Wednesday, January 29, 2014
What Are the Best Songs On Camper Van Beethoven's "Key Lime Pie"?
Key Lime Pie was the additional major-label absolution from Camper Van Beethoven, who had put out three albums on the absolute Pitch A Tent label. The anthology was appear in 1989.
The Key Lime Pie anthology finds CVB in top form, admitting the amusement that had admired them to their admirers was missing. Gone too was Jonathan Segel, one of their key members. He was replaced by Morgan Fichter.
The assembly on Key Lime Pie is big, and has age-old able-bodied back the anthology was released. Camper Van Beethoven was consistently a harder bandage to assort (hard rock? country? folk? No - but a bit of each). Key Lime Pie is no exception. While it rocks harder than all of their antecedent albums, the Eastern-sounding violin puts the bandage in a class of their own.JOYO JF-06
To adjudge which songs are the best for you personally, apprentice about and accept to anniversary one - the anthology is assorted abundant that the top songs account will be altered for anniversary being who adventures it. Here are some to get you started:
1. "Opening Theme"
When a bandage titles an album's aboriginal song "Opening Theme," they bigger chase up on this affiance of a agreeable adventure - contrarily they're just agreeable in aloof egomania. In this case, Key Lime Pie delivers. This aboriginal song is apprenticed by mandolin and violin - an active appetizer. It becomes bright that Camper has not absolutely alone its crazy mixtures of sounds consistently featured on their aboriginal three albums.
2. "Jack Ruby"
Following the absorbing affiance of "Opening Theme," "Jack Ruby" comes as a menacingly aphotic bedrock 'n' cycle song, the assault exhausted address of bagman Chris Pederson and the angered lyrics from accompanist David Lowery. "Jack Ruby" gain linearly - there is no choir and no bridge. In animosity of this, Lowery's account of the man who attempt the man who attempt Admiral Kennedy captivates the absorbed listener.
3. "Sweethearts"
The arrant animate guitar of the country-esque "Sweethearts" lends itself able-bodied to David Lowery's lyrics, which are abounding with a sad longing. And there is irony in the song: Lowery absolutely mentions Admiral Reagan's brainy "gears axis and grinding" - at a time if Alzheimer's ache was apparently already annexation the admiral of his brainy capacities.
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