Bitrate: 320K/s
Year: 2001
Time: 37:06
Size: 85,3 MB
Label: Checkered Past Records
Styles: Rock
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Satisfied - 3:14
2. Drunken Moon - 4:25
3. Sangre Y Lagrimas - 2:55
4. Where Ya Been - 3:07
5. I Believe - 3:48
6. The Title Of This Song - 3:14
7. Four On The Floor - 3:04
8. One World - 3:26
9. Disfrute - 2:46
10. Jean-Marie - 4:18
11. Wooky Do - 2:44
Distilling their personnel and their sound down to that of a basic guitar trio, the Silos followed up 1998's reconstructing Heater with Laser Beam Next Door, a rushing collection of garage-style rock & roll tunes the group had been road testing for at least a year. Leader Walter Salas-Humara focuses his energy like on no other previous Silos effort, but perhaps the laser's target is a bit too small. His lyrics are direct, and even at times a bit too simple. The fuzzy guitar attack that launches "Satisfied" sounds predictably tame by the fourth track. "Where Ya Been" sports your run-of-the-mill derivative classic rock power riff, and comes of sounding a bit like a poor man's Foo Fighters. Even so, the off-kilter charm of tunes like "Title of This Song" and "Wooky-Do" (in addition to perhaps betraying a large quotient of N.R.B.Q. in Salas-Humara's record collection) can easily make up for it. Requisite Spanish numbers "Sangre Y Lagrimas" and "Disfrute" are more successful that many of their English counterparts -- not so much for their lingual uniqueness, but for the fact that they are supported by the two best melodies of the entire album. Still, this is a rocking album that breezes by easily.
Laser Beam Next Door
Year: 2001
Time: 37:06
Size: 85,3 MB
Label: Checkered Past Records
Styles: Rock
Art: Front
Tracks Listing:
1. Satisfied - 3:14
2. Drunken Moon - 4:25
3. Sangre Y Lagrimas - 2:55
4. Where Ya Been - 3:07
5. I Believe - 3:48
6. The Title Of This Song - 3:14
7. Four On The Floor - 3:04
8. One World - 3:26
9. Disfrute - 2:46
10. Jean-Marie - 4:18
11. Wooky Do - 2:44
Distilling their personnel and their sound down to that of a basic guitar trio, the Silos followed up 1998's reconstructing Heater with Laser Beam Next Door, a rushing collection of garage-style rock & roll tunes the group had been road testing for at least a year. Leader Walter Salas-Humara focuses his energy like on no other previous Silos effort, but perhaps the laser's target is a bit too small. His lyrics are direct, and even at times a bit too simple. The fuzzy guitar attack that launches "Satisfied" sounds predictably tame by the fourth track. "Where Ya Been" sports your run-of-the-mill derivative classic rock power riff, and comes of sounding a bit like a poor man's Foo Fighters. Even so, the off-kilter charm of tunes like "Title of This Song" and "Wooky-Do" (in addition to perhaps betraying a large quotient of N.R.B.Q. in Salas-Humara's record collection) can easily make up for it. Requisite Spanish numbers "Sangre Y Lagrimas" and "Disfrute" are more successful that many of their English counterparts -- not so much for their lingual uniqueness, but for the fact that they are supported by the two best melodies of the entire album. Still, this is a rocking album that breezes by easily.
Laser Beam Next Door
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