Lmoe.
Release Date: 04/11/2000
Original Release:
2000
# of Discs:
2
J&R Item # 362426_CD
UPC # 650869663320
Label: Fat Boy
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Buying Info
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Disc: 1
Disc: 2
To listen to sound clips, you'll need the most current version of the
Performer: moe.
Engineer: Andy Tori; Bil Emmons Producer: John Siket; Al Schnier; moe.; Chuck Garvey; Rob Derhak; Jim Loughlin; Vinnie Amico Distributor: E1 Distribution (USA) Notes: Moe includes: Al Schnier, Chuck Garvey (guitar). Recorded live at 9:30 Club, Washington, District Of Columbia; Boulder, Colorado; Los Angeles, California; San Francisco, California. Personnel: Al Schnier (vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar, mandolin); Chuck Garvey (vocals, guitar, acoustic guitar, electric guitar); Rob Derhak (vocals, electric bass); Jim Loughlin (acoustic guitar, flute, didjeridu, drums, percussion); Vinnie Amico (drums, percussion). Audio Mixer: John Siket. Recording information: 9:30 Club, Washington D.C. (1999); Boulder Theatre, Boulder, CO (1999); House Of Blues, Los Angeles, CA (1999); The Filmore, San Francisco, CA (1999). Photographer: Debbie Amico. Recorded at several shows across their fall 1999 tour, L captures Moe in the process of moving from an adventurous bar and club band to a respectably polished theater act. With the reintegration of former drummer Jim Loughlin back into the band as a multi-instrumental utility man in early 1999, the band vastly expanded their textural palette. While the band tightened, though, they also ossified, losing some of their sense of improvisational risk-taking. The jams on the double album are swift and directed, but sound almost rehearsed to a fault (especially in contrast with their previous improv-based releases, the live album Loaf and Meat single). The version of "Meat" featured on L, for example, is quick and brutal. Its high energy improvisation is organized in the round as each player leads briefly before passing the musical baton to the next musician. While this keeps the music from drifting, it also robs the piece of collective creativity. Critics have often accused the band's sound of being derivative. While specific influences -- Frank Zappa, Neil Young, the Allman Brothers Band, to name a few -- are pretty easy to pick out, the band generally uses this to their advantage, creating a sound that carries with it a surprising amount of depth, mostly through highly personable interplay between the instruments, notably guitarists Al Schnier and Chuck Garvey. ~ Jesse Jarnow
CMJ (3/6/00, p.31) - "...vastly extended instrumental segments full of rolling bass and drum solos....this live double disc captures the band's energy at shows from L.A. to D.C. and everywhere in-between."
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