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Music CD - Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks: Real Emotional Trash

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Music CD: Real Emotional Trash Artist: Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks
List Price: $14.98
Our Price: $9.99
Your Save: $ 4.99 ( 33% )
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
Manufacturer: Matador Records
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Average Customer Rating:     

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Tracks:
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1. Dragonfly Pie 2. Hopscotch Willy 3. Cold Son 4. Real Emotional Trash 5. Out Of Reaches 6. Baltimore 7. Gardenia 8. Elmo Delmo 9. We Can't Help You 10. Wicked Wanda
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Binding: Audio CD EAN: 0744861077220 Label: Matador Records Manufacturer: Matador Records Number Of Discs: 1 Publisher: Matador Records Release Date: 2008-03-04 Studio: Matador Records
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Spotlight customer reviews:
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Customer Rating:      Summary: Malkmus at his best Comment: Fantastic Album from start to finish. Malkmus has shown a new and undeniable maturity level. He is above par for achieving the level of the songwriting elite. All in all Malkmus keeps getting better and better at his craft and Real Emotional Trash is the proof.
Customer Rating:      Summary: Very good, very different Comment: Really like this CD a lot. Very different. Meanders around in styles, some great guitar licks and entertaining songs. Give it a listen, might take a few times through to really appreciate it but it is a very solid disc.
Customer Rating:      Summary: SM & the Jicks never disappoint Comment: As an aging Silver Jews/Pavement fan, I was reluctant to get on board with SM & the Jicks, but was pleasantly surprised. The songs are all catchy, sarcastic, and musically brilliant. I'll pull out the Pavement records when I'm feeling nostalgic but all of the SM & the Jicks CD's are currently on heavy rotation in my house.
Customer Rating:      Summary: A man in love with his guitar. Comment: Real Emotional Trash is a good album. It's not easy to listen to and like it at first but SM is not exactly fast-food, right? So, give it a chance and you won't regret it.
"Dragonfly Pie" starts off with a slow fuzzy riff that sounds like Black Sabbath with Lou Reed on vocals. Distortion is all over the speakers, the rhythm is odd and menacing. But things are never quite what you are expecting with SM and suddenly the song changes to a waltz coupled with a little falsetto jingle only to start it all over again. Meanwhile Malkmus takes every break to pull out a wicked guitar solo. Welcome to planet weird. This is very much Pig Lib territory - and that's a good omen.
Unfortunately "Hopscotch Willie" fails to deliver. It has a tropicalia-cool melody but the song doesn't change much. Instead, it drifts into a monotonous guitar jam to the same lounge rhythm. After 6 minutes I thought that this one is going to be so-skipped.
The title track has been slayed by critics more often than not but for me is the strongest song in the album. This is one of those moments where SM stops fooling around and sounds serious. It also sounds as if SM was aiming for something special, should I say grand? with this song. This may sound corny but the song, on its 11 minutes, sounds always earnest and honest, kind of low key epic, but never pompous.
"Gardenia" is another high note on the album. Like "Shady Lane" or "Carrot Rope", it comes as a breath of fresh air and, with its glorious 3 min, it's the only straight pop song on the record.
The good thing about SM, besides being a really hot guitarist, is that even when his music starts drifting or sinking under its own weight, right when you are starting to loose it, he always comes with something brilliant and unexpected that wakes you up. Listen to "Elmo Delmo" and get what I mean.
What makes this album not as good as Pig Lib or Face the Truth is that there is not enough of that pop ingredient that SM mixed so cleverly in songs like "Oyster" or "Vanessa From Queens" that were melodic, catchy, weird and challenging. Off course there's plenty of challenge in Real Emotional Trash and SM albums are usually growers but this is a demanding album and I'm not sure if in the end it will pay off completely. One thing that really pays off is SM's guitar playing. The man is better than ever. And a lot of time it's his guitar playing that saves the day on this album. The last song "Wicked Wanda" ends up with an epic solo and as the last note squeaks I can't help but to think of the Smashing Pumpkins. What about that?
Just one more thing. Janet Weiss, the woman that shares the position of best drummer in rock with Dave Grohl, is in the band now. So, please, turn up the drums.
Customer Rating:      Summary: It's hard being SM Comment: A pure genius rock-out. Shut up, buy it, listen to it in awe, praise it to your friends, bask in how cool you feel about yourself because you love it and never again provide another over-analyzed pretentious driveled opinion about his graceful motives and unsurpassed talents again.
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Editorial Reviews:
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If you've never heard Stephen Malkmus, you might want to begin with one of the more accessible of his four solo albums, be it the self-titled debut or 2005's watertight Face the Truth. But if you're familiar with his individual work or that of his former band, Pavement, Real Emotional Trash will settle right in as the next chapter of the eccentric Portlander's prolificacy. Leading the Jicks this time is ex-Sleater-Kinney drummer (and backing vocalist) Janet Weiss, who--while she never lets loose to pound her skins to oblivion--does manage to reel in the band on extended jams like that of the intricate "Elmo Delmo," a bluesy murder yarn called "Hopscotch Willie," or the sprawling 10-minute title track. Malkmus's guitar fixation tends to overshadow his roguish, pop-sharp song craft this time around, with fewer catchy choruses and more axe-driven bypasses, save for the peculiar "Cold Son" and the joyful live-show staple "Gardenia." Then again, Trash's capriciousness and experimental willingness are what gave Malkmus an audience in the first place--and what promise to keep it coming back for more. --Scott Holter
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