Close Lobsters - Headache Rhetoric (1988)

Artist: Close Lobsters
Title: Headache Rhetoric
Year Of Release: 1988
Label: Fire Records
Genre: Indie, Alternative
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 35:46
Total Size: 82.4 / 237 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
Tracklist:Title: Headache Rhetoric
Year Of Release: 1988
Label: Fire Records
Genre: Indie, Alternative
Quality: Mp3 320 kbps / FLAC (tracks)
Total Time: 35:46
Total Size: 82.4 / 237 MB
WebSite: Album Preview
1. Lovely Little Swan (3:47)
2. Gunpowder Keg (2:54)
3. Nature Thing (4:58)
4. My Days Are Numbered (3:02)
5. Gutache (3:04)
6. Got Apprehension (3:38)
7. Gulp (2:10)
8. Words On Power (3:20)
9. Skyscrapers (4:11)
10. Knee Trembler (4:42)
Review by Stewart Mason
Darker-hued and more aggressive than the Close Lobsters' much sunnier early releases, Headache Rhetoric is an aptly named album full of roiling guitars, foreboding lyrics, and an increasing sense of tension. Yet even on the most lyrically distressing songs, like the self-explanatory "My Days Are Numbered," there's a dedication to classic pop structures that gives the song a Kinks-like shuffle driven by Robert Burnett's bouncy, McCartney-esque bassline. Similarly, "Got Apprehension" sets a cheerful little ditty about death by decapitation to a sunny "sha-la-la" chorus. By the end of the album, with a powerful remake of "Skyscrapers of St. Mirin" from the 1998 EP What Is There to Smile About and the extended neo-psychedelic freakout "Knee Trembler," there's an almost oppressive sense of doom to the album; set off by the prettiness of most of the melodies and the hazy jangle of the guitars, the overall effect is somewhat akin to Love's Forever Changes, minus the orchestrations.
Darker-hued and more aggressive than the Close Lobsters' much sunnier early releases, Headache Rhetoric is an aptly named album full of roiling guitars, foreboding lyrics, and an increasing sense of tension. Yet even on the most lyrically distressing songs, like the self-explanatory "My Days Are Numbered," there's a dedication to classic pop structures that gives the song a Kinks-like shuffle driven by Robert Burnett's bouncy, McCartney-esque bassline. Similarly, "Got Apprehension" sets a cheerful little ditty about death by decapitation to a sunny "sha-la-la" chorus. By the end of the album, with a powerful remake of "Skyscrapers of St. Mirin" from the 1998 EP What Is There to Smile About and the extended neo-psychedelic freakout "Knee Trembler," there's an almost oppressive sense of doom to the album; set off by the prettiness of most of the melodies and the hazy jangle of the guitars, the overall effect is somewhat akin to Love's Forever Changes, minus the orchestrations.