Blood on the Slacks
Blood on the Slacks is the fourth full-length album by the American band Golden Smog. It was released by Lost Highway Records on April 24, 2007, less than a year after their previous album, Another Fine Day. The album's name is a play on Bob Dylan's 1975 album Blood On The Tracks. It was the first release from the group to not feature the Wilco frontman Jeff Tweedy as part of the lineup since 1992's On Golden Smog.
Blood on the Slacks | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
Studio album by | ||||
Released | April 24, 2007 | |||
Genre | Pop, rock | |||
Length | 24:53 | |||
Label | Lost Highway | |||
Producer | Ed Ackerson, Paco Loco, Golden Smog | |||
Golden Smog chronology | ||||
|
Reception
Review scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Allmusic |
Writing for Allmusic, music critic Mark Deming praised Louris' song "Without a Struggle" and wrote of the album "Blood on the Slacks' pearly moments suggest these guys might be saving some of their top-shelf ideas for this band for a change, even if they didn't spend a lot of time sweating over the finished product."[1]
Track listing
- "Can't Even Tie Your Own Shoes" (Kraig Jarret Johnson, Gary Louris, Dan Murphy) – 3:09
- "Starman" (David Bowie) – 4:42
- "Look At You Now" (Louris) – 3:04
- "Scotch on Ice" (Johnson, Louris, Murphy) – 3:14
- "Magician" (Johnson, David Pirner) – 1:20
- "Without a Struggle" (Louris, Murphy, Mark Perlman) – 3:14
- "Tarpit" (J Mascis) – 3:07
- "Insecure" (Murphy) – 3:03
Personnel
- Gary Louris – vocals, background vocals, synthesizer, guitar, harmonica, piano, Glockenspiel, Mellotron
- Dan Murphy – vocals, background vocals, guitar, piano, slide guitar
- Kraig Jarret Johnson – vocals, background vocals, guitar, piano
- Marc Perlman – bass, percussion, conga, drums, tambourine, background vocals
- Ed Ackerson – percussion, background vocals
- Peter Anderson – drums, percussion, background vocals
- Muni Camón – vocals
- Jose Guillanot – trombone
- Miguel Ángel Muñoz – trumpet
- Linda Pitmon – drums
- Francis Salas – saxophone
Production notes
- Ed Ackerson – producer, engineer, mixing
- Paco Loco – producer, engineer
- Richard Dodd – mastering
- John Fields – mixing
- Anna Marie Gabriel – art direction, design
- Jim Gavenus – photography
- Jennifer Turner – artwork
- Kim Buie – A&R
gollark: <@!330678593904443393> I'll take your complaints as consent to harvest your data utterly for neural network training.
gollark: The closer you pass by a piece, the more distance quota it takes.
gollark: Anyway, each piece can move some total distance in a line each turn defined by what piece it is, and if there is a piece which can block it near the path it'd take, it uses more of that distance quota to move on that path.
gollark: No, it's still turnbased.
gollark: Yes, but in continuous chess it can't, I'll explain.
References
- Deming, Mark. "Blood on the Slacks > Review". Allmusic. Retrieved September 29, 2015.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.