Billy Bragg & Wilco - Mermaid Avenue Vol. II
Facts
| Artist(s) | Billy Bragg & Wilco |
| Studio | Elektra / Wea |
| Release Date | May 30, 2000 |
| UPC Code | 075596252225 |
| Buy this item | $12.99 at Amazon.com As of Dec 4 16:45 EST (details) 1 Audio CD, Usually ships in 24 hours, Or 51 new from $7.92, 37 used from $0.98, 1 collectible from $13.98 |
Tracks
- Airline To Heaven
- My Flying Saucer
- Feed Of Man
- Hot Rod Hotel
- I Was Born
- Secrets Of The Sea
- Stetson Kennedy
- Remember The Mountain Bed
- Blood Of The Lamb
- Against The Law
- All You Fascists Are Bound To Lose
- Joe DiMaggio Done It Again
- Meanest Man
- Black Wind Blowing
- Someday, Some Morning, Sometime
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User Reviews
Average user review:| A Grain of Salt, Please, and a Little Patience |
Also, read up on the project at Nora Guthrie's site:
http://www.woodyguthrie.org/merchandise/mermaidavenuevol1.htm
http://www.woodyguthrie.org/merchandise/mermaidavenuevol2.htm
Mermaid II is a really textural and varied album and anyone who says it is sloppy compared with the Mermaid I is wilfully ignoring a lot, namely the musical experimentation and advancement of Bragg and Wilco in the 5 years between the two. First of all, these artists are renowned for their abilities to be both musically tight and arranged and still work in a lot of improvisation. They switch back and forth between the two disciplines at will and can emphasize one or the other to produce the sounds they desire. I think this was paramount to conveying the ideologies behind Guthrie's lyrics and incorporating his own folk style, as well. Moreover, it is what makes producing Americana, which is exactly what this is, so challenging and to do so PLUS deciding to include and marry to that each of Bragg and Wilco's own combined styles is really an admirable accomplishment. They make it seem effortless and never allow themselves to forsake Guthrie's awareness, intellect and intent. Both albums contain this "loosely tight" format, yet are wonderfully arranged, traversing various signature American genres, textures and instruments. Bragg (a Brit) brings this around full circle with many of the arrangements and influences in each record having originated from the mountain music of the Appalachias brought over by immigrants from the UK in the nineteenth century. I don't think many people consider this, but it is not lost on the artists. Both of these albums are so much more important than some of the biased and knee-jerk reactions they provoke. July 30, 2008
| 5 stars for remeber the mountain bed |
oh the other WILCO stuff here is also fantastic..i havent really sat thru the billy bragg..but i will....buy this for REMEMBER THE MOUNTAIN BED alone..wow id love to know what you think May 17, 2007
| Continues winning homage but feels less memorable |
Admirable collaboration paying tribute to folk hero Guthrie is a serviceable update to an epic legacy, a hard enough feat in itself that garnered much praise. But after this second volume appeared a few years later, perhaps the conceptual accomplishments gave way to seeing some unimpressive songwriting for what it was. The production and attitude is all there to pull it off, especially well for fans of folk rock (mixed of course with the country sounds of Wilco), but to say this would be necessary to anyone who has the first volume and is not absolutely in love with it would be untrue. Having said that, the band continued to present a polished relevance to Guthrie's legacy in the authentic synergy Bragg and Wilco have. Some gems underneath the generic sounding majority may beckon the devoted to purchase this and spin a great mix from the two volumes. May 1, 2007
| One of my most treasured albums |
| Good, but disappointing...3 1/2 stars |
This, however, is a rehash of volume one.
Thankfully, Wilco went back into the studio to record some new songs--this album's best songs--but all we have from Billy Bragg are the outtakes from the first album, and Natalie Merchant's song on this volume...well...to put it nicely...sucks.
"Airline To Heaven" by Wilco is an outstanding song, using Bible verses in its lyrics and an exciting build. "Secrets Of The Sea" is a good one as well, as is "Someday, Some Morning, Sometime," but overall this album should never have happened. Volume one was good, and they should have left it alone.
I saw Billy Bragg on tour for this album--the show was awful, and most of the songs he played were bad covers of the songs Wilco had written--and he hinted there might be a volume three.
Please God, no. Spare us, please. Spare us all. Let these artists put their talents to use in some way better. Let Billy Bragg return to "Workers Playtime," and keep him away from Wilco. They're doing fine without him. October 11, 2005
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