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Grand Slam

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Download links and information about Grand Slam by Spiderbait. This album was released in 2000 and it belongs to Rock, Punk, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 17 tracks with total duration of 45:22 minutes.

Artist: Spiderbait
Release date: 2000
Genre: Rock, Punk, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 17
Duration: 45:22
Buy on iTunes $9.99
Buy on Amazon $9.49

Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Cracker 3:06
2. Glockenpop 3:19
3. Shazam! 2:03
4. Dinnertime 2:11
5. Plastic 2:31
6. Bessy's Last Journey 3:17
7. Daisy May 1:58
8. White Trash Superstar 3:27
9. Buster 2:13
10. By the Time I Get to Howlong 1:59
11. Stevie 3:00
12. Jellybean Drifter 2:45
13. King of the Northern 2:12
14. Tallygaroopna 1:13
15. Ultralite 4:01
16. Lickety Split 2:45
17. Lost In Adelaide 3:22

Details

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Grand Slam largely avoids the thrashing, distortion-laced pop that characterized Spiderbait's earlier albums, and instead elaborates on the random, cheerful experiments begun on Ivy & the Big Apples. Sure "Shazam" and "King of the Northern" feature the band's typically harsh guitar, grating vocals, and driving base and drum lines, but the rest of the album is surprisingly diverse — ranging from groovy space funk ("Cracker"), to dreamy exotica ("Bessy's Last Journey" and "Buster"), to cheerful, unabashed pop ("Glockenpop" and "Stevie"). "Tallygaroopna" and the synthesized strings and evocative lyrics of "By the Time I Got to Howlong" even border on folk. Most surprising, perhaps, is how well they succeed. The best songs, such as the superb "Glockenpop," feature bassist Janet English on lead vocals, whose sweet voice offers a colorful counterpoise to Mark Maher's often-monotonous screech. Unlike earlier albums, she appears on nearly half the tracks. Maher himself shines on the poetic "Howlong," on which he exhibits the full extent of his (meager) vocal range (though one wishes he didn't go for the high notes). Overall, the album does have a few duds, and at times the choruses of even the best songs sound strained and tense. Predictably, it also lacks some of the bite and intensity of past albums. But they've lost nothing of their vitality, and what is lost in bluntness is gained in nuance and maturity — all of which make Grand Slam Spiderbait's most listenable, adventurous, and richly textured album to date.