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Spiderland

Slint

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Album Review

More known for its frequent name-checks than its actual music, Spiderland remains one of the most essential and chilling releases in the mumbling post-rock arena. Even casual listeners will be able to witness an experimental power-base that the American underground has come to treasure. Indeed, the lumbering quiet-loud motif has been lifted by everybody from Lou Barlow to Mogwai, the album's emotional gelidity has done more to move away from prog-rock mistakes than almost any of the band's subsequent disciples, and it's easy to hear how the term "Slint dynamics" has become an indie categorization of its own. Most interestingly, however, is how even a seething angularity to songs like "Nosferatu Man" (disquieting, vampirish stop-starts) or "Good Morning, Captain" (a murmuring nod to "The Rime of the Ancient Mariner") certainly signaled the beginning of the end for the band. Recording was intense, traumatic, and one more piece of evidence supporting the theory that band members had to be periodically institutionalized during the completion of the album. Spiderland remains, though, not quite the insurmountable masterpiece its reputation may suggest. Brian McMahan softly speaks/screams his way through the asphyxiated music and too often evokes strangled pity instead of outright empathy. Which probably speaks more about the potential dangers of pretentious post-rock than the frigid musical climate of the album itself. Surely, years later, Spiderland is still a strong, slightly overrated, compelling piece of investigational despair that is a worthy asset to most any experimentalist's record collection.

Customer Reviews

essential

there's nothing 'slightly overrated' about this album. If you've got as far as reading this, you should own it...

Poetic mayhem and musical mastery

Absolutely love this album. Loved it then and still love it now. Thankfully can buy it on itunes as I only have it on vinyl at the moment and my record player broke down long ago.

One of those rare perfect albums...

This is one of those albums that needs to be consumed in its entirety in one sitting with the phone off and with all extraneous humans banned from your auditory vicinity. It is a perfect album with everything in absolutely the right place. Having long considered this album to be a litmus test of those most likely to understand my subconscious, I've lent the vinyl out to many people over the years. It is a must have. Brilliant to see that this band will still get royalties long after the closing painful screams of 'Good Morning, Captain' are gone...

Biography

Formed: 1987 in Louisville, KY

Genre: Alternative

Years Active: '90s, '00s

Though largely overlooked during their relatively brief lifespan, Slint grew to become one of the most influential and far-reaching bands to emerge from the American underground rock community of the 1980s; innovative and iconoclastic, the group's deft, extremist manipulations of volume, tempo, and structure...
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