Create account Log in

Bach's Bottom

[Edit]

Download links and information about Bach's Bottom by Alex Chilton. This album was released in 1975 and it belongs to Rock, Rock & Roll genres. It contains 15 tracks with total duration of 47:34 minutes.

Artist: Alex Chilton
Release date: 1975
Genre: Rock, Rock & Roll
Tracks: 15
Duration: 47:34
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.99
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

[Edit]
No. Title Length
1. Take Me Home and Make Me Like It (Version 1) 2:55
2. (Every Time I) Close My Eyes [Version 1] 1:57
3. All of the Time 2:47
4. Free Again (Version 1) 5:06
5. I'm So Tired (Part 1 & 2) 2:58
6. Free Again (Version 2) 2:17
7. Jesus Christ 2:54
8. Singer Not the Song 2:04
9. Summertime Blues 2:37
10. Take Me Home and Make Me Like It (Version 2) 6:58
11. (Every Time I) Close My Eyes [Version 2] 1:46
12. Bangkok 2:00
13. Can't Seem to Make You Mine 2:46
14. Walking Dead 2:58
15. Take Me Home and Make Me Like It (Version 3) 5:31

Details

[Edit]

Recorded in 1975 and 1976, shortly after Big Star broke up during the fractious, drug-addled sessions for their final album, the songs on Bach's Bottom were similarly left stranded at the time, although four of them did eventually show up on the 1977 Ork Records EP Singer Not the Song. Released well after the sessions, Bach's Bottom (a punning title on Chilton's first band) is a mess. As a mess, it's a less-glorious mess than Sister Lovers, which manages to sound spooky and haunted and decadent and rocking as often as not; these 15 songs mostly just sound like drunken, sneering rambles. (All three versions of the lumbering jam "Take Me Home and Make Me Like It" sound like they're on the verge of total collapse, and not in a good way.) On the other hand, that actually fits songs like "Free Again," the most obviously Big Star-like tune here, and the storming cover of the Seeds' "Can't Seem to Make You Mine," so parts of the album actually work. And of course, it has "Bangkok," possibly Chilton's finest post-Big Star single, so it's close to necessary just for that. But Bach's Bottom is strictly for the hardcore Chilton fan, as it's one of his most willfully difficult and impenetrable records.