Product Details
Crooked Rain Crooked Rain [Special Edition]

Crooked Rain Crooked Rain [Special Edition]
Pavement

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Track Listing

Disc 1:

  1. Silence Kit
  2. Elevate Me Later
  3. Stop Breathin
  4. Cut Your Hair
  5. Newark Wilder
  6. Unfair
  7. Gold Soundz
  8. 5-4 = Unity
  9. Range Life
  10. Heaven Is A Truck
  11. Hit the Plane Down
  12. Fillmore Jive
  13. Nail Clinic
  14. Camera
  15. Raft
  16. Cooling By Sound
  17. Haunt You Down
  18. Jam Kids
  19. Strings Of Nashville
  20. 5-4 Vocal
  21. Exit Theory
  22. Unseen Power of the Picket Fence
  23. Stare
  24. Kneeling Bus

Disc 2:

  1. All My Friends
  2. Soiled Little Filly
  3. Range Life
  4. Stop Breathing
  5. Ell Ess Two
  6. Flux = Rad
  7. Bad Version Of War
  8. Same Way Of Saying
  9. Hands Off The Bayou
  10. Heaven Is A Truck (Egg Shell)
  11. Grounded
  12. Kennel District
  13. Pueblo (Beach Boys)
  14. Fucking Righteous
  15. Colorado
  16. Dark Ages
  17. Flood Victim
  18. JMC Retro
  19. Rug Rat
  20. Strings of Nashville (instrumental)
  21. Instrumental
  22. Brink Of The Clouds
  23. Orange Black
  24. Tartar Martyr
  25. Pueblo

Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #2314 in Music
  • Released on: 2004-11-01
  • Number of discs: 2

Customer Reviews

Go back to those Gold Soundz..5
All of a sudden i'm 17 again, sitting in my bedroom trying to work out the chords to "Range Life"..

A phenomenal reissue - even if you already own this underrated masterpiece it's still worth forking out the price of an album for the whopping 49 tracks and cool little booklet you get here. laid back, raw, sunkissed, lyrically bizarre, melodic genius. Unmissable.

Life changing music5
When I first heard this album I was an adolescent teenager with bad floppy hair and a Dinosaur Jnr fixation. Years later, long after all my Dinosaur Jnr albums have gone to the storage graveyard in the loft, I'm still listening to Pavement. For me Brighten the Corners is their best album, but Crooked Rain still rates as a life changer. Musically it took me down a different road, away from the antipathic, introverted angst of Nirvarna, or Smashing Pumpkins into a whole new world of playful melodys, lyrics and sharp, sharp humour.
Before Pavement I always belived music had to be serious.
It even turned me into the musician I am today. Search out '53mph' on Amazon and you can find my CD. It would never have existed without this album.

Origins5
First there was "Slanted and Enchanted: Luxe and Reduxe," a richly enhanced double-disc set with a fat liner book of notes. Now there's "Crooked Rain Crooked Rain: L.A.'s Desert Origins," a similar reissue of Pavement's magnificent sophomore album -- and crammed with so much new stuff that it's worth getting again.

The first half of the first disc is the original "Crooked Rain Crooked Rain": the caustic pop-rock of "Cut Your Hair," the dark "Stop Breathin'," the folky "Range Life," and the trippy "Newark Wilder." It's immensely, intensely good, with a cleaner sound than the lo-fi "Slanted and Enchanted," and a sort of suburban-kid-turned-rocker perspective.

But wait: there's much more. Almost forty songs more, to be precise! Packed into every crevice of the disc is B-sides, singles, and other free-floating music from Pavement's "Crooked" days. One example is "Cooling By Sound," a sardonically wicked song that informs you that Malkmus is cooler than thou. Another is the quiet B-side "Strings of Nashville."

Then there is the second disc: eleven unreleased songs accompanied by a bunch of other tracks. These extras are not all good, but they are always enlightening, especially the eight that were made with Gary Young. There are even some rough early songs which Pavement was messing around with at the time, and were later rerecorded for "Wowee Zowee." Rounding it off are a bunch of other early creations -- some funnier songs, some instrumental experiments -- and a session with the much-lamented DJ John Peel. And accompanying the CDs is a fat little booklet, full of retrospectives and glossy pics.

"Crooked Rain Crooked Rain" was recorded in an apartment over a record store, which seems like an appropriate place for an indie-rock album to be born. Especially for one of the best underground bands of that era, whose catchy, weird pop-rock has remained relevant and enjoyable right up to this day. It seems only right that this sprawling reissue is just so... big. Never can it be said that Matador didn't do justice to Pavement in these reissues.

Malkmus and the other Pavement guys had plenty of talent -- they could be fun and catchy, gritty and lo-fi, or dark and weird. And while "Slanted And Enchanted: Luxe and Reduxe" was a look at the birth of the band, this is more of a how-to-make-an-album portrait. Not bad, just different. A good kind of different.

The Peel Sessions are among the best of the extras on this release. The B-sides and "rough drafts" are not as polished as the final product; sometimes the songs like "Range Life" and "Ell Ess Two" (an early "Elevate Me Later") were entirely different. A few of the extras are for die-hard fans only, like "Unseen Power of the Picket Fence." But cram them all together, and it feels like Pavement has released a whole new album. In a sense, despite being disbanded, they have.

"Crooked Rain Crooked Rain: L.A.'s Desert Origins" is a must-buy -- with four times the original material and formerly unreleased songs, it's an amazing release even if you already have the original.