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1- Bewitched
2- Chinatown
3- Friendly Advice
4- Pup Tent
5- Sideshow by the Seashore
6- Anesthesia
7- Tiger Lily
8- 4000 Days
9- Hello Little One
10- Moon Palace
11- Lost in Space
12- 23 Minutes in Brussels
13- 4th of July
14- Bonnie and Clyde
Bonus vinyl tracks:
California
Double Feature
Bobby Peru
Indian Summer
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1/29/01- LUNA
Live!
Live
albums are rarely justified, even from the great and
the good - you get the sounds, but neither the sights
nor smells. But Lunas credentials are stronger
than most. In the studio, their VU-patented riff logic
gets embellished with strings, keyboards and a general
otherworldly ambience. On a
stage, however, they revert to two guitars, bass and
drum basics - which as Dean Wareham himself says, are probably the strengths of the
band anyway. Well, somewhat. Wareham and six-string foil Sean Eden
belong to the New York hipster pantheon of electric guitar alchemists,
and their groovy, meditative parlaying consistently elevates Live! beyond
the realm of optional-for-diehards-only purchase. The tracklisting generously
visits each of the bands five albums - with a rare detour to G500
days with 4th of July - and proves what most Luna aficionados have long
held to be self-evident: that for a nimble-fingered dude who sings like
Kermit the Frog, Wareham is beyond compare.
Keith Cameron
MOJO Magazine
Luna
: Live!
(NEW MUSIC EXPRESS)
Too
often a contractual obligation, it's a brave band that
submits to the live album. So you have to admire Luna's
nerve in subjecting themselves to the ordeal. Because,
after almost ten years in obscurity, you suspect they
were glad to find anyone had turned up to the concerts
at all.
Recorded
at three shows in Washington DC and New York, Luna (singer
Dean Wareham's post-Galaxie 500 bolt hole) were never
the most demonstrative of bands. Amazingly, here stripped
of all studio extras, they're less flashy than ever.
Simplicity
obviously works to their advantage. True, with all unnecessary
distractions gone you're painfully aware of Wareham's
stretching for the high notes, but from the leathery
creak of 'Bewitched', to the arch pop of 'Moon Palace'
via the rollicking fuzz of '23 Minutes In Brussels' it
hardly seems to matter. Especially as the simple approach
also leaves centre stage for Wareham's sly tales of debauched
mischief-making. Obsessed with black-clad New York cool,
this is a must-have curio for the fans. For everyone
else it's a timely catch-up history lesson.
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