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Eleventh Dream Day
Release Date: 03/15/2011
Original Release:
2011
# of Discs:
1
Label: Thrill Jockey
Disc: 1
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: Eleventh Dream Day
Engineer: Ryan Neuschafer; Mark Greenberg... Distributor: Redeye Notes: Personnel: Douglas McCombs, Mark Greenberg, Rick Rizzo, Sally Timms, Jim Elkington, Janet Beveridge Bean. Audio Mixers: Ryan Neuschafer; Mark Greenberg. Recording information: Mayfair Studios; North Branch. It's no real surprise that after nearly 30 years as a band and five years since their last album, Eleventh Dream Day reconvened to record again. They've practically made a career of being underappreciated but something continues to bring them back to make music together despite a myriad of divergent paths over the years. What is a bit of a surprise is that this is probably their hardest-rocking album since Prairie School Freakout, their debut full-length from 1988. They come charging out of the gate with "Damned Tree" and its snarling double-tracked guitars, and the the pace barely lets up until "Away with Words," which only starts soft and slow then builds in intensity. "That's What's Coming" is a bit slower as well (and reminiscent of Prairie School Freakout's "Among the Pines"), but still has nice howling guitar. The rest of the tunes are your basic Eleventh Dream Day scorchers. Doug McCombs turns in some killer basslines, with "Satellite," "Divining for Water," and "Tall Man" as standouts. Mark Greenberg's keys are very subtle (this is a guitar band, after all), but he really adds to "Satellite" with some great weird sounds. Janet Beveridge Bean sings co-lead on "Divining for Water" but sticks to drums and backing vocals outside of that. Rick Rizzo has upped the intensity for this one, and his barely-in-control guitar has never sounded better ("Sonic Reactor" is classic Rizzo guitar). At this point, EDD will probably never get the recognition they deserve, but those in the know are sure glad they're still at it. ~ Sean Westergaard
Spin (p.76) - "[The album] opens and closes with glorious echoes of X's overdriven guitars and yowling male-female harmonies."
Uncut (magazine) (p.80) - 4 stars out of 5 -- "'Damned Tree' is a meeting of The Fall and DIRTY-era Sonic Youth, 'Satellite' is a chunky Stranglers-style rocker with space-psych on the side."
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