词条 | And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders |
释义 |
| name = And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders | type = Album | artist = The Ex and Tom Cora | cover = Weathermenexalbum.jpg | alt = | released = October 19, 1993 | recorded = January 15-22, 1993 at the Friends Studio, Amsterdam | venue = | studio = | genre = *Experimental rock
| length = 57:03 | label = Fist Puppet | producer = Dolf Planteijdt, The Ex, and Tom Cora | prev_title = | prev_year = | next_title = | next_year = | misc = {{Extra chronology | artist = The Ex | type = Album | prev_title = Scrabbling at the Lock | prev_year = 1991 | title = And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders | year = 1993 | next_title = Mudbird Shivers | next_year = 1995 }}{{Extra chronology | artist = Tom Cora | type = Album | prev_title = A Beautiful Western Saddle | prev_year = 1993 | title = And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders | year = 1993 | next_title = Cyberband | next_year = 1994 }} }}{{Album ratings |rev1=Allmusic |rev1score={{rating|4|5}}[1] |rev2=Trouser Press |rev2score=favorable[2] }} And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders is the second of two albums by Dutch punk band The Ex in collaboration with avant-garde cellist Tom Cora. ReceptionDean McFarlane of Allmusic writes that the "second album of this winning collaboration [...] continue to indulge [the group's] collective love for European folk themes and free improvisation." He praised the "the delicate melodious folk [...], curious improvised sound-searching" which "marked a new tangent the group followed into a total free-form improvisation inspired by the likes of avant-garde jazz associates Han Bennink and Misha Mengelberg." Despite this, he writes that the group " never left their punk roots behind" and concluded by calling them "one of the genre's most interesting and inventive groups."[1] Trouser Press wrote that while the album was slightly inferior to its predecessor, this "denser, darker album [...] has its share of great songs, particularly "Dere Geliyor Dere" (another Siral piece) and two excuses for singer G.W. Sok to run off at the mouth and sound good doing it: "What's the Story" (with lyrics taken from an interview with film director Sam Fuller) and the hilarious fake materialist manifesto, "Everything & Me."" The track "War O.D." ("the climax of many of the Ex's shows with Cora") was praised as "one of the sharpest songs they've ever written, politically and musically."[2] Bill Meyer wrote for Chicago Reader that both the collaborative albums "reveal an intoxicating chemistry. The Ex push Cora to play more directly than usual, while his improvisational chops and broad musical vocabulary have facilitated the live realization of the promise shown on Joggers and Smoggers [...] his delicately plucked accents articulate the Oriental flavor of "Okinawa Mon Amour." He may be only one player, but he has an unusually broad and exotic musical vocabulary, and with his assistance the Ex can now improvise and successfully interpret European and Asian folk songs onstage."[3] Track listing
Personnel
Recorded at Friends Studio, Amsterdam, Netherlands. Produced by Dolf Planteijdt. Notes
References1. ^1 {{cite web|url=https://www.allmusic.com/album/and-the-weathermen-shrug-their-shoulders-mw0000621388 |title= Tom Cora / The Ex / Ex & Tom Cora – And the Weathermen Shrug Their Shoulders |website=allmusic.com |access-date=2018-11-11}} {{The Ex}}{{1990s-alt-rock-album-stub}}2. ^1 {{cite web|url=http://www.trouserpress.com/entry.php?a=ex|title=TrouserPress.com :: Ex|website=www.trouserpress.com}} 3. ^{{cite web|url=https://www.chicagoreader.com/chicago/scattershot-ballet-the-ex--tom-cora/Content?oid=884025|title=Scattershot ballet: The Ex + Tom Cora|first=Bill|last=Meyer|website=Chicago Reader}} 2 : The Ex (band) albums|1993 albums |
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