Trim, 9th Ward High Roller

Trim, 9th Ward High Roller is an EP by Surgery, released on June 30, 1993 through Amphetamine Reptile Records.[2] Featuring improved songwriting and tighter musicianship, the band expanded upon their mix of blues and southern rock with noise rock while developing a more straightforward sound.[3]

Trim, 9th Ward High Roller
EP by
ReleasedJune 30, 1993
RecordedB.C. Studios, Brooklyn, New York
GenreNoise rock
Length25:40
LabelAmphetamine Reptile
ProducerMartin Bisi, Surgery
Surgery chronology
Nationwide
(1990)
Trim, 9th Ward High Roller
(1993)
Shimmer
(1994)
Professional ratings
Review scores
SourceRating
Allmusic[1]

Release and reception

The album is regarded as a standout for Surgery in terms of musicianship and unique compared to Amphetamine Reptile's catalog. Victor W. Valdivia of allmusic gave the album three out of five stars, noting that "with their bad-boy swagger, Surgery is really an early-'70s blues-rock band stuck out of their time, far more sleazy (à la the Rolling Stones and New York Dolls) than scuzzy (as all other Amphetamine Reptile artists, who seem more rooted in Richard Hell and Sonic Youth)." He went on to say "Sean McDonald's voice is the key weapon here, a raspy, gritty instrument devoid of any punk affectations. Coupled with the skillful guitar of John Leamy, it gives the EP a feel unlike any other Amphetamine Reptile release".[1]

Track listing

All tracks are written by Surgery.

No.TitleLength
1."Kickin' Around"3:43
2."Maldia"3:35
3."Brother Remington"5:28
4."A.K."3:37
5."Exquisite"4:47
6."Your Beautiful Smile"4:26

Personnel

Surgery
Production and additional personnel
gollark: This is clearly a hyperbolic heptagon tiling.
gollark: ~~until the real TJ09 bans me for impersonation~~
gollark: Never changing back though.
gollark: I think we should have some sort of rolling TJ09 thing - one person is TJ09 for the day.
gollark: The description - and everyone else - says them, but that doesn't make them true!

References

  1. Valdivia, Victor W. "Trim, 9th Ward High Roller". Allmusic. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  2. Sprague, David (2007). "Surgery". Trouser Press. Retrieved March 22, 2013.
  3. Aaron, Charles (September 1993). "Singles: Stolar Tracks". Spin. Vol. 9 no. 6. p. 132. Retrieved May 21, 2013.
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