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New River Head 2

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Download links and information about New River Head 2 by The Bevis Frond. This album was released in 1991 and it belongs to Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic genres. It contains 5 tracks with total duration of 30:14 minutes.

Artist: The Bevis Frond
Release date: 1991
Genre: Rock, Indie Rock, Alternative, Psychedelic
Tracks: 5
Duration: 30:14
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Tracks

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No. Title Length
1. Motherdust 5:31
2. Cuvie 2:31
3. Chinese Burn 2:50
4. Thankless Task 2:59
5. The Miskatonic Variations II 16:23

Details

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Though Saloman can never be said to necessarily, or at least obviously, progress from release to release, he does have a knack for ensuring that each Bevis Frond album has something interesting. It's when he puts everything together to create a consistently strong record that notice is due, and Frond's 1991 effort stands out in that regard. His slightly mournful, weary vocals remain unchanged, as does the general feeling of pop/psych-rock with jamming tendencies. The core duo of Martin Crowley on drums and Saloman on everything else also continues, supplemented by a variety of guest performers. There's just that little something more here, though, that marks New River Head as a good starting point for anyone interesting in discovering more about the Frond. The first couple of songs are mostly Saloman-by-number, but then he hits a great winning streak, starting with "Waving," a gentle folk ballad which adds a violin for an effect that's just melancholy enough and results in an honestly heart-catching little track. Following that is the title song, a strong feedback crunch that welds Saloman's ear for a good hook with his considerable playing abilities well. The disc continues in the same, fine general vein from that point on, ranging from the Byrds-inflected guitar chime of "He'd Be a Diamond" to the soft, then shroomy, head-nodding "Stain on the Sun." The standout is "The Miskatonic Variations II," a nearly 17-minute ambient-to-full-blown-noise jam recorded with a guest bassist, guitarist, and sax player, not to mention Current 93's lead figure David Tibet adding some chants on top of it all. Throw in a variety of other niceties here and there, like the brief garage-rock blasts "Undertaker" and "Chinese Burn," and New River Head winds up being a slice of Frond at his high-powered best.