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Afraid Of The House

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Download links and information about Afraid Of The House by French Vanilla, Jim. This album was released in 2017 and it belongs to Rock, Garage Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 11 tracks with total duration of 26:09 minutes.

Artist: French Vanilla, Jim
Release date: 2017
Genre: Rock, Garage Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 11
Duration: 26:09
Buy on Songswave €0.74
Buy on iTunes $9.99

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. When You're Down 2:28
2. I'm Just Sitting Here 2:10
3. Back Home 2:20
4. Take It To The Grave 2:06
5. Not Even War 2:22
6. Eye For An Eye 2:42
7. Grow Like Rabbits 2:54
8. Psychic Killer 2:52
9. I Have To Slow Down 2:11
10. Green Curtains 1:08
11. Lonely Man 3:03

Details

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On Jim Blaha's first two albums under the moniker Jim and the French Vanilla, the formula was simple — Blaha cutting angular pop tunes in his bedroom, lo-fi style, with an acoustic guitar, some percussion pieces, and a four-track cassette machine. For his third time at bat, Blaha has taken a somewhat different approach; 2017's Afraid of the House is an electric affair, with Blaha turning up his amp and bashing at a full drum kit in a bare-bones rock & roll session. This is still very much a homemade album, and it sounds like it, full of overblown tape distortion and occasionally iffy fidelity overall. But Blaha has also been working on his hobbyist production skills, and the jittery vocal sound on "Eye for an Eye," the heavily processed acoustic tone on "Not Even War," and the junkshop keyboards on "Lonely Man" all help make this a more interesting bit of listening than either Roll Out the Candy or II. Of course there's only so far you can go with a project like Jim and the French Vanilla, and Afraid of the House is a still a set of 11 rudimentary tunes built around chugging power chords that zip by in roughly 27 minutes. Despite that, there is a sense of freedom and mischief here that's not always present in Blaha's work with his main band, the Blind Shake. And the songs may be compact but they get over, and the garagey minimalism of "When You're Down," "Back Home," "Take It to the Grave," and "Grow Like Rabbits" works in a way that a more ambitious production might not. Afraid of the House sometimes sounds like something Jim Blaha knocked off in an afternoon for the hell of it, but give this a listen past the surface and you'll find a powerful exercise in no-frills, high-impact rock & roll.