
The cover painting by Chris Knox depicts Mrs Nancy Pomeroy in her kitchen/dining room in Invercargill. In his youth, Chris, who lived in the next street, would often visit the Pomeroys. The picture makes prominent lower middle class decoration typical of Invercargill in the 1960s.
The cover painting by Chris Knox depicts Mrs Nancy Pomeroy in her kitchen/dining room in Invercargill. In his youth, Chris, who lived in the next street, would often visit the Pomeroys. The picture makes prominent lower middle class decoration typical of Invercargill in the 1960s.