Plants and Birds and Rocks and Things

Plants and Birds and Rocks and Things Artist: Loud Family
Label: Alias Records
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD
Number Of Discs: 1


UPC: 093716003328
EAN: 0093716003328
ASIN: B000001HUQ


Release Date: 1993-02-15

Plants and Birds and Rocks and Things


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Tracks:

  1. He Do The Police In Different Voices
  2. Sword Swallower
  3. Aerodeliria
  4. Self Righteous Boy Reduced To Tears
  5. Jimmy Still Comes Around
  6. Take Me Down (Too Halloo)
  7. Don't All Thank Me At Once
  8. Idiot Son
  9. Some Grand Vision Of Motives And Irony
  10. Spot The Setup
  11. Iverness
  12. Rosy Overdrive
  13. Slit My Wrists
  14. Isaac's Law
  15. The Second Grade Applauds
  16. Last Honest Face
  17. Even You
  18. Ballad Of How You Can All Shut Up

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  1. The Tape Of only Linda
  2. Days for Days
  3. Attractive Nuisance
  4. What If It Works
  5. Two Steps

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars One of rock music's finest moments.......2007-03-04

At one point in my life, my job consisted of listening to an ungodly amount of music: approximately 2,000 albums a year, plus 20-30 live sets a week.

I also worked directly with bands writing and recording their own music ...

... and then this popped up. I still listen to it, all the time - it is truly one of the best rock records ever recorded. The techniques and choices in recording could take up many pages of description, but at the end of the day, pop music boils down to a few things:
- melodies
- emotion
- vocal performance

The melodies are unforgettable, the feeling jumps out of the speakers (from despair to joy, and many more subtle and nuanced stops in between).

If it was ever possible to OD on music, or become jaded, I would qualify. This album still makes me feel excited to pick up a guitar, hell, to take it out of the jewel box.

4 out of 5 stars Bricolage: a sonically compressed funhouse.......2007-01-16

Rumors were Aimee Mann was going to sing in re-mixed versions of Scott Miller's songs. The True Gamesters fansite has her covering "Inverness," but I have not heard any more about this planned re-make re-model. That song is closer to her style than Miller's. If you have heard his music, you know what I mean: hyper-clever, kinetic, intricate, arabesque, and sometimes either truly annoying or damned funny, usually in that sardonic way that Mark E Smith might share.

The Loud Family's apparently his attempt to shake off the new-wave power-pop tag that (see All Music Guide) still dogged Game Theory at the end of the 80s. All new line-up, which seems usual every few albums anyway (as with The Fall), under one consistently idiosyncratic and stubbornly lovable singer-songwriter who does not make that occupation an embarassment. Still, with Mitch Easter again manning the studio, there's a familiar obsession with building up layers of sound, found and invented. I like this bricolage.

The songs, when you have 19 (that last bit shows a typically annoying bit of Miller's impishness), will be uneven. Anyone who listens to this album or any Miller album honestly would probably agree. This one provides possibly the most accessible introduction to his later, post-college radio mid-80s, stage. He seeks to plunge you into his funhouse. Distortion's a given. But, with songs such as "Inverness," a lovely and straightforward detour (!) into pop, Miller shows he can play by the industry's rules and do well, also. But that's an uncharacteristic song.

However, the chugging "Idiot Son" sounds less ironic than usual, if only in its musical direction. It could be the more rocking counterpart to cheerier ditties like the assured "Give In World," the lyrically enigmatic but carefree "Take Me Down," or even the eccentric pop of "Second Grade Applauds." "Spot the Setup," contrarily, seems a ringer for the irritating tune pro forma, and an instrumental like "Rosy Overdrive" wanders without enough concentration across its relatively long allotted six minutes.

There's lots to pick and choose from among what remains, but that's for you to discover. While it does continue the Mitch Easter-directed studio trickery of GT's "Lolita Nation," it also furthers the last GT album, the overlooked "Two Steps," whose greater integration of a softer undertone can also be heard in the more accessible tunes among the expected experiments and extravagance. While not my favorite LF album, it's one I'd recommend if you are entering the world of Scott Miller and mates.

5 out of 5 stars True Gamester.......2005-06-03

I was a huge Game Theory fan, though I came late to the party. It was around late 87 - early 88 that I heard Lolita Nation and it was like heroin (not that I've tried that!) I was hooked. When Two Steps from the Middle Ages came out, I was in the fan club. I was writing Scott Miller irritating fan letters. I got a tape of the (one of) the last shows featuring the Michael Quercio line-up through Scott himself. Then, it all fell apart. Scott would send stuff out on occassion, insisting he was doing something.

Suddenly, in a weird turn of events, this album came out and just floored everyone I knew that heard it. It was louder and heavier than Game Theory, though it was the same for all intents and purposes. Almost every track is a classic (apart from the non-Scott songs ... sorry, they just don't hold up). "Sword Swallower", "Jimmy Comes Round" and "Last Honest Face" are songs that will remain in my head forever.

I hope Scott comes back with something ... another rebirth. "As if we'd ever let that hour of opportunity go by."

5 out of 5 stars Truly unique.......2004-09-01

This is the definitive Scott Miller Loud Family moment; see Distortion of Glory for the definitive Scott Miller Game Theory moment. Great lyricist who pens great tunes; how can you go wrong. That there is substance behind the lyrics only adds to the intrigue. So many great songs on this cd. Start with Aerodeliria, Jimmy Still Comes Around, Idiot Son, Inverness, Slit My Wrists, Isaacs Law. This Cd doesn't literally rock; it rocks literally. Probably still one of my top 30-40 albums (of thousands I've bought or have). If you like to think while you're singing along; pick this one up.

5 out of 5 stars

Music Album:

  1. 88 Elmira St. ~ Danny Gatton
  2. Millennium ~ Earth Wind & Fire
  3. Zolof the Rock & Roll Destroyer ~ Zolof the Rock & Roll Destroyer
  4. Buying the Lie ~ Death on Wednesday
  5. Foundation Stones ~ Rosetta Stone
  6. Moanin ~ Preachers
  7. Where's the Beef ~ Various Artists
  8. Polecats Are Go ~ Polecats
  9. Harmony No Harmony ~ Million Dead
  10. Standing in the Shade ~ Very Secretary

Music Album

Music Album

Music CD

Keep It Simple ~ Curtis Fuller

Emit ~ Chris Speed's yeah NO

Inside Out ~ Rolf Kuhn

The Versatile Eddie Harris/Eddie Harris Sings the Blues ~ Eddie Harris

Johnny Campbell ~ Johnny Campbell

Shadow Dancing ~ Cornell Dupree

Percussions of Guinea, Vol. 2 ~ Various Artists

Cumana ~ Arturo Trio O'farrill

Conscience

Antologia ~ Angel Parra