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Track Listing 1. APB 2. Seconds 3. Change Your Tune 4. Testimony 5. Truly, Truly 6. Superslomotion 7. Fine How'd Ya Do 8. Come to Mama, She Say 9. 8 Mile Road 10. Everybody Needs a Little Sanctuary 11. My, My, My 12. Crooked Dice 13. Jubilee 14. Shallow End, The
Album Notes Grant Lee Buffalo: Grant-Lee Phillips (vocals, guitar, 6 & 12 string slide guitar, banjo, Mellotron, Hammond B-3 organ, organ, synthesizer, vibraslap, celesta); Joey Peters (drums, tablas, tambourine, guiro, shakers, djimbe, timbles, maracas, wood blocks, cymbals, sleigh bells). Additional personnel includes: Greg Leisz (lap steel & pedal steel guitars); Robyn Hitchcock (harmonica, background vocals); Phil Parlapiano (accordion); Jon Brion (Chamberlin, tack piano, organ, vibraphone, optigan); Rami Jaffe (Hammond B-3 organ); Dan Rothchild (bass, background vocals); E, Michael Stipe, Andrew Williams (background vocals). Recorded at A&M Studios, Hollywood, California. JUBILEE finds Grant Lee Buffalo updating their lush trademark sound, injecting it with even more adrenaline without sacrificing any of the sincerity of 1994's MIGHTY JOE MOON. Their great big sound has gotten even bigger, bringing with it the control of seasoned veterans with a strong command of the tools at their disposal. Laying atop a rich bed of organic sounds, JUBILEE possesses that rare quality of sounding like an instant classic, mixing rage seamlessly with beauty. Vocalist Grant-Lee Phillips slips effortlessly from ranting rasp to a sweet falsetto, notably on the album's opener, "APB." On guitar, Phillips proves equally adept, layering acoustic guitar and serpentine electric leads atop the band's solid rhythm section. "Seconds" features swirling backwards guitar and simmering rhythm parts, while the band's well-known Beatles fixation shows up on "Change Your Tune," with its high register chorus and wobbly slide solo. Notable guest appearances include the inimitable Michael Stipe ("Everybody Needs A Little Sanctuary") and the equally inimitable Robyn Hitchcock, who lends a wailing harmonica to "My, My, My."
Industry Reviews 3.5 Stars (out of 5) - ...Phillips continues to evoke an utterly unique world composed of American lore, biblical references, literary flair and stirring emotional honesy... Rolling Stone (08/20/1998)
Grant Lee Buffalo's music is for people who want it both ways: to dance and to dream....Phillips writes slinky, sensual, Beatlesque melodies that slip between major and minor, eluding resolution... Musician (07/01/1998)
...Grant Lee Buffalo...exert more inspired song craft from the zone between pop, roots rock, and art... Entertainment Weekly (06/12/1998)
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