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Another Fine Day
Another Fine Day

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Artist: Golden Smog
Label: Lost Highway
Category: Music

List Price: $13.98
Buy Used: $2.25
You Save: $11.73 (84%)



New (49) Used (35) from $2.25

Avg. Customer Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars 14 reviews
Sales Rank: 8217

Media: Audio CD
Discs: 1
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.3
Dimensions (in): 5.6 x 4.9 x 0.4

MPN: 000602902
UPC: 602498890431
EAN: 0602498890431
ASIN: B000FKO3AI

Release Date: July 18, 2006
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
Condition: All of our used items are 100% Guaranteed to play. Ships 1st class!!

Tracks:

  • You Make It Easy
  • Another Fine Day
  • 5-22-02
  • Long Time Ago
  • Corvette
  • Beautiful Mind
  • Listen Joe
  • Cure For This
  • Hurricane
  • Strangers
  • Frying Pan Eyes
  • Gone
  • Never Felt Before
  • I Can
  • Think About Yourself

Similar Items:

  • Blood on the Slacks
  • Weird Tales
  • Down by the Old Mainstream
  • Sky Blue Sky
  • Tim O'Reagan

Editorial Reviews:

Amazon.com
Jeff Tweedy might carry the name recognition, but the rest of his band-on-the-side carries the mail on the fourth release from this Midwest all-star group. Though the Wilco leader teams with the Jayhawks' Gary Louris on a pair of nimble pop songs--the elegantly strummed "Listen Joe" and Kinks cover "Strangers"--it's Louris who's clearly at the head of the class with self-assured vocals ("Another Fine Day," "Think About Yourself"), lush harmonies ("Long Time Ago") and those unmistakable guitar leads ("Frying Pan Eyes"). Soul Asylum guitarist Dan Murphy's obligatory rocker "Hurricane" is a high point, as is the album's lead track "You Make It Easy," which has Kraig Johnson warbling over a thumping piano lead and chunky fuzz guitar. But most welcome among the 15 songs are two contributions from Louris's fellow Jayhawk Marc Perlman: the refreshing "Corvette" and "Cure for This," a '60s-speckled pop song sung by Muni Loco, the wife of producer Paco Loco and the first female to grace a recording by Golden Smog. --Scott Holter

Album Description
It might sound like hype, but as hype nips at your ears every day from every corner, who gives a damn? You're smart. Your BS detector is strong; take this missive with a grain of salt, but don't talk yourself out of opening your ears to this mix-by-one-band-how-can-this-be-one-band? that fell from the skies of Puerto Santa Maria, Spain and Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Start with Gary Louris and Kraig Jarret Johnson's "You Make It Easy." A breezy love song about breezy commitment. Listen. To that solo. To those harmonies. Dare yourself not to sing along. Try to play "name the influences" and you will have fun but you will fail.

Then check out "Hurricane," and hear Dan Murphy, singing his guts out and having, like the title track he co-penned says, "another fine day." Dig Louris and Jeff Tweedy's "Listen Joe," and how they sing to themselves and a long-gone friend, "surprise, surprise, everyone dies."

Listen. To what every new breed that comes along calls "old school," to sounds baked into these guys since the days of vinyl. Feel the embers of all the mystics, all the Gram Parsons and Eagles and Zeppelin and Buzzcocks and Flaming Lips and Gorillaz (Kraig's fave of the moment) records and all the rest that they've ingested. Truly, these cats have forgotten more records than the rest of us have sold to the used record store.

"Don't it blow your mind like the first time? The dream is never over," they ask, on "Corvette," with the exuberance of high-schoolers playing together in the garage for the first of many times. Listen. To "Corvette". Then listen to Louris's "Gone". They have been through death and love and war and all the other vagaries of middle age in these new Middle Ages, and this is the sound of them coming out the other side - or at least trying to come out the other side - with friendship and rock `n' roll as their guides.


Customer Reviews:   Read 9 more reviews...

3 out of 5 stars Subtle, ambient,, moody, a heavy vibe   August 26, 2006
 12 out of 24 found this review helpful

I'm revising my review of this record, having revisited it now almost 6 months on.

I come to Golden Smog looking for the kind of alt-country harmonies I loved on the first couple of Jayhawks records, since this band presents Louris and Perlman back together. That immediate, welcoming, familiar sound is almost totally lacking on this album. But it turns out, what is here is a sort of beguiling tapestry of sound, just a beat or two off of catchiness, that draws you in without your even knowing it, and by the time you're two thirds in, maybe you even forgot what you were listening to, but you don't want to stop. It is a record with a texture that knits the songs and vocals of the disparate songwriters together, an ambient sound, a vibe. It is better than I thought at first. And the further in yuo get, the better it is, I think.

The original review, intact, is below; take them together as observations at two points in time...

********

This band is a hell of an aggregation of talent. The first two records (and the EP) were quirky, outstanding alt.country exercizes, even more precious because as a fan of the Jayhawks early records, it is always a pleasure for me to hear Louris and Perlman together.

Here though, it is as if Jeff Tweedy has decided that it wasn't enough to suck the songcraft out of his own band (Wilco) and replace it with ambiance noise; now he has to do it to this band as well. So the twang is replaced by the drone; we've moved away from the realm of Gram Parsons, and dangerously close to the realm of Yankee Hotel Foxtrot. If that sounds cool to you than you ought to grab this. To my ears, Tweedy is doing me no favors.

A worthwhile record, but I don't think it has legs. You'll play it a few times, file it away, and go back to waiting for the next Jayhawks release. Or Wilco's return to traditional song form.



4 out of 5 stars Evolution of Smog Continues!   July 20, 2006
 9 out of 12 found this review helpful

First off... don't listen to self professed Smog anti-fans like Wheeler. This is a great disc. It follows true to the evolution of this band. I hate it when people judge music through anticipation. There is nothing weak here whatsoever. To try and label this is also a crime. Powerpop? No. Sincere, yes. No Smog disc has sounded like the last... it is no different here. Louris and Tweedy are shining stars in the industry. They just reside in a galaxy that most do not choose to look into. For shame!


3 out of 5 stars Golden, but somewhat smoggy   July 24, 2006
 9 out of 14 found this review helpful

Since I've discovered iTunes I've been better able to put my music appreciation into perspective. Many work hours have been spent rating individual songs, where a rating of four or five is used for my all time favourite songs (they number in excess of five hundred). Three stars is reserved for songs that I'm always happy to hear, but that aren't what I would consider to be "stand out" tracks. And that's about where I'd put the vast majority of the songs from the latest Golden Smog album.

It's such a shame when a third of the tracks from the album's predecessor "Weird Tales" obtained the coveted four and five star status.

Perhaps it's because most of the songs have been co-written by Gary Louris, but this album's three-starness reminds me of a Jayhawks album where all the songs contain great hooks, but only one or two deliver their promised potential. If only Gary had come up with another "Until You Came Along" or the endlessly appealing "Jennifer Save Me".

It's now that I have to admit to being absolutely mad about Jeff Tweedy, and it might be that I'm not so keen on "Another Fine Day" because Jeff has only contributed to the writing of two of the songs. From my experience with the two previous Golden Smog albums, I've initially been attracted by the sweet hooks of Louris and lamented what seems to be a lack of effort from Tweedy, only to find Tweedy's strangely infectious and heartfelt vocals winding their way towards a four star rating or beyond.

With the above perspective, I have to say that there's something really special about the classic Tweedyesque "Long Time Ago". It sits nicely in the Golden Smog catalogue alongside "Please Tell My Brother" in that it's another simple acoustic song about love for one's family. And Tweedy sings it as if he means it. It's worth buying this album for that track alone.

In fact, it's definitely worth buying this album. The only thing wrong with it is that Golden Smog have produced much better material.



3 out of 5 stars (Almost) Smog Heaven   July 18, 2006
 8 out of 19 found this review helpful

Rising from their "supergroup" origins, the members of Golden Smog have been able to cohere into a distinctive beast all their own. They certainly still wear their influences quite plainly, however. Their love of '60s and early '70s rock is evident throughout the new CD, leading to a fun "spot that band" listening game. I heard Stones, Beatles, Dead, Who, and Badfinger... a LOT of Badfinger. The problem is that these Fine Day songs sound good but are relatively non-memorable. The result of the weak songwriting for me was that instead of really enjoying these new tunes, I began to long for music by the original groups they sound like. In fact, I think I'll go listen to some Badfinger right now.


4 out of 5 stars Another Fine Golden Smog Record   July 18, 2006
 7 out of 8 found this review helpful

Went out to buy this record today, the day of release, due to the amazing predecessor, "Weird Tales". I'm a big Jayhawks fan, as well as a big Wilco fan, but this album caught me a bit by surprise. It's very rocking in production and songcraft, with only a few acoustic tunes. The majority of the record is wall-of-sound rock & roll...like Oasis covering Whiskeytown... which results in one the most thrilling listens I've had when first popping in a new CD and letting it play. I recommend this album to anyone who loves great rock & roll or Americana with some soul and energy...

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