Green Eggs and Crack

Green Eggs and Crack Artist: Too Much Joy
Label: Sugar Fix
Category: Music


Average customer rating: 5 out of 5 stars
Media: Audio CD


UPC: 607714700723
EAN: 0607714700723
ASIN: B000007O6F


Release Date: 1998-06-16

Green Eggs and Crack


Related Categories:

General General
Categories | Alternative Rock | Styles | Music
General General
Categories | Rock | Styles | Music
Pop Rock Pop Rock
Categories | Pop | Styles | Music

Tracks:

  1. Innocents Ablaze
  2. Here's to Eternity
  3. Map Like Mine
  4. Grandma Went to Athens, Once
  5. No Beer
  6. James Dean's Jacket
  7. Navigator
  8. No Rope
  9. My Place
  10. Bored With Love
  11. Someone Else's Jacket
  12. Years
  13. Drum Machine
  14. King Fred
  15. Don Quixote
  16. Otter Song
  17. Drunk and in Love
  18. Frustrated
  19. Secret Handshake

Similar Items:

  1. Gods & Sods
  2. Live at Least

Customer Reviews:

5 out of 5 stars The best self-released DIY indie album of the 1980's.......2005-09-04

Why yes, self-released, DIY & Indie do all mean the same thing.
Scarsdale, N.Y.'s TMJ (known previously as The Rave) recorded
this album while still in College inbetween semesters and on breaks over a four year period. Oddly enough, it's a cohesive, consistant, quietly bratty pop-punk classic. "Map Like Mine" is a college radio classic (or at least it sounds as such) and still is one of TMJ's best ever songs. "No Beer" is dramatic in a silly and genuinely odd way. "Innocents Ablaze", "James Dean's Jacket" and "Don Quixote" are light mid-80's sounding jangle-pop. "Bored With Love" is as poignant as it is humourous.
"Drum Machine" is the only song they kept from this album in their live repertoire. It's a mini-chuckle fest.
But the real unsuspecting whoppers here are "Years" (their best
alienation/angst song) and "Here's To Eternity" (easily their
best boozy song) which has the Son Of Sam reference "the dogs in my head" (a hint of things to come as well).
Both songs are TMJ classics.
The CD contains five bonus tracks - two from the Crack
era and three from 1993. The later period songs have no business being on here. As good as they may be, (esp. "Drunk & In Love") they make no sense being on here, thus messing with the cohesiveness of the entire collection.
These songs could've easily been released on Gods & Sods and would have really improved the truly lackluster ...finally.
It would've made a bit more sense to close the CD on the accapella delight "The Otter Song" as Tim says purposefully says "the end" at the end.

The initial pressing of 1,000 vinyl copies are pretty rare (of which I personally own a couple - like five or so).

Robert Christgau said the best thing about this album was the title and in the advertisement for the GE&C t-shirt I believe Tim's blurb under it read "the album's out of print but the shirts sound better anyhow"...these both read nice and are cutely
self-effacing but the album is quietly rocking, lightly irreverend and unsuspectingly great. Even though the band consistantly said that the album sucks. They were wrong.

5 out of 5 stars Pop Culture Weaved Into The Ultimate Musical Tapestry.......2005-07-16

This CD contains 19 tracks, everyone has great pop culture references and is funny, really funny, insightful and musically brilliant. "Drum Machine" may be the best song ever recorded, and "Drunk And In Love", "No Beer", "Years", "Frustrated", "Secret Handshake", "Grandma Goes To Athens", "The Other Jacket", and "My Place" are just some of the other frathouse classics off an album filled with them. Out of all the smartass classic CD's this remains the best edging out They Might Be Giants and Ween's debuts and Flaming Lips in their prime.

5 out of 5 stars What d'ya want from me, Mahatma Gandhi?.......2003-05-04

Wow -- what a flashback. I had almost forgotten this record (or CD or whatever). This was a classic "let's have some fun" record back in, what, 1987? with my friends in Berkeley.

Here's my weird connection. My original LP has deep score marks around the little guy, because a buddy was doing the video for "some friend's band" and wanted me to do an animation sequence for their first (?) video. I had been doing a little illustration work on a college magazine with him, and didn't know jack cheese pie about animation, but ....

I was 19 or 20. I traced the figure and painstakingly drew maybe 50 animation "cells" on tracing paper, which my friend magically converted to computer in black and orange for the video for "Innocents Ablaze." In the video, the kid came alive and walked off the edge of the albume. Wow -- I was famous. Actually, not. And thank God. If you ever see the video, it's the most amateurish thing you've ever seen. I'm sure there was some severe disappointment among band members. But it worked. I got an album out of it. I probably should have followed up with the band, but I was just helping out a buddy.

If it means anything, friends and I still know "The Otter Song" and "King Fred," not to mention the fact that we occasionally quote the classic "Don Quixote." I wish young bands still started out so fun and fresh like this. But now we've got Eminem.

Great record, great memories.

5 out of 5 stars Ahead of their time.......1999-03-10

Forget Harvey Danger, Barenaked Ladies, Green Day and a host of others. NONE of them would exist without the profound influence of groundbreakers like Too Much Joy. TMJ made better records (especially Son Of Sam I Am and ...Finally) but this early work is essential to own for the genesis of it all; and it's fun in its own right. The bonus tracks prove these guys have more TRUE punk in their little fingers than their disciples have in their entire styled-for-MTV-bodies.

4 out of 5 stars

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