2004-02-10
Rather than attempt to top what will be a career defining effort, Grant Lee has decided to pull up stakes and head South. His previous release, 2002’s solo debut Mobilize, was an industrial/alt-dance/pop masterpiece that still resonates with an unrivaled sense of assurance and liberation.This time around, the songs are more metaphor-laden character studies than self-revelatory. The music, too, is a striking departure, turning in a folk-based direction - “Cosmic Americana” as Gram Parsons once called it. Check out Grant’s version of Gram’s “Hickory Wind” which rounds out the album.
Though Creeper won’t outdo Mobilize, it proves that Grant's songs can stand up to the genre-leap test.
BLACK LIPS
Two Hundred Million Thousand
RADIO 4
Stealing of a Nation
Yo La Tengo
I Am Not Afraid of You and I Will Beat Your Ass
TORI AMOS
Live At Montreux 1991 & 1992
Cheap Emotion
Hospital Talk
The Detroit Cobras
Tied and True
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