Which album... |
George
Dignified Lazar

Registration Date: 10-08-2007
Posts: 71
Location: where the wind hits heavy on the borderline
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DA/TST/Eddies/Dogs have obviously gone through many musical stylings over the course of last 30 years. Which album blind-sided you the most? Threw you for a loop? A nasty curve? I rode with all of the changes in stride myself, but I gotta admit, when I first put SCENIC ROUTES into my car stereo after hurriedly ripping off the cellophane, my mouth was agape for more than a few spins. In light of DAs country roots, it shouldn't have surprised me so much perhaps. Of course, eventually I loved it.
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08-01-2008 08:00 |
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Ritchie_az
Ceremonial Kernel

Registration Date: 07-02-2008
Posts: 2,165
Location: Arizona
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Meat de Farm Beetles. At the time, the only Swirling Eddies song I had heard was Hide The Beer off of some Frontline CD showcasing thier artists. I purchased this thinking it would be something along the same lines. Boy, was I wrong!
Second would be Gift Horse. You know, I got into DA, 77's and The Choir in 2000-2001. I read on-line that Terry, Mike and Derri (plus Gene--I hadn't heard Adam Again yet) had recorded some albums together under the name Lost Dogs. I was expecting some pretty creative/progressive rock--I was so surprised to hear country music!
When I purchased the Alarma Chronicles Book Set, Doppelganger, Vox Humana and Fearful Symmetry all took me by surprise, but I loved them from the first spin. BibleLand blind-sides me every time I play it.
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This post has been edited 1 time(s), it was last edited by Ritchie_az: 08-01-2008 09:11.
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08-01-2008 09:10 |
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John Foxe
Woolly Eggwhisk
 

Registration Date: 03-12-2002
Posts: 654
Location: Elkhart, Indiana
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Alarma to Doppelganger: catchy new wave to dark strangeness
Motorcycle to Bibleland: polished Beatlesque-pop to garage grunge
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08-01-2008 11:15 |
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Jerry Davison
Woolly Eggwhisk
 
Registration Date: 03-30-2005
Posts: 846
Location: Atlanta, GA
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Songs of the Heart. Even though it's friggin' brilliant on so many levels (and has one of my all-time favorite DA songs, "When Everyone Wore Hats") I still can't listen to it all the way through. Terry uses this kind of low mumble to sing in and the songs are just plain weird for the most part. It's very Zappa-esque to me. But like I said, it's still brilliant.
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08-01-2008 11:52 |
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John Foxe
Woolly Eggwhisk
 

Registration Date: 03-12-2002
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Location: Elkhart, Indiana
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With his mostly-spoken vocals, he was speaking as if he were "Bud". Not even reviewers got the point Terry was trying to make. The only thing negative I'll say are two songs that just don't work for me:
'Can't Take My Eyes...' - maybe because it's a rare one Terry didn't write and so it doesn't really seem to be a pure DA song. It's almost like it doesn't quite belong. Sorry, I know this is a fav with some...
'Turn This Off' - because it's so raucous and hard. I get the gist, because Bud is complaining about that very thing. Still it does not sound pleasing to the ear.
That said, SotH is absolutely brilliant, off-beat, and moving. Plus it has some of the best songs Terry has ever composed (Glory Road, WEWH, Sins of the Fathers, Organ bar.)
Overall, once the listener understands the concept, the whole recording works better.
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08-01-2008 12:37 |
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Ritchie_az
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quote: |
The only thing negative I'll say are two songs that just don't work for me:
'Can't Take My Eyes...' - maybe because it's a rare one Terry didn't write and so it doesn't really seem to be a pure DA song. It's almost like it doesn't quite belong. Sorry, I know this is a fav with some... |
It's one of my favorites.
It surprises me that a rock band--any rock band--would cover Can't Take My Eyes Off of You . But DA did so with complete brilliance and even made it fit into the lyrical theme of the album. I believe Terry Taylor is one of a small few that could pull it off, which demonstrates his genius.
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08-01-2008 13:20 |
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jiminy
Tallowy Tamale
   
Registration Date: 11-16-2002
Posts: 9,494
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for me I would have to also say SOTH
after a 7 year haitus from all things TST
OE (1989 )
to seeing SOTH at a discount store-
( I got in 1996) I thought
"hmm- I remember them! wonder what DAniel AMos is up too?"
when Terry started to speaksing after track one (and I recall right afterward I read a rumored review that he blew out his vocal chords or some such nonsense..and had no voice left . Anyone else recall that?)
I liked (most of it) for its quirkiness-(remember my last dip was OE) but in all honesty thought it was the swansong for the boys.
THe whole Bud and Irma idea seemed like a last gasp into a forgotten era not for us only- but maybe for them too.
Next up I got John Wayne- and put that crazzzee thought to bed.
I then got up to speed with KAlhoun , MC and BL- things I had not heard during my absence.
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08-01-2008 15:42 |
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John Foxe
Woolly Eggwhisk
 

Registration Date: 03-12-2002
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Yeah I saw Terry&Friends at Cornerstone '97. Before the show started they were playing SofH as background music. Then Terry came on and at some point mentioned that sales weren't very good probably because there were a couple of old people on the cover.
I had no idea right off that these two people were bogus. I heard later that Terry saw a cover of these two people, and decided to build a fictitious story around them. I heard another story that Tom Howard dropped by during recording and remembered those people from real life.
Very cool.
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08-01-2008 17:12 |
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Dr Rich
Ubique Epoque

Registration Date: 03-15-2002
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Shotgun Angel.
I had Darn Floor and FS. I also had the swirling eddies stuff.
I had no idea that DA had country roots at all.
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08-01-2008 21:04 |
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Dr Rich
Ubique Epoque

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quote: |
Originally posted by John Foxe
Yeah I saw Terry&Friends at Cornerstone '97. Before the show started they were playing SofH as background music. Then Terry came on and at some point mentioned that sales weren't very good probably because there were a couple of old people on the cover. |
I looked at the old people on the cover and put the CD back on the shelf!
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08-01-2008 21:05 |
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James
Mind Peach
Registration Date: 01-09-2007
Posts: 146
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SOTH's album cover didn't do the band any favors, that's for sure. Musically, it took me quite a while to warm up to that one. So of all the DA albums, I'd say that one threw me for a loop the most.
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08-01-2008 21:33 |
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George
Dignified Lazar

Registration Date: 10-08-2007
Posts: 71
Location: where the wind hits heavy on the borderline
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The SOTH cover drew me, actually. I laughed when I saw it. Thought it was kind of a tongue-in-cheeky kinda thing. Yet nothing in the music pokes fun at that cover aesthetic. So that was surprising. But then I played it and I was actually mesmerized right off the bat--though it wasn't what I expected. Absolutely NOTHING about it attempted to succeed in a market place. Which, of course, struck me as very cool. Certainly there isn't a less commercial DA record, right? I imagine it must have sold less than any other DA record.
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08-01-2008 23:59 |
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Ritchie_az
Ceremonial Kernel

Registration Date: 07-02-2008
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The SotH cover made me briefly hesitate, but did not stop me from purchasing the album. I think people who didn't know who DA was probably passed over the CD.
They may have wondered if it was really Danielle & Amos instead of Daniel Amos.
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08-02-2008 00:57 |
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Dr Rich
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I was already buying Our Personal Favorite World Famous Hits
as well as Vox Humana.
It seems I was also picking up that live Choir CD too.
SotH just kinda lost out.
I had skipped out on BibleLand as I thought it seemed too "Youth Groupie"
for my taste.
Shows what I knew!
When I finally did purchase BibleLand it threw me for a loop how much I liked it right away.
Most DA records need some time to digest it, for me anyways.
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08-02-2008 01:05 |
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Dr Rich
Ubique Epoque

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quote: |
Originally posted by Ritchie_az
The SotH cover made me briefly hesitate, but did not stop me from purchasing the album. I think people who didn't know who DA was probably passed over the CD.
They may have wondered if it was really Danielle & Amos instead of Daniel Amos. |
I think the song "My Hand to God" made me decide not to buy it at the time either.
I thought it was a praise and worship tune!
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08-02-2008 01:07 |
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Ritchie_az
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quote: |
I thought it was a praise and worship tune! |
I'm not big into the whole "praise and worship" craze in CCM right now, but the City On A Hill series is pretty good (you know, for what it is).
I actually purchased the first CoaH album before I knew who The Choir was.
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08-02-2008 01:19 |
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Dr Rich
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Yeah... I have the At The Foot of the Cross CD.
I enjoy it a lot.
No City On A Hill stuff, however.
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08-02-2008 01:23 |
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Dr Rich
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quote: |
Originally posted by Ritchie_az
I actually purchased the first CoaH album before I knew who The Choir was. |
Wow!
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08-02-2008 01:24 |
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Ritchie_az
Ceremonial Kernel

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I know, off topic a little, but my first Choir album was Free Flying Soul, which I found (in 2001) in the discount bin at a CBS for $5, I think. I quickly followed that with Flap Your Wings, which I didn't like as much, and (Youth Choir) Voices in Shadows, which I really liked right away, but I like it less as time has passed. Live at Cornerstone 2000 (Plugged) followed not long afterward. I purchased O How The Mighty Have Fallen shortly after it was released, and it stands as my favorite Choir album. I managed to get copies of Chase The Kangaroo and Wide Eyed Wonder within the last year, and I'm still digesting them.
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08-02-2008 01:39 |
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