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Interbabe Concern

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Download links and information about Interbabe Concern by The Loud Family. This album was released in 1996 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative genres. It contains 19 tracks with total duration of 57:24 minutes.

Artist: The Loud Family
Release date: 1996
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Pop, Alternative
Tracks: 19
Duration: 57:24
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Sodium Laureth Sulfate 3:19
2. North San Bruno Dishonor Trip 0:45
3. Don't Respond, She Can Tell 3:59
4. I'm Not Really a Spring 3:41
5. Rise of the Chokehold Princess 4:20
6. Such Little Nonbelievers 3:37
7. The Softest Tip of Her Baby Tongue 3:30
8. Screwed Over By Stylish Introverts 2:41
9. Top-Dollar Survivalist Hardware 3:29
10. Not Expecting Both Contempo and Classique 3:31
11. I No Longer Fear the Headless 4:52
12. Hot Rox Avec Lying Sweet Talk 1:07
13. Uncle Lucky 3:53
14. Just Gone 2:47
15. Asleep and Awake On the Man's Freeway 2:39
16. Where They Go Back to School But Get Depressed 2:48
17. Where They Sell Antique Food 0:38
18. Where the Flood Waters Soak Their Belongings 1:08
19. Where They Walk Over Sainte Therese 4:40

Details

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Anyone who wondered where the fragmented songs and purposefully twisted aural montage went on Loud Family's second album, The Tape of Only Linda, will either be elated or annoyed to know they're back in force on the group's third full-length release, Interbabe Concern. While the edition of Loud Family that cut The Tape of Only Linda had been solidified by a solid dose of touring after the release of their first album, Interbabe Concern was cut with a new lineup in which Scott Miller handled all guitar duties and Kenny Kessel and Dawn Richardson took over on bass and drums (Paul Wieneke remained on keyboards and occasional lead vocals). This new Loud Family sounded more like Scott Miller's backing band than the group that made the first two albums, and without producer Mitch Easter on hand, Miller seems to have used Interbabe Concern as an opportunity to reacquaint himself with the cryptic side of his musical personality; there are a lot more short pseudo-tunes interspersed between the "real" songs, plenty of odd found noises and sound effects, and while Miller plays plenty of guitar here, there's a decidedly lower hard-and-heavy quotient than on the muscular The Tape of Only Linda. Interbabe Concern plays like a somewhat stranger version of Loud Family's debut, Plants and Birds and Rocks and Things, except that there are fewer memorable songs (there are memorable songs, of course, just not as many), the production has a lot less gloss, and Miller's fondness for chaos seems to outweigh his knack for perfect pop hooks. It's an inarguably interesting album, but one that demands a lot more work for the listener to ferret out the good stuff. In short, it's a lousy starting point for non-fans, and an acquired taste for the initiated.